Boards see the benefits of involving the CHRO, with their people skills and intimate knowledge of the company’s talent pool, not to mention the crucial role they play in broader C-suite succession planning and as a conduit to conversations around the top table. As we explored in our previous work, Cracking The Code on C-Suite Succession: A Roadmap for Chief People Officers, the CHRO is central to building leadership pipelines and ensuring smooth executive transitions.
However, the reality is that many CHROs have never previously been involved in a CEO succession project, despite their experience in C-suite succession. So, how can boards leverage the expertise and perspectives of CHROs to enhance CEO succession processes? And how can they best partner for success?
To answer these questions, we spoke with CHROs across a range of sectors to hear their perspectives on the important role CHROs can play in CEO succession.
Nitin Paranjpe
Former Chief People & Transformation Officer at Unilever
Research shows that whether CEO successions succeed or fail isn’t always dependent on obvious hurdles, such as CEO experience. (An analysis of over 1,000 S&P 500 and S&P 400 MidCap CEOs found that length and breadth of executive experience did not predict the post-succession performance of CEOs). Instead, as RRA explored earlier this year, it is the psychological nuances in the process that can often derail even the most mature leaders and organizations.
As the guardians of organizational culture and human capital, CHROs play a pivotal role in navigating these psychological complexities of CEO succession.
A CHRO is in a good position to persuade a reluctant or unwilling CEO to start thinking about succession planning sooner than they otherwise would. The CHRO can be their confidant or sounding board, giving them the opportunity to speak openly and honestly about their long-term plans, aspirations and potential exit strategy. The CHRO can also help the CEO to understand that choosing a successor is a core part of the job, and a key marker of their success and their long-term legacy as a leader. As Brigid Pelino, Chief People and Culture Officer at Definity, told us: “As a CHRO, you handle some of the most sensitive conversations with the CEO, which naturally places you in a position of trust. You become the central point for gathering and sharing insights from peers, consolidating their concerns, successes, and overall sentiment. The key is to have clear, direct conversations with the CEO, ensuring they’re always informed about what they truly need to know.” From this objective position, CHROs can play a role in CEO succession that is harder for board members to do.
The CHRO has a unique vantage point of the organization’s talent pool, from the rising stars to the unsung heroes and at all levels via the talent ecosystem, and they can bring these perspectives to board-level discussions. Armed with insights from either first-hand experience or from external advisors, they know much about internal candidates: their strengths, their blind spots, their leadership skills, their readiness for the top job. Expert assessment data and analysis helps the board to form a rounded, accurate view of the potential internal frontrunners, with many CHROs attributing the success of the entire process to the robust underpinning it provides. “As a CHRO, you have a unique advantage through your deep knowledge of internal candidates and your trusted relationship with the CEO,” said Ally Dashner, Vice President & Head of People at Delfi Diagnostics. “The key to influencing the process is asking powerful questions and coaching your main stakeholders, while ensuring you maintain an appropriate balance in those relationships. When disagreements arise, it's about bringing people together to find a resolution that serves the organization’s long-term interests."
The fact that the CHRO does not often sit on the board in most major markets means they can remain a neutral party, acting as a bridge between the board and the current CEO throughout the process—keeping the lines of communication open, relaying important information back and forth, and managing expectations on both sides. As Chris Van Steenbergen, the former Chief Human Resources Officer at Heineken, told us: “As a CHRO, maintaining neutrality is all about earning and sustaining trust from both the board and the CEO. The board needs to have full confidence that you’ll act in the best interest of the organization, not just for the CEO or the next candidate. Your role is to be transparent and truthful, which is only possible when that trust is firmly in place."
In much the same way, the CHRO can also be a bridge between the incoming and outgoing CEO. They are in a unique position to be a sounding board for both sides, giving each one the opportunity to speak freely about their own plans, hopes, and fears. Armed with these insights, the CHRO can then use what they’ve learned to help both sides to find common ground and constructive solutions to any differences they may have. And they can also help to make sure that the outgoing CEO doesn’t stand in the way of their successor during the transition period by trying to stop them doing things their own way or taking the business in new directions. All this, of course, reduces the potential for conflicts which may otherwise take up the board’s valuable time and energy.
Joel Gray
Senior Vice President, Human Resources, Westlake
It takes a skilled CHRO to do right by the board, the business, and both the outgoing and incoming CEOs while protecting their own reputation. We’ve identified six ways boards and CHROs can partner to create value in CEO succession processes.
Building trust between the board, the CEO, and other key leaders is essential to a successful succession process. CHROs should see their role as fostering open communication and acting as a bridge between different stakeholders. Boards should see the CHRO as a channel for mediating conflict, gaining candid feedback, and a useful check on ensuring decisions are aligned with the organization’s best interests. The ability to build trusting relationships directly influences a CHRO’s ability to navigate the complexities and overall process of succession planning. As one CHRO told us: "Success comes from mastering the people dynamics, guiding the CEO to leverage the best practices already in place, and maintaining strong communication with the board. When trust is built on both sides, the succession process becomes an opportunity for growth across the leadership team and the organization."
