Onboarding Landmines – HP CEO Failure as a Case in Point

Leo Apotheker, co-CEO SAP
 

On the one hand, Hewlett-Packard CEO Leo Apotheker is just one more of the 40% of new leaders that fail in their first 18 months.  On the other hand, we rarely get as clear a view of why someone failed as we do in this case.  Board chair Ray Lane explained in a September 22, 2011 press conference call that Apotheker:

 – failed to deliver/execute

 – failed to form a strong team

 – failed to communicate well

In Lanes' words:

Failed to deliver

You don't deliver a quarter, you don't deliver another quarter…Then you have to make the tough call of, how long do you go along with that? Do you help? Do you surround? Or do you replace?

(Apotheker lacked the) ability to get down deep into the businesses and understand the dynamics that were going on the businesses, and that could land us on a quarter ahead of expectations.

Failed to form a strong team

This is a company that requires an executive team to be on the same page. I would spend time here or at board meetings or whatever the occasion was and we didn't see an executive team working on the same page or working together.

Failed to communicate well

I think we struggled in the August 18 announcement (about buying Autonomy, spinning off the PC unit and discontinuing the TouchPad), and when we communicated to our constituents, customers, press, investors, with clear, concise communications.

Prescription for success

In our work with senior executives and in our book, The New Leader's 100-Day Action Plan, we suggest new leaders must do three things to succeed:

  1. Get a head start
  2. Manage the message
  3. Build the team

I suggest, that if Apotheker had gotten a head start before he started and then treated every day thereafter like it was the first 100 days of the rest of his career, he would have had a far greater chance of delivering.

Had Apotheker paid more attention to his message and communication points to all stakeholders, he could have avoided some of his communication snafus.

Had Apotheker paid more attention to building his team, the team would have performed better.

It's too late for Apotheker, but not too late for you.  Read and heed.


Image by mkrigsman via Flickr

Follow this link for more on onboarding landmines
 
Enhanced by Zemanta

Read More Articles

Why You Should Have More, Not Fewer Meetings | Meeting Effectiveness for Leaders

Meeting effectiveness is not about having fewer meetings. It is about having the right meetings, with the right people, for the right reasons, done in the right way. When leaders…

Read Article
The Artistry in Communication: Where Leadership Comes Alive

Executive communication is often taught as a process of alignment — aligning messages with culture, strategy, operations, and tactical missions. That’s necessary but not sufficient. The artistry lies not in…

Read Article
How Mission Briefs Accelerate Progress by Clarifying Direction, Resources, Authority, and Follow-Through
How Mission Briefs Accelerate Progress by Clarifying Direction, Resources, Authority, and Follow-Through

Teams fail when direction is fuzzy, resources are ambiguous, or authority is blurred. Too often, leaders assign tasks without enough context for teams to make smart, independent decisions. The result?…

Read Article
High Stakes Landmines for Technology Executives

By Jeff Scott with George Bradt High-stakes onboarding landmines are everywhere for new technology executives, but few are as deadly—and as fixable—as a misaligned role. Being the right technology leader…

Read Article
Preparing For The Next Point Of Inflection With Contingency And Capability Plans

The next point of inflection is coming whether you’re ready for it or not. Your success as a leader doesn’t hinge on your ability to predict the future, but on…

Read Article
The Baked Ziti Approach To Making The Implicit Explicit

Sometimes it’s best to hint at things implicitly so others can interpret as they see best. Sometimes it’s best to explain things explicitly so others can follow precise directions. And…

Read Article