The Strategy of
Succession Planning by M. Dana Baldwin
When Business Week magazine
features an article questioning why Herb Kelleher, CEO of the very
successful Southwest Airlines, has not designated and groomed a successor,
it exposes a weakness in many companies' strategic thinking. The concept
of succession planning has become an important part of many companies'
strategic planning but not in all companies.
Too many think of succession
planning as having application only in family owned companies or in large
conglomerates. In fact, succession planning should be a part of every
company's Strategic Plan - your vision of where the company will be going
in the future. The reasons for this approach are fairly obvious: If there
is no succession planning process, how will the company develop and
nurture its human capital? How will you assure a continuing sequence of
qualified people to move up and take over when the current generation of
managers and key people retire or move on? How will you be able to plan
for the future of the company without some assurance that the key posts
will be filled with people able to carry on and excel? Succession planning
is much more important than the time many companies devote to it would
indicate.
What is involved in succession
planning? Succession planning is a part of the process of preparing for
the future of your company. Does this mean you should only plan a
succession path for your CEO? We suggest that virtually every key position
and key person in your organization is a candidate for a succession plan.
The important impact is that it is virtually impossible to successfully
promote someone unless there is a trained person to take over the position
being vacated. To effectively implement a succession plan, you need to
include/consider a number of elements:
What is the long-term
direction of your company? Do you have an effective strategic plan
guiding your course and direction?
What are the key areas which
require continuity and development of the people resources within your
company?
Who are the key people you
want to develop and nurture for the future?
How does the concept of
succession planning fit into your strategies? Are you concentrating
your efforts in the areas where the returns will be highest?
What are the career paths that
your most talented people should be following? Is each path customized
to fit the abilities and talents of the people involved?
The point here is to be sure you
do not do this by rote: a plan that is not dynamic, that does not include
the consideration of the individual's involved, is not usually as
effective as one that is tailored to each individuals needs and
capabilities.
Should you wait for openings to
appear before promoting someone, or should you make opportunities for each
individual as they grow and mature, so that you can keep them challenged
and stimulated, and not lose them to other, possibly faster moving
companies? Your plan should be proactive, with people moving into
different areas for experience and training before they are needed in
critical positions, rather than reactive - waiting for openings to occur,
then scurrying around to find an appropriate candidate at the last second.
What strategies should you be
considering for your succession planning process? First, realize that one
size doesn't fit all. There are different approaches which may be used,
depending on the situation in each company. In some cases, a company may
have to move some people along quickly, in order to expose them to a broad
range of experiences, and possibly to fill vacancies. In others, a deeper
involvement in selected departments or disciplines may be indicated. Some
of this will depend on the culture and processes of the company. In yet
other cases, decisions about the process will depend on the individual's
capabilities and competencies, and the structure and operations of the
company. In virtually all situations, your ability to educate and promote
will depend on the capabilities and strengths of the people who currently
occupy the key positions, and where they will be going in the future -
what are they being groomed for?
It may not be vital to have a
succession plan for every position in the company, but certainly there are
some key areas of responsibility which must be considered. These will vary
by company and industry, but as a part of your Simplified Strategic
Planning process, one important strategic issue should be the need for
succession planning for certain, defined key positions. This issue should
be revisited at least once a year, and more often if circumstances
dictate.
Advantages of Succession
Planning:
An ongoing supply of well
trained, broadly experienced, well-motivated people who are ready and
able to step into key positions as needed.
A cadre of desirable
candidates who are being integrated into the company with positive
goals established for them individually.
A flow of these capable people
through various departments with the goals of educating them into the
culture and processes of the company.
Alignment of the future needs
of the company with the availability of appropriate resources within
the company.
Positive goals for key
personnel, which will help keep them with the company and will help
assure the continuing supply of capable successors for each of the
important positions included in the succession plan.
Defined career paths, which
will help the company
recruit and retain better people.
Very likely, the continuous input
of ideas to improve the internal processes and procedures of the company,
as well as the opportunities to improve the offerings and services of the
company in the marketplace.
Recognize that all companies do
not have to follow the same path either in the overall situation or even
for each individual. Each situation should be analyzed and optimized in
terms of the company's needs and the individual's needs. In addition,
there should be enough time allowed to groom the successors. They should
not be expected to learn the jobs/responsibilities overnight. Time is the
gift that good planning can bestow on the process. Also, the successor and
potential back-ups should be designated early in the process. Not only
will this help the individuals involved, it will clarify the communication
and help eliminate disappointment and possible departures of key
candidates if they become disillusioned because they have not been
informed they are being groomed for higher positions or if they feel they
are not moving upward rapidly enough.
