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How Senior Leaders Can Fix Their Side of Executive Onboarding
Apr 26 -
7 minutes, 0 seconds
Executive onboarding isn't just the organization's job. Senior leaders must take ownership of their own onboarding to succeed. This article explains how to fix your side of the relationship and close the gap between what the company provides and what you actually need.
Why Executive Onboarding Often Fails at the Top
Research shows that 27% to 46% of senior-level executives fail or leave within two years. According to McKinsey, the main reason isn't lack of skill. It's a lack of structured support during the transition. Many organizations focus on the basics—badge access, compliance training, and introductions—but fail to help new leaders navigate culture, politics, and relationships.
Egon Zehnder's study of over 500 executives confirms that most new leaders struggle because they don't understand the unwritten rules or build critical peer relationships quickly. Only 2% of global companies offer what's called "accelerated integration"—the structured, relationship-centered support that truly helps.
But here's the part many miss: senior leaders can't wait for the organization to fix this. You have to build what you need yourself.
The Self-Written 90-Day Review: A Game Changer
One of the most effective moves you can make is writing your own 90-day review. Don't wait for your manager to schedule it. Send it to them in advance. This creates a meaningful conversation instead of a formal, one-sided evaluation.
What to Include in Your Self-Written Review
- Wins, named clearly. Your manager might not see everything you've accomplished. Naming your wins isn't bragging—it's operational clarity. It helps your manager understand your impact.
- Misses, framed as learning. Be honest about where you moved too fast or underestimated something. Frame it as a calibration, not a confession. This builds trust and shows self-awareness.
- A clear ask for how you want to work together. By 90 days, you know what you're seeing—fault lines, leverage points, and opportunities. Name them directly. Ask for alignment on how you'll operate going forward.
As Russell Reynolds notes, seasoned HR leaders often regret not being more intentional about their manager relationship. The preventive action is simple: do the work yourself, early.
Why Senior Leaders Stop Managing Up (And Why That's a Mistake)
As you rise, the feedback infrastructure that supported you early in your career quietly disappears. You get more autonomy, more deference, and fewer structured check-ins. The assumption is that you don't need it anymore. But you do. You've just stopped being offered it.
At the senior level, you must rebuild that structure for yourself. Your response should be proactive and systematic.
Four Practices That Close the Executive Onboarding Gap
1. Own Your Onboarding from Day One
Don't wait for the organization to hand you a plan. Start architecting your onboarding the moment you accept the offer. The company's plan covers what they think you need. Your job is to identify and fill the gaps. Extend your plan beyond 90 days—business cycles like budget planning and performance reviews last longer.
2. Make Your Wins Visible Before They're Needed
Share brief, specific updates regularly. Don't wait for a formal review. This shapes how your work is understood before perceptions harden. Egon Zehnder found that accelerated integration can reduce the time to full effectiveness by nearly 50%. Most organizations won't use that window. You have to.
3. Name Your Misses Before Someone Else Does
Executives who build durable trust early are the ones who show self-awareness about their mistakes. Naming a miss—framed as a learning opportunity—signals that you're safe to give real feedback to. This strengthens your relationship with your manager over time.
4. Define Your Highest Contribution and Say It Out Loud
Don't assume your manager knows where you add the most value. State it directly, early, and in the context of the business. Egon Zehnder's framework identifies stakeholder alignment as one of the most critical tasks for executive integration—and the one organizations least support. Build it yourself.
The One Question Every Senior Leader Should Ask
Most 90-day reviews ask: "Is the new leader meeting expectations?" That frame is evaluative. The power flows one way.
The better question is: "How is this relationship working?" Treat it as a real operational question, not a relational afterthought. The manager-leader relationship at the senior level is one of the highest-leverage variables in whether you succeed or fail. When it works well, teams follow.
When you send your manager a self-written review in advance, the conversation becomes more honest, more useful, and more forward-looking. You've done the work to make it so.
Your Move: Build the Executive Onboarding You Need
Onboarding helps you understand the organization. Transition is about leadership—identity, influence, alignment, and sustained performance over the first 12 to 18 months. Most organizations do the first reasonably well. Almost none are designed for the second.
The gap is yours to close. Build the executive onboarding you need. Do it before the relationship hardens into something harder to reshape.
executive onboarding senior leader onboarding 90-day review managing up new executive transition onboarding for executives leadership integration senior leadership success
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