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So while you find a way to cover the five key questions, remember several guidelines to make the very best first impression.

1. You Don’t Have to Have All the Answers

No one expects you to know everything; in fact, people will be suspicious if you imply that you do. Avoid the temptation to think you have to be the savior and have immediate answers.

Given the magnetic pull that many leaders feel of having to have the solution to every problem, this point is worth reiterating, especially if the situation you are moving into is a sensitive one…

2. Addressing Doubts and Fears

Whether you are a new CEO coming into a company or a manager coming into a new department, your arrival is bound to create anxiety. Being sensitive to this and having a process to address it will help you minimize the upheaval. Recognize that your reputation will be preceding you as you walk into the room. By the time of your arrival, you can be sure that you’ve been researched on the Web and that your former colleagues have been called. It’s not just your individual reputation; if you are an outside hire, it extends to your previous company as well…

Libby Sartain, senior vice president of human resources at Yahoo!., describes the essential elements of a new leader assimilation process:

  • When a new leader is hired, convene a meeting with that person’s new team members during the first week. With the leader in the room, give all the team members the chance to introduce themselves and say a little bit about who they are and what they do.
  • Then, with the leader out the room, have the team answer these questions:
  • What do we expect of this new person?
  • What do we want the new leader to know about us? What do we do well? Where do we need improvements?
  • What do we want to know about the new leader? What are our concerns about him or her?
  • What are the burning issues in our department?
  • What are the major obstacles that the new leader will face?
  • