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Leadership isnโ€™t only about whatโ€™s going on now, but about what an organization hopes to accomplish in the future. The most outstanding leaders arenโ€™t necessarily the ones who make headlines today, but the ones who lead competently today while planning for what happens after theyโ€™re gone.

Leadership Legacy

If only envisioning the future were this easy!

Every leader should be concerned with their legacy, not only for their own reputation, but for the well-being of the overall organization. Leadership legacy is just one of many aspects of leadership that executive coaching is designed to address. After all, the leader that gets all the attention now, but leaves a โ€œscorched earthโ€ with no plan for the future wonโ€™t be appreciated for long.

Planned Leadership Changes Typically the Least Disruptive

We canโ€™t always plan for smooth transition of leadership, because disasters and unexpected circumstances happen. When thereโ€™s an unexpected event that necessitates a leadership change, the results can be an organization that falters or fails, or an organization that comes back stronger than ever. Much depends on what the previous leader did in the way of succession planning.

The strongest leaders, and the leaders that history is kindest to, are leaders who take time during their tenure to plan for what should happen after theyโ€™re gone. With luck, the transition of leadership will be a happy occasion that is planned and executed flawlessly. But if the leadership transition should happen in an unexpected way, that succession planning will still pay off. In fact, it will be especially valuable in such situations.

Focus on Here and Now with Mature and Ethical Conduct

The CEO coach primarily focuses on whatโ€™s going on now. What are the clientโ€™s strengths, and where is there opportunity for improvement? What skills gaps does the client need to address to lead effectively? The work that the CEO coach does in improving a leaderโ€™s performance not only makes the organization better today, but paves the way for smart succession planning, and long-term improvement of the organization.

Succession planning should accompany smart leadership action that takes place in the present. Succession planning by a leader who behaves unethically or with immaturity might be better than nothing, but itโ€™s harder to respect the choices of a leader who doesnโ€™t perform with the maturity and strength that is expected of someone in an executive leadership position.

Recognize and Encourage Future Leaders

Executive coaching

Executive coaching can help leaders recognize potential in others.

Executive coaching also helps present leaders identify potential future leaders, and the leader of good character welcomes this opportunity rather than seeing as a threat. During their time with a CEO coach, an executive may or may not identifyย theย person they see as their successor. Whatโ€™s important is that the executive realizes the importance of planning for their leadership legacy. Will they be remembered as a leader who was dedicated to improvement of the organization by doing whatโ€™s possible to ensure continued great leadership? Or will they be remembered as someone who only cared about gaining recognition and applause and leaving the future to take care of itself?

One process executive coaching can assist with is learning to identify potential future leaders and helping them develop their potential. The coach can help the client learn to recognize outstanding potential and consider ways to help future leaders fulfill that potential.

Executive coaching is about helping a high-level leader excel right now. Most organizations simply canโ€™t wait around for a new leader to gain their bearings and climb a leadership learning curve. The CEO coach can help ensure that a new CEO hits the ground running and leads the organization to a higher level of functioning.

At the same time, executive coaching emphasizes the importance of legacy and of succession planning. A leaderโ€™s tenure as CEO or other high-level leader may be long or short, but eventually things will change, and being ready for those changes not only benefits the organization in terms of a smoother transition of leadership, but also results in a lasting legacy for the leader who understood the importance of planning for the future.

I was fortunate to work with the late Steve Jobs near the end of his life, and during that time, I could envision his legacy of continuous improvement and breaking out of the comfort zone. Everyone knew that Steve Jobs couldnโ€™t possibly be replaced, and he knew it too. But he also knew that his legacy could be carried on because of the way he infused the entire organization with passion for creativity and innovation.

John Mattone

John Mattone is the worldโ€™s top executive coach and a pioneer in leadership transformation. As the founder of John Mattone Global and the creator of the Intelligent Leadershipยฎ framework, he has coached Fortune 500 CEOs, government leaders, and rising innovators across 55 countries. A best-selling author of 11 books, including Intelligent Leadership and The Intelligent Leader, Johnโ€™s mission is to unlock greatness in leaders, one transformation at a timeโ€‹โ€‹.

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