What are the possible pitfalls of
succession planning? Some important ones include:
Lack of a formal written plan
for each key person or position. A rigid, inflexible plan NOT tailored
to the needs and abilities of the personnel involved.
Too long a wait for real
movement/promotion, potentially resulting in the best people leaving
due to apparent inertia in the system.
Too superficial an approach,
with the corresponding lack of real understanding of the procedures,
processes and requirements of each area the individual is exposed to
during the process.
Selection of unqualified or
unmotivated people for inclusion in the succession plan. Quality of
the individuals selected is paramount to the success of the process.
What are the benefits of good
succession planning? With a well-thought-out succession planning process,
your company earns a number of clear pluses:
A well-trained, involved and
potentially deep stream of capable people who are well versed in the
breadth and depth of the company.
A continuous stream of people
who are constantly reviewing, questioning and refining procedures and
processes, helping to improve the quality inside the company, as well
as improving the offerings of the company out in the market place.
An increasing reputation as a
good, challenging, stimulating place to work, which could result in
your ability to hire ever better people.
How should privately held
corporations handle ownership considerations versus management and
operating considerations? Situations in which ownership and operations or
management responsibilities are vested in the same people can be
devastating to a family or closely held corporation if not handled wisely.
While difficult, the duties of management and the family/stockholder
relationships must be kept separate for the good of both the stockholders
and the corporation. Private relationships which interfere with the
effective operation of the company can only be harmful and non-productive.
Nepotism can be either positive or negative, depending on the capabilities
of the individuals involved. It is rarely neutral.
Business considerations should
take precedence over family considerations when it comes to the welfare of
the company. Private, family matters should never interfere in or be a
part of the business. Failure to adhere to this advice can often lead to
unfortunate or even calamitous situations which can tear a closely held
company apart. These may be difficult situations, and may require an
impartial source to mediate. In any case, clear, objective, unambiguous
guidelines and goals should be set in writing so that the junior members
of the family firm may have specific expectations of where they might go,
how they are expected to progress, and the standards by which they will be
judged. Family considerations must be kept outside of the on-the-job
evaluations, or the entire process can become quite unsettling and less
than objective for the individuals involved. Where possible, outsiders (to
the family) might be involved in the mentoring and development processes
to help the development of the younger generations. This can bring a
degree of objectivity that parents and children can often find difficult
to maintain in situations where the younger generation works for and will
eventually succeed the senior people. Settling this issue is potentially
the key to the effectiveness and even survival of some privately held
firms.
How does succession planning fit
into Simplified Strategic Planning? As in the deployment and utilization
of any strategic resource, the development of your key people must be
considered as you plan for the future of your company. It is certainly
worth considerable time and effort to discuss the company's needs and
current capabilities thoroughly, as a Strategic Issue, and possibly as a
part of Strategies - Internal Development. If you do not have a formal
procedure for succession planning, you may want to create an Objective
which mandates the development and installation of a Succession Planning
process which fits the needs and preferences of your specific company.
What do you need to do to get the best from your people, to position and
educate them so they may best contribute to the company's and their long
term success, and to assure a flow of competent, well educated and
experienced people for your future?
How long should succession
planning take? Realistically, succession planning is never finished. On a
regular basis, each company must look at its needs and resources to
determine where it needs to have successors in place or in the process of
learning the requisite disciplines. Each company needs to determine how
long a candidate should be involved or exposed to the training needed.
Each individual should have a concisely determined path toward the goal
set for him or her. That path may be changed as needed and as events
determine, so monitoring and updating should be a part of every succession
plan.
Over what time period should you
plan? To be realistic, succession must be planned years in advance of
expected needs. To properly train a successor, the firm needs sufficient
time to expose the people to the full spectrum of opportunities within the
firm, as well as any desired or required outside education/experience
expected. For example, if someone is expected to be a general manager, the
number of departments, the types and ranges of technologies and processes,
and the level of knowledge about the company procedures and policies,
markets and customers, suppliers, employees, contractors, etc., will
determine the time and depth of involvement. Additional factors, such as
past experience and current knowledge that the individual brings to the
process, will also affect the succession time frame.
Skillfully done, succession
planning will bring the peace of mind that senior management should have,
based on the understanding and expectations of its future leadership.
Copyright, Center for Simplified
Strategic Planning, Inc., Southport, CT, 2000. Reprinted with permission
of the Center for Simplified Strategic Planning, Inc., http://www.cssp.com.
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