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竞争CEO职位要注意:这些细微失误可以让你出局

Ruth Umoh
2025-12-18

一些细微的信号,可能在无意中让高管在CEO竞逐中出局。

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在通往最高管理层的竞争中,推动领导者前进的因素——如战略视野、执行力、行业专长——已广为人知。而那些悄然令他们出局的因素,则隐蔽得多。最终获任者与止步者之间的区别,往往与能力关系不大。真正起淘汰作用的,是那些细微、行为层面且大多无意识的特质。它们不在高光时刻显露,而是在层层审视下,通过领导者不经意流露的细节呈现出来。

高管猎头几乎置身于每一次重大CEO继任的中心,他们比任何人都更清晰地看到这些模式。罗盛咨询(Russell Reynolds Associates)CEO康斯坦丁·亚历山德拉基斯(Constantine Alexandrakis)日常工作便是为董事会提供建议并评估全球顶尖高管。他目睹过优秀的候选人在最后阶段失去势头,也见过一些人仅仅因为避开了同行踩中的陷阱而成功上位。在他看来,让CEO候选人在后期功亏一篑的失误,几乎都与能力无关,而是源于候选人在自我展示时无意中传递出的信号。

最常见的警示信号是对“我”字的过度执着。有些高管将成就完全归功于个人胜利而非团队合作,这无意中向董事会传递出一种信号:他们可能不愿分享荣誉与权力。如今的CEO遴选看重协作能力、统筹全局的本领以及提升整个领导团队的魄力。如果过分强调个人功绩,董事会便会认为其领导风格与当今对这一职位的期待不符。

与此类似的一种失误,是通过行程安排流露出的自我意识。亚历山德拉基斯提到一些候选人坚持乘坐头等舱、声称数周内都没有空档,或提出死板的日程要求。对高管本人而言,这或许只是正常的边界设定,但在董事会眼中,这可能被视为一种特权心态,并预示着未来与此人共事可能困难重重。而灵活变通的态度,则能体现出对流程的尊重及对该职位的真正兴趣。

另一个代价高昂的错误,是用漂亮话回避关于失败的提问。董事会寻求的是深刻的自我反思,而非完美无瑕的履历。然而,许多高管仍会习惯性地给出千篇一律的空洞回答,比如“我工作太拼”“我承担太多”,或是一些经过修饰、毫无信息量的轶事。这类回答要么显得缺乏自省,要么暴露了对展现脆弱的恐惧。两者都不会留下好印象。董事会需要的是了解自身盲点并能持续进化的领导者;无法阐明真实教训的候选人,容易让人感觉其成长已陷入停滞。

难以配合的沟通方式是另一个悄无声息的淘汰因素。有些高管试图“导演”面试过程——主导议程、预设流程,或要求过度准备——这会迅速引发摩擦。这些行为暗示,这位领导者可能难以应对CEO角色天然伴随的模糊性与不可预测性。董事会需要的是能在现实约束中取得成功的CEO,而非事事都需按自己喜好安排的管理者。

最后一种,也往往最具破坏性的失误,是过度推销。有些候选人用力过猛,要么答非所问、透露过多,要么过于明显地试图讨好。结果非但没有展现自信,反而流露出迫切与焦虑。由于CEO遴选既看重能力也看重沉稳,那些表现得踏实、持重的领导者,往往持续优于过度表现者。董事会评估的不仅是候选人的过往成就,也包括他们在高压之下如何举止自持。

这些陷阱往往连当事人自己也难以察觉。亚历山德拉基斯指出,讽刺之处在于,当一个人进入CEO的考察范围时,他通常已无需再证明自己的才华。真正需要证明的,是分寸感。最终胜出的候选人,往往是那些克制住了过度修饰、过度揽功或过度设计形象的冲动,转而展现出从容、谦逊和自知之明的人。而这些品质,正被董事会视为领导现代企业不可或缺的核心素质。(财富中文网)

译者:郝秀

审校:汪皓

在通往最高管理层的竞争中,推动领导者前进的因素——如战略视野、执行力、行业专长——已广为人知。而那些悄然令他们出局的因素,则隐蔽得多。最终获任者与止步者之间的区别,往往与能力关系不大。真正起淘汰作用的,是那些细微、行为层面且大多无意识的特质。它们不在高光时刻显露,而是在层层审视下,通过领导者不经意流露的细节呈现出来。

高管猎头几乎置身于每一次重大CEO继任的中心,他们比任何人都更清晰地看到这些模式。罗盛咨询(Russell Reynolds Associates)CEO康斯坦丁·亚历山德拉基斯(Constantine Alexandrakis)日常工作便是为董事会提供建议并评估全球顶尖高管。他目睹过优秀的候选人在最后阶段失去势头,也见过一些人仅仅因为避开了同行踩中的陷阱而成功上位。在他看来,让CEO候选人在后期功亏一篑的失误,几乎都与能力无关,而是源于候选人在自我展示时无意中传递出的信号。

最常见的警示信号是对“我”字的过度执着。有些高管将成就完全归功于个人胜利而非团队合作,这无意中向董事会传递出一种信号:他们可能不愿分享荣誉与权力。如今的CEO遴选看重协作能力、统筹全局的本领以及提升整个领导团队的魄力。如果过分强调个人功绩,董事会便会认为其领导风格与当今对这一职位的期待不符。

