MIT Sloan Management Review
Magazine: Fall 2013 Research Highlight
Magazine: Fall 2013 Research Highlight
By Monika Hamori and Burak Koyuncu
Companies increasingly seek to hire CEOs with previous
experience in the role. However, new research suggests that is not always a
wise choice.
“A lot of chief executives look very successful and are
very successful in a company at a point in time. They look like geniuses. But
the real test is if you take that genius and put him in a totally different
situation to succeed again. And to do that, they have to be able to listen,
able to understand, able to hear why the culture is totally different … the
behavior that worked where you worked before ain’t gonna work here.”
— Archie Norman, former CEO of the U.K. supermarket chain
Asda Stores Ltd., when asked for advice that he would give to other CEOs.
A growing number of companies recruit CEOs with a proven
track record. According to a Booz & Co. study of CEO succession at the
world’s biggest public companies, almost 20% of both incoming and departing
CEOs at such companies in 2008 had had CEO experience at another corporation,
almost twice the average percentage for the 11 years studied. Companies resort
to hiring prior CEOs because they are increasingly unwilling to take the risk
of hiring executives with no previous job-specific experience. They also assume
that CEO job experience provides both a good track record and an understanding
of the role.
But is this assumption correct? To answer that question, we
collected data on the career histories of the CEOs of S&P 500 corporations
who occupied the CEO post as of 2005 and tracked their performances up to three
years after their appointments to the CEO position. Industries included
agriculture, mining, construction, manufacturing, transportation and utilities,
financial services, retail and wholesale, and other services.
Out of the 501 CEOs we looked at, 19.6% had at least one
prior CEO job. Our research found that these prior CEOs performed worse than their
peers without such experience. Being a prior CEO was negatively and
significantly associated with three-year average post-succession return on
assets.
Why Does This Happen?
One possibility is that experienced CEOs underperform their
peers without job-specific experience because they face more hurdles in their
new job: They have to lead organizations that have greater financial problems
than those of their peers. However, when we compared the pre-succession
financial performance (return on assets and return on sales) and the
debt-to-equity ratios of companies that experienced and non-experienced CEOs
took over, we found that the two groups of companies showed no statistically
significant differences in financial performance. Company performance before the
succession event therefore cannot explain why CEOs with previous CEO experience
saw lower post-succession performance than their peers who did not possess
prior CEO experience.
Another possibility is that chief executives with prior
experience as a CEO face performance problems because they are outsiders who do
not possess company-specific human capital and cannot tap into the social
networks of the new organization. Our results indicate, however, that outsiders
without prior CEO experience showed no significant differences from those CEOs
who ascended to the CEO post from within the organization. In sum, outsider
status alone does not explain why prior CEOs underperform their peers.
We suspect that the job-specific experience these CEOs
gained in their prior CEO job or jobs interferes with their performance in the
new position. Their job-specific experience may slow down learning because some
knowledge and techniques need to be “unlearned” before learning in the new
context can take place. In addition, as prior CEOs rely on experience from past
events, they are more likely to follow decision-making shortcuts, and this may
cause them to give the same answer to a different problem. Prior CEOs may be
too embedded in the norms, culture and routines of one organization and thus
may underperform in another because they have developed fixed assumptions about
how tasks should be done.
RELATED RESEARCH
M. Hamori and B. Koyuncu, “Experience Matters? The Impact of
Prior CEO Experience on Firm Performance,” Human Resource Management,
forthcoming.
Our results support this idea of a CEO experience trap. We
find that those CEOs who directly transition from a prior CEO job to the new
CEO job do worse (that is, they have a 48% lower three-year average
post-succession return on assets) than CEOs without prior experience. By
contrast, CEOs who spent some time working in a different position between two
CEO jobs had no significant difference in performance than CEOs without prior
experience, presumably because they were able to unlearn some of their previous
experience during that time.
Further, prior CEO experience in a similar-sized company was
negatively associated with post-succession performance. Similarly, CEOs with
prior CEO experience in the same industry also have worse post-succession
company performance than CEOs without prior CEO experience. However, prior CEOs
whose experience was in a different-sized company or a different industry did
not face worse post-succession company performance than their peers without
previous CEO experience.
These results may be surprising, but they are consistent
with findings by other researchers that large U.S. publicly traded companies
that hire prior CEOs have lower return on assets, higher debt ratios and higher
chances of bankruptcy up to three years after the succession event than
companies with other types of succession events, even though the stock returns
of these companies increase.
There are signs of an “experience trap” for other
occupations, as well. For instance, several studies found that entrepreneurs
who were successful at a certain stage of the product life cycle, with skills
well-adapted to that stage, experienced failure as they led ventures in other
parts of the product life cycle or industry evolution. Other research shows
drops in job performance by stock analysts and call center operators in the
insurance industry after moving to a different employer.
Avoiding the Experience Trap
Our results suggest that hiring organizations should give
more careful consideration to whether they want to hire CEOs with prior
experience in the role. One recommendation when hiring CEOs with prior
experience is to have them in an interim position at the organization for at
least a year before they take the CEO post. That would allow them to acquire
company-specific human and social capital and, more importantly, to unlearn
some of the knowledge and assumptions specific to their old job.
If an interim position is not possible, another solution may
be to immerse a future CEO in the company’s operations before he or she takes
the CEO job. Although this approach would not help experienced CEOs unlearn the
knowledge and assumptions from their old job, it may help their acculturation
to the new CEO role. In fact, many ex-CEOs who have success in their new CEO
jobs served as a member of the board of the company before being appointed to
the new CEO position.
A good example of this approach is Dan Akerson, who was the
chairman and CEO of two telecom companies, Nextel and XO Communications, before
he was appointed to become the CEO of General Motors in September 2010. Akerson
was already very familiar with GM’s operations at that point because he had
been serving as a board member for GM since July 2009. Four months after his
appointment as CEO, the business press enthusiastically praised his
reorganization efforts. Indeed, although in 2005 — a boom year for the auto
industry — GM posted a net loss, in 2010 the company reported $4.7 billion in
net income.
Another example of an experienced CEO first serving on the
board of a company he later joined as CEO is John Rishton, who served a stint
of three years as the CEO of the Dutch retailer Royal Ahold NV before becoming
the chief executive of Rolls-Royce Holdings plc in April 2011. Rishton had been
a nonexecutive board member of Rolls-Royce since 2007 and the chairman of its
audit committee. During his board tenure at Rolls Royce, he won the trust of
his fellow board members, who voted unanimously to give him the job of chief
executive. The succession process at Rolls-Royce took a year and was very
carefully planned and executed. The company’s profits increased by more than a
fifth in 2011, thanks to a strong performance in its maintenance and repair
division as well as a joint venture with Daimler AG.
In general, companies that hire CEOs with prior CEO
experience need to provide ample support to their transition and integration,
with, for example, collaboration with the outgoing CEO, if he or she is
retained as a chairman. The greater the opportunity for acculturation, the
greater the chance the company can avoid falling into the CEO experience trap.
No comments:
Post a Comment