What are best practices for succession planning?
Succession planning is a critical aspect of organizational sustainability that often goes overlooked. This article explores best practices for effective succession planning, drawing on insights from industry experts. From building organizational roadmaps to creating flexible talent pipelines, discover key strategies to ensure your company’s leadership continuity and long-term success.
- Build a Roadmap for Organizational Growth
- Design a Resilient Leadership Culture
- Create Flexible Talent Pipelines
- Implement Risk Matrices and Skills Inventories
- Navigate Unique Challenges in Web3 Succession
- Develop Talent Through Regular Conversations
- Plan for Future Capabilities Not Positions
Build a Roadmap for Organizational Growth
Evaluate where the company is and where it is going. What are the strategic and organizational moves that need to be made to get there, and what are the people implications? A succession plan can be valuable for a time when it is built off of the current state organization, it is even better when it is a roadmap to growth. There will always be opportunities to grow talent internally to fill incumbent spots, keep that practice too. Some parts of the org will look the same on a chart, but may profoundly change in focus and scope, so don’t just create the prioritized lists of internal and external candidates, 9 blocks, etc.
Nathan Deily
Chief People Officer, nth Venture
Design a Resilient Leadership Culture
Succession should be treated as a long-term capacity strategy, not a short-term contingency plan. That means identifying potential successors early, yes—but also building systems where people can grow into leadership with support, feedback, and stretch opportunities. It’s not about naming ‘the next one.’ It’s about designing a leadership culture that doesn’t collapse when someone leaves.
Naomi Hattaway
Founder and President, 8th & Home
Create Flexible Talent Pipelines
Succession planning today is less about naming a replacement and more about building a resilient talent pipeline. It starts by identifying critical roles—often beyond just the C-suite—and mapping the competencies, not just the titles, needed for future success. From there, it’s about aligning development opportunities with business strategy: stretch assignments, mentorships, and cross-functional projects all play a role in preparing future leaders.
What’s changed recently is the need for agility. Roles are evolving faster due to technology and market shifts, so succession plans must be flexible, data-informed, and regularly revisited. Leadership potential isn’t measured only by tenure or performance, but also by adaptability, strategic thinking, and the ability to lead through change.
The strongest plans build in transparency—so people know where they’re headed—and focus on inclusivity, widening the lens to surface untapped talent across the organization.
Arvind Rongala
CEO, Edstellar
Implement Risk Matrices and Skills Inventories
At Remote People, we’ve implemented several best practices to plan for succession. One helpful tool that we use for succession planning is a risk matrix that shows the potential impact of each position becoming vacant. We can see at a glance which roles being vacated would cause the most harm to the organization if not quickly replaced. We also use a skills inventory to show which skills are needed for these critical roles. With regular talent assessments to determine job readiness, we are able to see which internal candidates would be able to fill these key positions. These best practices keep us well prepared for the possibility of key position turnover.
Susan Snipes
Head of People, Remote People
Navigate Unique Challenges in Web3 Succession
Succession planning in Web3 isn’t about ticking boxes or following traditional playbooks. At the senior executive level – CEOs, CFOs, COOs and beyond – we’re talking about leaders who must navigate decentralized governance, shifting regulations, and complex community dynamics. These roles demand a unique blend of technical know-how, strategic vision, and ethical leadership.
That means succession has to be fluid, anticipatory, and deeply strategic. You can’t rely on standard competency frameworks; instead, you need to focus on adaptability, ethical decision-making, and the ability to lead through ambiguity. Development paths must be bespoke, mixing cross-functional experience, mentorship, and exposure to the ecosystem’s evolving challenges.
Data plays a crucial role too. Predictive analytics isn’t just a buzzword; it’s how you spot potential gaps before they become problems and how you build a talent pipeline that’s resilient in a competitive market.
And let’s be clear, diversity and inclusion aren’t optional add-ons. They’re vital for building leadership teams that innovate, reflect your community, and make smarter decisions.
Ultimately, success comes from balancing internal development with targeted external recruitment. At RecruitBlock, we help HR leaders build these dynamic, future-proof pipelines so Web3 organizations have the visionary leaders they need to thrive.
Penny Sommerfeld
Director, RecruitBlock
Develop Talent Through Regular Conversations
For me, succession planning isn’t a one-time exercise—it’s about building the habit of staying ready.
That means making talent conversations a regular rhythm, not a reactive scramble. I hold quarterly reviews with leadership teams to ask: Who might be ready for what’s next? What would they need to grow into that role? And how can we give them meaningful opportunities to stretch and build those skills now—not later?
Succession planning isn’t just about filling roles. It’s about developing people. And when we treat it as an ongoing practice—not a last-minute emergency—we build stronger, more resilient teams over time.
Lisa Friscia
President and Founder, Franca Consulting
Plan for Future Capabilities Not Positions
I’ve spent decades building succession programs at Fortune 500 companies and learned that most HR leaders make the same critical mistake: they plan for positions instead of planning for capabilities.
When I worked with a pharmaceutical manufacturer, we found their “high-potential” list was just people who looked like current leaders. We shifted to identifying what capabilities the business would need in 5-10 years—digital change, global market expansion, regulatory complexity—then reverse-engineered development paths. This approach increased internal promotion success rates by 40% because successors were prepared for future challenges, not yesterday’s job requirements.
The breakthrough came from treating succession like clinical assessment. I use structured talent reviews that evaluate decision-making under pressure, adaptability, and influence patterns—not just performance ratings. One financial services client found their top performer couldn’t handle ambiguity well, while a “solid contributor” excelled at navigating uncertainty. Guess who became the better leader during market volatility?
Start by mapping your organization’s future business challenges, then assess who demonstrates the psychological flexibility to grow into those demands. Most succession failures happen because we promote people into tomorrow’s problems with yesterday’s skills.
Bill Berman
CEO, Berman Leadership