The Importance of Due Diligence Before Accepting a Job

40% of new leaders fail in their first 18 months.  A lot of these failures are preventable, including the ones that could have been mitigated if the new leader had done the right due diligence to uncover and mitigate organizational, role, and personal risks by getting answers to three critical questions:

What is the organization’s sustainable competitive advantage?

(To get at organizational risk.)

Did anyone have concerns about this role; and, if so, what was done to mitigate them?

(To get at role risk.)

What, specifically, about me, led the organization to offer me the job?

(To get at personal risk.)

Scouts, Seconds, Spies

Getting at these often requires help from scouts, seconds, and spies.  Scouts are people outside the organization with a view in.  Think in terms of customers, suppliers, analysts.  Seconds are people inside the organization with a bias to help with the new leader's onboarding.  Think in terms of the new leader's boss, HR, internal coaches and mentors and the like.  Spies are people inside the organization not afraid to tell truth to power.  Think about the administrative support network or people several levels down.

Risk Assessment

Not all risks are the same.

    If you’re facingYou should:

    A low level of risk – Do nothing out of the ordinary (but keep your eyes open for the inevitable changes to come).

    Manageable risk  – Manage it in the normal course of your job.

    Mission-crippling risk Resolve before accepting the job or mitigate before doing anything else if already in the job.

    Insurmountable barriers – Walk away.

 

 

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Read More Articles

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
Clear road
What To Do When Others Don’t Do What They Said They Would Do

One of the most predictable realities is that not everyone does what they said they are going to do - and even fewer do it when they said they would…

Read Article
Board meeting with the CEO
Why the Best CEOs Start Board Meetings With One Simple Sentence

Most board meetings don’t fail because of bad data. They fail because of unclear expectations—especially about how directors should feel when they leave the room. Too often, management teams present…

Read Article
White-water rafting team navigating strong river rapids with teamwork and coordination.
Recalibrating Your Own BRAVE Leadership in Turbulent Times

Leadership is most effective when it turns other‑focused intent into disciplined, everyday action in an ever-changing world. Take this moment to recalibrate how you are leading to sharpen both your…

Read Article
Team meeting
The Hierarchy of High Performance: Defining Ways of Working by Level

Use this approach to make your ways of working more disciplined, consistent, and effective by level, remit and choices, and systems and tools: Level, Remit and Choices:  Board – governance…

Read Article