After a Private Equity firm purchases a company, one of the first major decisions is whether or not to hire a new CEO
George Bowman
Founder & CEO Value Driven Solutions? | Private Equity Advisor | Lean Master | Operating Partner | Leadership Solutions | Executive Recruiter | Value Driven Approach?| Everything OpEx?| Investor | Entrepreneur |
After a?Private Equity?firm purchases a company, one of the first major decisions is whether or not to hire a new CEO. The role of an interim CEO can be challenging and mired with complexity. Although private equity portfolio company CEOs and other CEOs share several of the same roles, a private equity portfolio CEO is tasked with unique challenges. Many private equity portfolio CEOs jump into the role unprepared or underprepared for what lies ahead.
Here are three things soon-to-be private equity portfolio company CEOs need to know become assuming the role.
1. It pays to understand the private equity business
It’s critical that portfolio company CEOs understand the?private equity environment?and how?private equity works. They must, for example, have an understanding of how a fund raises money and what’s entailed from the initial deal signing to exit.
In addition, CEOs must have a concrete understanding of their specific private equity firm. What other investments do they have? How are they structured? What is the team composition? As a?report?by Spencer Stuart explains, one of the leading executive search funds explains, “The fundamentals of how a fund raises money, its inner workings and hierarchy, and its politics all can affect how the firm interacts with your business.”
2. Portfolio CEOs and others are not one and the same?
There are many similarities between the traits needed to be a successful private equity portfolio company CEO and those needed to be a non-portfolio CEO. Yet there are notable differences. Before assuming the role, aspiring portfolio CEOs need to understand and appreciate the nuances.??
Research?by Value Driven Solutions, which evaluated 60 psychometric scales from well-validated assessments of leadership, found that successful portfolio CEOs differ from other CEOs in four notable areas.
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3. A sense of urgency is critical
The most successful portfolio CEOs are able to execute. Unlike some other CEOs, a portfolio CEO can’t afford to move slowly or “play the long game.” Oftentimes, they need to rapidly launch turnarounds, hire quickly, and fire quickly. They must have the conviction to make decisions quickly often in uncertain environments’ where there is not an established process of success. And they must all do this while hitting the challenging performance goals that investors establish. Helen Roberts, a partner at Skillcapital, a leading international executive search and advisory firm focused on private equity,?outlines?four factors that shed light on why portfolio CEOs are more likely than other CEOs to need to embrace an ability to execute and a sense of urgency:
The job of a private equity portfolio company CEO is not for the faint at heart. Research?has shown that as many as half of CEO exits are unplanned, often due to poor performance or disagreements with the firm. Aspiring portfolio CEOs need to appreciate the nature of the job and the skillset required to be successful. By doing so, they’ll be better able to leap into the role and immediately drive impact and performance.
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