Planning is everything—in fact, many CHROs mentioned that if the CEO succession planning process is properly executed, one should have a contingency plan for any disruption that may arise. And the process does not stop with an appointment—a plan for CEO onboarding can help smooth the transition and minimize disruption to the business. Boards can lean on CHROs to develop and execute the plan end-to-end, providing continuity and transparency throughout the process. As Katy Theroux, former Chief Human Resources Officer at Cornerstone Building Brands, told us: “Starting the discussion well before the anticipated change allows you to define your role as CHRO in the succession process, identify candidates, and build a strong plan. Regular check-ins with the CEO, board, and leadership team ensure alignment, and a phased, transparent approach to onboarding sets expectations for all constituents.”
A CHRO can bring valuable experience in working with external providers of assessment data and tools to ensure a transparent and fair CEO succession process. A CHRO will have expertise in leveraging performance metrics, archetypes, leadership and psychological assessments, and external benchmarks to evaluate potential succession candidates—both internally and externally—which can help boards to reach better decisions about each person’s suitability to the organization’s needs. By leveraging data as the driving force in the decision-making process, a CHRO will effectively reduce any biases that may arise for preferred candidates, align stakeholders, and provide evidence-based recommendations. Several CHROs have noted that leveraging external providers for assessment data and criteria benchmarking was a pivotal moment, realigning stakeholders and allowing the process to move forward with stronger momentum. Boards should therefore lean on their CHROs to bring their expertise to the table to help them build consensus and make the best decisions for their business more quickly than they otherwise might have done.
Soni Basi
Former Global Chief People Officer, Edelman
To add value as the connective tissue that binds all stakeholders in the succession process, it is critical for the CHRO to develop and maintain independence. While being a trusted advisor to the CEO and board, the CHRO needs to maintain a neutral stance, prioritizing the organization’s long-term success over individual loyalties. But, given the personal vulnerability of the CHRO in CEO succession, this is harder than it sounds. "Maintaining independence as a CHRO is super important and takes courage,” Ronald Schellekens, Chief Human Resources Officer, Unilever, Ice Cream told us. “It’s important for the CHRO to challenge CEOs and other executive team colleagues, not for the sake of conflict, but to ensure that necessary disagreements are openly discussed and resolved. Independent thinking means addressing tough issues head-on and making sure leadership hears what they need to, not just what they want to. The CHRO must set the standard that these conversations aren’t personal—it’s about staying true to principles, even when it’s uncomfortable, and that’s what ultimately leads to the strongest outcomes.”
Open communication throughout the CEO succession process is key to maintaining alignment and trust. While openness and transparency are important, understanding what to share and with who at any given moment is an equally essential skill to possess. The CHRO should ensure that all stakeholders are kept informed about the progress, challenges, and any changes to the succession plan. Regular updates to the board, the CEO, and other senior leaders help manage expectations and reduce uncertainty. "Open, ongoing communication is essential during CEO succession but knowing what to share and when is just as important,” Andrew Biga, Chief People Officer at Go Health, told us. “Building close relationships with both the CEO and the board allows you to gather critical insights and ensure proper alignment throughout the process. Having direct communication with board members gives you the ability to address concerns in real time and provide clarity where needed. This transparency keeps everyone on the same page and helps manage expectations.” Partnering with an emotionally intelligent CHRO can add value to CEO succession processes by helping all parties feel informed, secure, and aligned throughout the process.
A well-thought-out succession plan requires adaptability. To be successful, a it is important a CHRO remains flexible and open to learning as the process and its stakeholders evolve, reflecting on the lessons learned and adjusting strategies based on feedback ensures continuous improvement. Eric Barger, Managing Director, Bolton Talent, describes this mindset as “Know, grow, flow.” He explained: “Know your talent deeply—understand who they are and what they need. From there, you can grow your pipeline by investing in development, ensuring your people have the right opportunities. As you flow talent across teams and regions, you continuously retrace back to the 'Know' facet, developing new benchmarks and understanding, which keeps the process adaptive and aligned with evolving organizational needs." Boards should therefore look for CHROs that embody this mindset to ensure they have the capabilities to add substantive value during the complex and fluid process of selecting a new CEO.
Emma Combe is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Board & CEO practice. She is based in London.
Anna Penfold leads Russell Reynolds Associates’ Human Resources Officers capability. She is based in London.
Alison Huntington leads Knowledge for Russell Reynolds Associates’ Human Resources Officers and Legal, Risk & Compliance Officers capabilities. She is based in London.
Jason Kipkala is the Commercial Operations Leader for Russell Reynolds Associates’ Human Resources Officers and Legal, Risk & Compliance Officers capabilities. He is based in Toronto.