CLINGING ONTO POWER, FAILING TO GROOM A SUCCESSOR
However a few of the most troublesome are the results of the alternative downside: Comparatively profitable CEOs who cling onto energy and fail to groom an appropriate successor. The longer CEOs keep in place, the extra absolutely they inhabit their jobs.
It’s not simply that they relish all the eye (and cash). It’s that they will’t consider themselves as being something apart from the CEO, their each minute scheduled, their each transfer monitored.
Even accountable CEOs can delay fascinated by retirement – there is only one extra venture to complete, yet another transformation to supervise, yet another cowl story to pose for. The much less accountable ones subvert the succession course of, both consciously or unconsciously, by blocking the seek for a successor or undermining doable replacements.
The story of Disney’s battle to discover a successor to Bob Iger as CEO is especially tortured. The corporate groomed Thomas Staggs for the job, making him COO, solely to vary its thoughts, partly at Iger’s urging.
Then Iger, who had repeatedly delayed his introduced date for retirement, impetuously introduced that he was stepping down instantly in February 2020 and persuaded the board to nominate Chapek as his successor regardless of Chapek’s lack of expertise within the firm’s core enterprise of creating artistic content material. Chapek’s situation of employment advised an issue – he would function each CEO and CEO-in-training and, alongside along with his workplace, Iger would retain artistic management as govt chair of the board.
Positive sufficient, Chapek was out inside three years and Iger continues to be operating the corporate – one more “boomerang CEO” theoretically saving the day after their hand-picked successor ran issues off the rails. (Disney says it is going to title Iger’s successor in early 2026, earlier than his contract runs out on the finish of the 12 months.)