The New Leader’s Playbook
A 100-day action plan that jump start strategic, operational and organizational processes

We accelerate leaders and teams through complex transitions
by helping create and implement 100-day action plans that jump start strategic, operational and organizational processes.
We share our ideas on transition acceleration, executive and team onboarding and leadership weekly on Forbes.com.

We have organized these articles
in the categories we think about
when it comes to successful transitions – we call this The New Leader’s Playbook.
“Our clients deliver better results faster ”
Executive Onboarding Overview Articles

Why And How To Manage Through This Inflation Differently Per Ram Charan
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) was 7.9% higher in February than it was a year ago, the highest rate of inflation in 40 years. In a conversation with Ram Charan this past week, he told me this round of inflation is different. Companies will need to act differently....

Why You Should Sacrifice Ideal Job Criteria For Long-Term Goals In Choosing Your Next Job
A BRAVE approach to finding your next job gives you a framework for adding deliberate thinking to an emotional process and your ultimate choice. The crux of the issue is getting at the right weighting of the dimensions driving your choice – especially between your...

What Matters Now: Other-Focused Leadership
Let’s mash up three ideas: 1) The world needs more other-focused leaders, 2) Happiness is good, or more precisely, three goods: doing good for others, doing things you are good at, and doing good for yourself. 3) Great leaders bring out others’ self confidence. “They...

When And How To Tell, Co-Create Or Delegate
First, understand the difference between the three. Then, tell for compliance. Co-create for commitment. Delegate for accountability. Tell In Bryan Smith’s Tell – Sell – Test – Consult – Co-create framework for persuading others, Telling is one-way...

Executive Onboarding Lessons From Disney CEO Bob Iger
The most important lesson in Bob Iger’s book, “The Ride of a Lifetime” is that “a little respect goes a long way, and the absence of it is often very costly.” Respect yourself, colleagues and brand. Respect yourself A big part of self-respect is self-confidence -...
Position for Success
At its core, leadership is an exercise in culture change. It’s about creating and bridging gaps: gaps between you and your new team, gaps between reality and aspiration. Thus, positioning yourself for success as a leader must start with understanding your own cultural preferences and strengths in the context of potential opportunities. Then you should create options and do a real due diligence to mitigate organizational, role and fit landmines.
Get to Work Before Day One
Activate Ongoing Communication
How you approach the time between accepting the job and before you start can have a massive impact on your success after you start. On the one hand, the approach is different if you’re joining a new company, getting promoted or transferred from within, crossing international boundaries or merging teams. On the other hand, the context and culture will inform your choice around whether to assimilate in slowly, converge and evolve or shock the organization with sudden changes. (Go to these articles.)
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Take Control of Day One
Everything is magnified on Day One, whether it’s your first day in a new company, or the day of a big announcement. Everyone is looking for hints about what you as the new leader think and what you’re going to do. You’re going to get positioned – either by others or by yourself. This is why it’s so important to make sure people are seeing and hearing things that will lead them to believe and feel what you want them to believe and feel about you and about themselves in relation to the future of the organization. (Go to these articles.)
Activate Ongoing Communication
The prescription for communication during the time between Day One and co-creating a Burning Imperative is counter-intuitive and stressful for new leaders following this program. The fundamental approach is to converge and evolve. And the time before co-creating a Burning Imperative is all about converging. This means you can’t launch your full-blown communication efforts yet. You can’t stand up and tell people your new ideas. If you do, they are your ideas, not invented here and not the team’s ideas. (Go to these articles.)
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Pivot to Strategy
Build the team strategically, operationally and organizationally. Start with strategy and a Burning Imperative that is a sharply defined, intensely shared, and purposefully urgent understanding from each of the team members of what they are “supposed to do, now,” and how this works with the larger aspirations of the team and the organization. (Go to these articles.)
Drive Operational Accountability
Activate Ongoing Communication
The real test of a high-performing team’s tactical capacity lies in the formal and informal practices that are at work across team members, particularly around clarifying decision rights and information flows. Managing milestones is about mapping and tracking what is getting done by when by whom. Early wins are all about credibility and confidence. So identify potential early wins, their associated milestones and over invest to deliver them —as a team! (Go to these articles.)
Strengthen the Organization
Make your organization stronger by acquiring, developing, encouraging, planning, and transitioning talent:
Acquire: Recruit, attract, and onboard the right people.
Develop: Assess and build skills and knowledge.
Encourage: Direct, support, recognize, and reward.
Plan: Monitor, assess, plan career moves over time.
Transition: Migrate to different roles as appropriate.
This is one of the most important things you do. (Go to these articles.)
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Keep Building
Remember that aligning your people, plans, and practices around a shared purpose is not a one-time event, but, instead, something that will require constant, ongoing management and improvement to sustain momentum and deliver results. (Go to these articles.)
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Want The Best From Contractors? Deploy Two-Way Onboarding.
Examples To Follow From The Mid-Market Convention Honorees
Why Google Can Not Run The World: Wisdom = Data + Experience
New Leader Ideas 2013: Get The Job. Onboard Well. Be BRAVE.
Three Different Approaches To CEO Succession At Walmart, Kroger And Microsoft… Which Is Best?
Veterans Answering The Star-Spangled Banner’s Call
New Leader’s Playbook Highlights: A 2012 Year in Review
How To Win At Office Politics
MOOC Provider edX Partners with Community Colleges to Improve Workforce Readiness
Beyond 10,000 Hours: The Constant Pursuit of Mastery
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