与此类似的一种失误,是通过行程安排流露出的自我意识。亚历山德拉基斯提到一些候选人坚持乘坐头等舱、声称数周内都没有空档,或提出死板的日程要求。对高管本人而言,这或许只是正常的边界设定,但在董事会眼中,这可能被视为一种特权心态,并预示着未来与此人共事可能困难重重。而灵活变通的态度,则能体现出对流程的尊重及对该职位的真正兴趣。

另一个代价高昂的错误,是用漂亮话回避关于失败的提问。董事会寻求的是深刻的自我反思,而非完美无瑕的履历。然而,许多高管仍会习惯性地给出千篇一律的空洞回答,比如“我工作太拼”“我承担太多”,或是一些经过修饰、毫无信息量的轶事。这类回答要么显得缺乏自省,要么暴露了对展现脆弱的恐惧。两者都不会留下好印象。董事会需要的是了解自身盲点并能持续进化的领导者;无法阐明真实教训的候选人,容易让人感觉其成长已陷入停滞。

难以配合的沟通方式是另一个悄无声息的淘汰因素。有些高管试图“导演”面试过程——主导议程、预设流程,或要求过度准备——这会迅速引发摩擦。这些行为暗示,这位领导者可能难以应对CEO角色天然伴随的模糊性与不可预测性。董事会需要的是能在现实约束中取得成功的CEO,而非事事都需按自己喜好安排的管理者。

最后一种,也往往最具破坏性的失误,是过度推销。有些候选人用力过猛,要么答非所问、透露过多,要么过于明显地试图讨好。结果非但没有展现自信,反而流露出迫切与焦虑。由于CEO遴选既看重能力也看重沉稳,那些表现得踏实、持重的领导者,往往持续优于过度表现者。董事会评估的不仅是候选人的过往成就,也包括他们在高压之下如何举止自持。

这些陷阱往往连当事人自己也难以察觉。亚历山德拉基斯指出,讽刺之处在于,当一个人进入CEO的考察范围时,他通常已无需再证明自己的才华。真正需要证明的,是分寸感。最终胜出的候选人,往往是那些克制住了过度修饰、过度揽功或过度设计形象的冲动,转而展现出从容、谦逊和自知之明的人。而这些品质,正被董事会视为领导现代企业不可或缺的核心素质。(财富中文网)

译者:郝秀

审校:汪皓

In the race to the corner office, the factors that propel leaders forward—vision, execution, industry expertise—are well understood. The factors that quietly take them out of the running are far more elusive. What separates those who move from shortlist to appointment often has little to do with capability. Instead, the disqualifiers are subtle, behavioral, and largely unintentional, surfacing in the small cues leaders reveal under scrutiny rather than the big, splashy moments.

Executive recruiters, who sit at the center of nearly every major CEO succession, see these patterns more clearly than anyone. Constantine Alexandrakis, CEO of Russell Reynolds Associates, spends his days advising boards and assessing the world’s most senior executives. He has watched exceptional candidates lose momentum at the final stage, and others rise simply because they avoided the traps their peers stumbled into. When he describes the late-stage slips that cost CEO hopefuls the role, almost none relate to competence. They stem from inadvertent signals in how candidates present themselves.

The most common red flag is an overdeveloped attachment to the word “I.” Executives who position achievements solely as personal triumphs rather than as the product of a team unintentionally signal to boards that they may not share credit or power. Today’s CEO searches prize collaboration, orchestration, and the ability to elevate an entire leadership team. Lean too heavily on individual accomplishments, and boards see a leadership profile misaligned with the modern expectations of the role.

A close cousin of that misstep is ego expressed through logistics. Alexandrakis recalls candidates who insisted on first-class travel, declared no availability for weeks, or showed rigid scheduling demands. What may feel like normal boundary-setting to an executive can read to a board as entitlement and a preview of how challenging that leader might be to support. Flexibility, however, signals respect for the process and genuine interest in the role.

Another costly mistake is the polished non-answer to questions about failure. Boards are seeking introspection, not perfection. Yet many executives still default to canned, hollow responses like “I work too hard,” “I take on too much,” or sanitized anecdotes that reveal nothing. These answers suggest either a lack of self-awareness or a fear of vulnerability. Neither lands well. Boards want leaders who understand their blind spots and can evolve; candidates who can’t articulate real lessons risk signaling that their development has stalled.

High-maintenance communication is another silent eliminator. Executives who attempt to choreograph the interview—dictating the agenda, scripting the flow, or requiring excessive preparation—quickly create friction. These behaviors hint at a leader who may struggle with the ambiguity and unpredictability inherent in the CEO role. Boards want CEOs who can succeed amid real-world constraints, not leaders who need everything arranged to their liking.

The final and often most damaging misstep is over-selling. Some candidates overshoot, talking past questions, oversharing, or trying too visibly to impress. Instead of projecting confidence, they project desperation. Since CEO searches value composure as much as capability, leaders who appear grounded and steady consistently outperform those who over-reach. Boards are assessing both what candidates have done and how they comport themselves when the stakes are high.

These pitfalls often go unnoticed by the executives committing them. And the irony, Alexandrakis notes, is that by the time someone reaches CEO consideration, they rarely need to prove their brilliance. What they need to prove is their balance. The candidates who advance are those who resist the urge to over-polish, over-claim, or over-engineer their presentation, and instead demonstrate the poise, humility, and self-awareness that boards now see as essential to leading a modern enterprise.

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
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