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Why executive transitions go wrong -

and what to do about it

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Published on: July 2025

Written by:
Nicola Jones

Day 42: A newly hired Group Strategy Director is still at her desk at 9:00 p.m. She was brought in to lead a major transformation – one that’s been discussed for months but never clearly defined. She was hired because she’s capable, and there’s often an unspoken belief that capable leaders should just “get it” and move.

Her inbox is overflowing. Priorities keep shifting. Her peers are polite but distant – unclear on her mandate, protective of their turf, and too busy to engage deeply. Conversations stay surface-level.

She’s been invited in – but not set up to succeed.

It’s a common story: a strong leader, dropped into a high-stakes role without the clarity, structure, or support to land well.

Whether new to the company or stepping into a bigger role, many executives spend their critical first months navigating complexity alone – while being expected to deliver from day one.

Research has held steady for years: around 40% of leadership transitions fail within 18 months when the right support isn’t in place.

Too often, companies focus on choosing the right person – then overlook what it takes to truly integrate them. Without structured, human-centered support, even the most capable leaders struggle to succeed.

Why this matters more now

Transitions have always been high-stakes moments. But in today’s climate, the pressure is rising and the timelines are shrinking.

Leaders are stepping in during disruption – not stability.

Most aren’t inheriting status quo – they’re hired to fix or accelerate something.

Hybrid work delays trust-building and blurs cultural cues.

Visibility is high. Expectations form early and often.

In short: less room for error. More risk when it goes wrong.

Different paths. Same risks.

It’s tempting to think internal promotions are easier. But each path comes with invisible traps:

External hires lack historical context and relationships yet are expected to drive change.

Internal promotions bring familiarity but struggle to reset relationships and lead differently.

In both cases, leaders are often left navigating ambiguity alone once onboarding ends.

What’s missing

Most organizations do onboarding. Few do transitions. And that’s where things break down.

What’s often overlooked:

  • A clear and aligned mandate
  • Shared definitions of success across key stakeholders
  • Insight into unspoken cultural and political dynamics
  • Active sponsorship from the manager
  • A longer runway to build trust and momentum
  • Board-level clarity and engagement for senior roles

The result? Leaders are under pressure to perform – while still finding their footing.

The quiet rejection

Leaders are often hired to shift the system. But once inside, they encounter subtle resistance:

  • Their pace feels too fast.
  • Their questions challenge norms.
  • Their style doesn’t match unspoken rules.

Suddenly, trust is withheld. Expectations shift. Peers disengage – but don’t say why. The very qualities that got them hired now work against them. Confidence erodes. Performance stalls. And promising transitions quietly derail.

This isn’t just an onboarding issue. It’s a readiness issue – on both sides.

The cost of getting it wrong

A failed executive transition doesn’t just impact the individual – it ripples across the organization. It stalls momentum, fractures teams, delays results, and undermines trust in leadership.

It’s also expensive. Between lost productivity, re-recruitment, and missed goals, the cost can easily reach several times the leader’s salary.

When transitions go off course, it’s not just a talent issue – it’s a business one.

What needs to change

Organizations that get transitions right do five things well:

  1. Treat transitions as enterprise critical.
    Ask: What’s at stake beyond this one role?
  2. Define success together.
    Ask: Are expectations aligned across leader, manager, and stakeholders?
  3. Equip the manager to lead the transition.
    Ask: Are they prepared to sponsor – not just evaluate?
  4. Provide real support – not just warm welcomes.
    Ask: Have we created space for the leader to reflect, adapt, and build capability?
  5. Extend support beyond day 90.
    Ask: What happens after the honeymoon ends?

The gray zone

Most leadership transitions don’t fail during onboarding – they stall in the murky middle. That stretch between onboarding and full performance. Too late for checklists, too early for formal reviews, and too often overlooked.

This is when the leader is highly visible but still gaining footing. The system assumes they’re up and running. But what they actually need is time to reflect, context to navigate, and support to show up differently.

Without that space, small misalignments become big ones. First impressions stick. And promising transitions quietly derail – not because the leader isn’t capable, but because they’re left to navigate complexity alone.

This “gray zone” isn’t anyone’s job to manage – and that’s the problem.

The role of transition coaching

Transition coaching provides a confidential, strategic space to:

  • Navigate unspoken dynamics
  • Build confidence and clarity
  • Reflect and recalibrate in real time

As Greg Smith, CEO of Teradyne, put it:

“We’re investing in executive coaching because we want our senior leaders to lead with confidence from day one-not figure it out by month six.”

And the research backs it up.⁷ Coaching accelerates traction, strengthens alignment, and improves long-term performance.

But it only works when paired with system-level readiness: aligned stakeholders, engaged managers, and a clear plan for integration.

Final thought

Transitions aren’t just about setting a leader up to succeed. They’re a mirror for whether your organization is ready to evolve.

Because every new leader brings change – and every transition is a test of how well your system absorbs it.

If you’re hiring or promoting this year, the question isn’t just “is this the right person?”

It’s “are we ready to change with them?”

BTS helps leaders – and the systems around them – thrive through transition. Let’s talk.

Sources

  1. McKinsey & Company (2023), Leadership Transitions: Making the Move from Operational to Strategic
  2. Harvard Business Review (Ciampa & Watkins, 1999), Right From the Start
  3. CEB/Gartner Executive Research (2016), Why Successful Executives Fail
  4. DDI Global Leadership Forecast (2021), Assessing the Risks in Leadership Transitions
  5. McGill, P., Clarke, P., & Sheffield, D. (2019). From “blind elation” to “oh my goodness, what have I gotten into”: Exploring the experience of executive coaching during leadership transitions into C-suite roles. International Journal of Evidence Based Coaching and Mentoring. Oxford Brookes University.
  6. Greg Smith, CEO of Teradyne, as quoted in BTS webinar (2025)
  7. International Coaching Federation (ICF, 2021), The Value of Coaching in Leadership Transitions

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