Close Menu
    What's Hot

    An Open Strait of Hormuz Won’t Fix Gas Prices Overnight

    Alphabet Stock: Why I Am Diluting My Largest Position (NASDAQ:GOOGL)

    US Open 2026 tee times: Full R3 pairings and UK and Ireland start times for third round at Shinnecock Hills in New York | Golf News

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • An Open Strait of Hormuz Won’t Fix Gas Prices Overnight
    • Alphabet Stock: Why I Am Diluting My Largest Position (NASDAQ:GOOGL)
    • US Open 2026 tee times: Full R3 pairings and UK and Ireland start times for third round at Shinnecock Hills in New York | Golf News
    • Brazil 3 – 0 Haiti
    • U.S. Open 2026 scores: Xander Schauffele carries patient approach to strong second round
    • World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through
    • The Reflecting Pool Appears to Be Rejecting Its Makeover
    • Morocco beat Scotland 1–0 as Saibari scores fastest World Cup 2026 goal | World Cup 2026 News
    interluknewsinterluknews
    • Home
    • Business
      • Corporate News
      • Industry Insights
      • Startups & Entrepreneurship
      • Technology & Innovation
    • Economy
      • Economic Policy
      • Financial Analysis
      • Inflation & Interest Rates
      • Trade & Markets
    • Global
      • Conflicts & Security
      • Diplomacy
      • Global Trends
      • International Affairs
    • Lifestyle
      • Fashion
      • Food & Dining
      • Personal Development
      • Travel
    • Opinion
      • Columns
      • Editorials
      • Expert Opinions
      • Reader Voices
    • More
      • Politics
        • Elections
        • Government & Policy
        • International Relations
        • Political Analysis
      • Sports
        • Cricket
        • Football / Soccer
        • International Sports
        • Local Sports
      • Technology
        • Artificial Intelligence
        • Cybersecurity
        • Gadgets & Reviews
        • Tech News
      • South Africa News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    interluknewsinterluknews
    Personal Development

    Boards stopped giving new CEOs time to find their footing

    adminBy adminJune 20, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Boards stopped giving new CEOs time to find their footing
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Boards stopped giving new CEOs time to find their footing

    The clock doesn’t start on day one anymore. For decades, the “first 100 days” framework allowed new executives a structured runway—time to listen, assess, and earn trust before making consequential decisions. That window quietly closed. What replaced it isn’t a shorter timeline, but a fundamentally different set of expectations.

    Boards aren’t granting CEOs time to “learn the business.” They expect judgment from the start, and the tolerance for ambiguity has collapsed. Successful leaders must arrive pre-oriented, understanding the real mandate, the hidden risks, and how decisions are made before they walk through the door.

    THE PRE-WORK NOBODY TALKS ABOUT

    My career has spanned more than 25 years at the intersection of education, innovation, and leadership. I help place transformative leaders at the highest levels of the education and edtech sectors. Today, that work increasingly centers on the executives shaping AI’s integration into education—from university presidents navigating institutional transformation to CEOs of venture- and private equity-backed edtech companies building the next generation of learning platforms.

    This moment is unique because AI is reshaping strategy, governance, product development, workforce planning, and institutional relationships with students and educators. This is not simply another technology cycle. Leaders must understand the pace of technological change and how educational institutions actually adopt change.

    The nature of the pre-work required has changed, in addition to the speed. When we recruit a CEO for a client, our work continues after the offer letter. Before “day one,” we help the leader understand the organization’s actual culture (not the version in the pitch deck), the informal power structures, and the most important external relationships. We help build the foundation around a new leader so they can interpret signals quicker and act with precision from the start.

    This matters even more when a leader enters a sector that’s new to them. We often look outside of edtech for its executives. In certain placements, the executive doesn’t have deep expertise in the specific slice of education they are stepping into. We make deliberate introductions, including to other CEOs with adjacent industry experience, key voices outside the company, or resources that compress months of organizational osmosis. The goal is to quickly understand the dynamics and not pretend the gap doesn’t exist.

