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A PE firm's most impactful 'investment' isn't a company but its own repeatable C-suite hiring process. By systemizing hiring with tools like the Lou Adler method and Hogan assessments, firms can move beyond partner biases and dramatically reduce costly executive turnover, which is a major driver of underperformance in portfolio companies.

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Private equity firms often hire commercial leaders based on past roles and industry experience, which may not fit the current needs of the business. This leads to hiring "the memory, not the moment," resulting in poor performance for organic growth initiatives.

Mid-market private equity funds build internal value creation teams to support portfolio companies with critical functions like hiring. These teams leverage established processes and headhunter networks, enabling a new CEO to build an executive team far faster than they could alone.

PE sponsors can accelerate value creation by telling new CEOs that some new executive hires are expected to fail. This pre-approval removes the CEO's fear of appearing to have failed themselves, encouraging them to make necessary talent changes faster and more decisively.

Capital allocation isn't just about multi-million dollar acquisitions. Hiring a single employee is also a major investment; a $100k salary represents a discounted million-dollar commitment over time. Applying the same rigor to hiring decisions as you would to CapEx ensures you're investing your human capital wisely.

Private equity firms can use the 5x CEO leadership assessment not just for annual reviews, but as a proactive tool to identify potential performance issues in portfolio companies early on, acting as a "pulse check" or an early detection system.

Instead of just telling portfolio company leaders what to do, effective PE operators 'show' them how with specific frameworks, tools, and process examples. This visual and systematic approach is more effective than verbal direction alone and accelerates the implementation of value-creating activities.

While process is necessary, any repeatable, process-driven advantage that generates significant alpha will quickly be arbitraged away in competitive markets. A firm's true, lasting edge comes from its ability to recruit and retain exceptional people within a culture that fosters truth-seeking.

To combat the private equity industry's low success rate with CXO appointments, Speyside Equity uses a two-axis framework. It evaluates executives on their ability to achieve results (the Y-axis) and their personality and competencies to do it the 'right way' (the X-axis), effectively creating a 'no jerks' filter.

Alpine's "People-First" strategy inverts the typical PE model by building a bench of pre-vetted CEOs-in-Residence. This allows them to acquire businesses that lack incumbent management teams, positioning the firm as being in the "talent business" more than the "deals business."

PE firms often focus on the value creation plan during underwriting but neglect talent assessment. Evaluating the existing team and planning for development or replacement *before* the deal closes leads to better outcomes and avoids later surprises.