Executive Onboarding versus Onboarding

Onboarding and executive onboarding both aim to help new employees and new leaders deliver better results faster.  Still, there are three fundamental differences to keep in mind when onboarding executives:

  1. Executives deliver through others in addition to with others.
  2. Executives generally have greater role than personal risks.
  3. Executives generally have greater relationship than learning risks.

These lead to the importance of using a Total Onboarding Program in onboarding executives, pushing them to jump-start relationships in their Personal Onboarding Plans and getting them the right support based on their relative strengths.

Total Onboarding Program

If I could waive my magic wand, no one would give anyone approval to start recruiting anyone until they had crafted and gotten key stakeholders aligned around a Total Onboarding Program.  This involves thinking through the whole plan in advance, documenting it, and getting alignment around it – a significant step in reducing new executives’ role risk.

Personal Onboarding Plan

Co-creating a personal onboarding plan can be a great way for hiring managers and new executives to begin their working relationships.  Ideally, they would work together to think through the job and its deliverables, stakeholders, message, pre-start, and day one plans as well as personal and office setup needs.  Ideally, they would clarify who is doing what next.  Doing this empowers the new executives to take charge of their own onboarding, knowing that their managers support them.  In particular, pre-start conversations are a good way to jump-start relationships, helping to mitigate relationship risks.

Support

Executives need different support depending upon their relative strengths as they manage three processes: strategic, operational and organizational in pursuit of delivering results through others.  An executive with relative strengths in some areas may benefit from additional support in other areas:

  • An executive with relative strengths in strategy and operations could benefit from the support of a strong human resource officer.
  • An executive with relative strengths in operations and organization could benefit from the support of a strong strategy officer.
  • An executive with relative strengths in organization and strategy could benefit from the support of a strong operating officer.
  • An executive with balanced strengths could benefit from the support of a strong chief of staff.

George Bradt – PrimeGenesis Executive Onboarding and Transition Acceleration

Read More Articles

Argentina flag with the body shape of the country in soccer field.
Strategic Adaptation in Leadership: Lessons from the Argentina–England World Cup Semi-Final

The Argentina–England World Cup semi-final was not just a game; it was a live case study in how leaders deploy strategy and tactics—and what happens when they fail to adjust…

Read Article
Confident executive standing on a modern stage, delivering a presentation
Act Like You’re Already Successful to Jump-Start Success

Success doesn’t start when you “make it.” It starts when you behave like you already have. The best leaders - whether they are taking on a new CEO role, launching…

Read Article
Picture of the Allies Normandy World War II amphibious assault D‑Day
Why Leaders Get the Followers and Decisions They Deserve

Leaders don’t simply get the followers they deserve; they get the decisions they design for. When leaders understand the different ways people create value - artistically, scientifically, and interpersonally -…

Read Article
Primegenesis Operational Leadership
The Underappreciated Power of Operational Leadership

Operational leadership is the undervalued fulcrum between theory and reality. It is where strategy stops living in slide decks, where culture becomes observable behavior, and where tactics gain the coherence…

Read Article
NBA Champions game
The Stockdale Paradox: Preparing Your Leadership Team for Adversity

Down 29 points in the third quarter of Game 4 of the 2026 NBA Finals, the New York Knicks did something that had never been done in Finals history. With…

Read Article
Building Accountability in High-Performing Teams: From Slogan to Commitment

Turning empowerment from a slogan into a mutual agreement and engagement from an attitude into observable commitment  Almost every leader says they want empowered people. Almost every employee says they…

Read Article