PE sponsors and CEOs often define their "vision" as a revenue or EBITDA target. This is an output metric, not an inspiring vision. High-performing CEOs create a compelling narrative about the business's value proposition and purpose that motivates employees and resonates with customers. Financial success is the result of executing this vision.
A top-performing CEO adapted the board practice of an "executive session." He periodically removes himself from his own leadership meetings and asks an HR leader to gather candid feedback on his performance. This powerfully models vulnerability and a commitment to continuous improvement for the entire organization.
As part of their annual strategy refresh, a top CEO leads her team in a "blank sheet" exercise: designing a new company from scratch to compete with them. This proactive self-disruption forces them to identify their own weaknesses and market gaps, generating fresh ideas to incorporate into their actual business strategy.
High-performing CEOs don't hesitate on talent decisions. One mentor's advice was to act immediately the first time you consider firing someone, as indecision only prolongs the inevitable and harms value creation. This counteracts the common tendency for CEOs to be overly loyal or fear disruption.
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.
A CEO overseeing 40 general managers replaced monthly operating reviews with 20-minute video updates. He feeds the transcripts into a custom AI agent trained on the company playbook to instantly identify key issues and revenue shortfalls. This transforms the review process from data gathering to rapid problem-solving.
To overcome loyalty bias toward long-tenured employees, leaders should reframe performance reviews. Instead of asking if they are "good enough," ask, "Knowing our future needs, would I hire this person for this role today?" This clarifies whether their skills match future requirements, enabling objective talent decisions.
A nine-box grid plots employees on two axes: current performance and future potential. This tool helps leaders make nuanced talent decisions, correctly identifying valuable assets like a star salesperson who "exceeds expectations" in performance but has "low potential" for promotion because they don't want a management role.
