Idea in Brief

The Problem

Too many CEO successions fail. Sometimes the board mismanages them; sometimes the incumbent CEO is too reluctant to let go. But often the cause is the new leader’s lack of skill at influencing people at the top of the organization and at recognizing the nuances of power.

The Solution

Particularly when the incoming and outgoing CEOs overlap, the designated successor must be acutely aware of political forces and adept at wielding power wisely.

The Upshot

CEOs’ successors should understand effective approaches to influencing others and what contexts to apply them in. They must learn more about key audiences, clearly communicate a vision, win allies, manage resistance, develop strong relationships with the board, and stay humble.

Of all the decisions that a company’s board of directors makes, choosing the next CEO is arguably the most crucial. A failed CEO succession can disrupt employees’ work, cause senior talent to jump ship, damage the company’s reputation, erase enormous value, and ruin the careers and legacies of the outgoing CEO, the board, and the designated successor.

A version of this article appeared in the July–August 2024 issue of Harvard Business Review.