    THE BEST CEOS LEAD BEFORE DAY ONE

    The internal shift to CEO is where many new to the role get tripped up. They have the capability, but the instincts that made them exceptional operators and leaders actively work against them as CEO.

    Executives who arrive expecting an extended discovery phase are often the ones who struggle the most. In the CEO seat, hesitation can read as drift. The board, leadership team, and investors are all watching. Every early signal matters. Waiting to “learn the culture” before acting is a signal, and rarely a good one.

    The best incoming CEOs have figured out the difference between action and presence. Instead of trying to prove their worth, they’re setting direction, clarifying what a high-performing culture looks like, and making it immediately clear how decisions will get made. The job is structuring how problems get solved.

    By the time a CEO walks through the door, they should already understand much of the internal dynamics outside an org chart, the stakeholders who need early wins, and the organizational narratives to reinforce or disrupt. That distinction means everything.

    AI ISN’T OPTIONAL

    There’s one more variable reshaping executive readiness in real time: AI. From a talent perspective, AI has gone from a “nice-to-have” to a baseline expectation. Organizations are integrating AI into internal and external operations and customer-facing products. Each is important, but the tolerance for that innovation isn’t uniform. Leaders who aren’t able to understand that distinction are setting themselves up for a costly miscalculation.

    Universities and K-12 schools and districts are inherently conservative institutions. They move deliberately, answer to multiple stakeholders, and carry a deep sense of responsibility around how technology impacts students and educators. Their pace of AI adoption—and the appetite for AI-powered products from vendors—is often significantly slower than investors and markets assume. That mismatch between investor expectations and institutional reality is one of the most underestimated risks in edtech right now. A CEO arriving with an aggressive AI integration timeline, who doesn’t account for where their customers actually are, will lose trust on both sides of the table.

    The executives getting this right understand that AI readiness is a mindset, not just an ability. They’re asking the right questions before they step in: How is this organization using AI internally? What are customers actually ready to adopt? Where is the gap between what the market expects and what the institution will absorb?

    Those are the types of questions shaping top candidates, and increasingly, it’s what boards need to be asking, too.

    WHAT “READY” LOOKS LIKE NOW

    In reality, a 100-day framework simplifies what can be viewed as far more complex. It provides leaders and boards with a shared language for leadership transition. The real work starts before the first official day. The orientation, relationship-mapping, stakeholder and market intelligence, and the honest assessment of what the organization actually needs versus what it says it needs. This must be done in the weeks before a leader takes the role.

    A modern executive transition is a pre-loaded start, not a grace period. To thrive, leaders should arrive already in motion, clear on their mandate, scaffolded by the right introductions, and be prepared to lead before they step inside. 

    The clock is already running. Are you ready when it starts?

    Meredith Rosenberg is cofounder and partner at NU Advisory Partners.

    Boards CEOs find footing Giving stopped time
    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    Previous ArticleWhere Massachusetts wants to take its Scottish love affair next – Live Updates
    Next Article US Open golf: Wyndham Clark holds halfway lead as Rory McIlroy slips back after rollercoaster round at Shinnecock Hills | Golf News
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    World Cup fans devastated after ticket resale purchases fall through

    June 20, 2026

    Trump unveils the new Air Force One, a converted Qatari jet

    June 19, 2026

    Researchers say one childhood vaccine is preventing hundreds of cancer deaths

    June 19, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Latest Posts

    An Open Strait of Hormuz Won’t Fix Gas Prices Overnight

    Alphabet Stock: Why I Am Diluting My Largest Position (NASDAQ:GOOGL)

    US Open 2026 tee times: Full R3 pairings and UK and Ireland start times for third round at Shinnecock Hills in New York | Golf News

    Brazil 3 – 0 Haiti

    Latest Posts

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

    Advertisement
    Demo

    We are a digital news platform delivering timely, accurate, and insightful coverage of politics, global affairs, business, economy, sports, and more. Our mission is to keep readers informed with reliable news, clear analysis, and stories that truly matter.
    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Powered by
    ...
    ►
    Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
    None
    ►
    Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
    None
    ►
    Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
    None
    ►
    Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
    None
    ►
    Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
    None
    Powered by