Pursuit of Excellence
& POE Talent Solutions

Time to Toss Your Succession Template for Good!

March 15, 2020 08:07 PM By Dawn Garcia, MBA, MS, CMQ-OE

Toss Your Succession Plan Template!

If you’re a business owner, partner, or senior executive, you know that having a succession plan is a great idea to plan for the unknown and the future. You may have even developed a succession plan, or started, with the best intentions. There are several parts to a solid business succession plan: 1) people transitions, 2) ownership transitions, and 3) financial transitions. Today we’re focusing on the people transitions of succession planning.

 

If you’ve used a template to map your high potential leaders, maybe you’re on the way to creating a succession plan. What’s the problem? While every business needs a succession plan, and 86% of leaders acknowledge that it’s urgent to have one, only 14% believe they do it well (Deloitte, 2014). Why? There are several reasons, but the biggest is that most plans are not owned by a specific role and are not people centric. Templates perseverate this gap with a process vs. people focus. It’s time to move to a simpler, better future for your succession plans.

 

Get Started

 

The first step in developing an effective succession plan is to evaluate your organizational structure now, and into the future. Take some quiet time and consider the needs of the organization in the absence of current leadership roles. Likely, the roles you have now may not be the ones you need in a succession plan. Rather, consider your organization’s purpose, vision, and strategic plan. What are the needs of your customers and stakeholders into the future? What differences are in the short-term versus long-term? Take a long-term view, and identify the structure, roles and functions that will be needed. Capture a beginning view of the structure, roles and skill sets needed.

 

Set Key Roles

 

If you’re the owner, CEO or managing partner for the business, the job of getting a succession plan in place lands on your shoulders. As you define the organizational structure and roles, you may begin to consider who would fill those roles, either internally or externally. First identify the skills, knowledge and critical behaviors of each role using a data-driven job assessment tool. Regardless of the position, this reduces inherent bias in selection and function and keeps the focus on the future needs. Ensure that these roles support the strategic direction needed and complement one another in a balanced view. If you have others as partners or key executive leads, engage them in considering the structure and key roles needed as well, for better results!  

 

Select Key Talent

 

If you’ve created a data-driven job assessment tool to define the traits and behaviors of each role, now the process gets easier. You can use a data-driven psychometric behavioral assessment to identify the best match natural wiring of candidates to the requirements of the intended role. If you couple a cognitive assessment of the candidate’s ability to learn and grow into the full scope, you get even a clearer picture of capability. Evaluate the internal candidates that you believe to be a best fit based upon their past performance in like roles and see if there’s a match for the future. If the candidate match to the role is strong, then seriously consider a conversation with the person to explore succession interest and fit. Often, a conversation with a high potential or current leader about succession may help to retain key talent and build a strong workforce culture for the future. If the person is not a fit, you know that now, and can save valuable time and money in planning to develop an individual that will not be a great match. Continue this process until your key roles are identified, or you’ve identified roles that you’ll need to search externally.

 

Develop Key Talent

 

Now that you’ve identified what you need, and who will best fill it, it’s time to develop the skills and abilities of the future leaders over time. Our recommendation is to develop a learning and development plan for each leader that has specific outcomes tied to succession skills, now that you’ve clearly defined them. Work with the individual in challenge assignments, formal education or training, and mentoring, to develop experience and confidence in essential skills. Give them room to explore and grow to build capabilities for their future support. If there are short-term needs during a vacation coverage or illness, can you give the person a trial run with support as needed? Soon, there will be a clear succession plan that will help the organization to achieve the strategic future intended.

 

Review It Regularly

 

Despite the best laid succession plans, there should be a review at least annually to ensure that the persons are still in the right intended seats; the development plan is on track; and new role changes haven’t emerged. The good news is that this review process is generally quick and focused, and your plan easily can weather some periodic tweaks as needed. In addition, each time that a new strategic plan is established, this plan becomes part of the workforce plan, to position the organization for success into the future.

 

Get Resources

If you need to get your succession plan on solid footing sooner than later, working with an expert reduces the pain and hassles, and can enable data-driven tools to expedite a quality process. You've spent years establishing and growing a successful business. Shouldn’t your legacy include a solid plan for a successful future? We can help you bring it to life through our data analytic tools and expertise, beforeyou need to activate it. Let’s get your plan in place! 

Dawn Garcia is Principal and Founder of Pursuit of Excellence LLC, an independent business management consulting firm specializing in service-based businesses; delivering leadership, business and talent strategy, and execution expertise. Experience the Excellence Driven® System and The Predictive Index® for your business, and achieve the results you need! Every business needs help at some point; great business leaders actually get help when needed, realizing greater returns. 

When you need help, consult the experts. Our success is your success! 

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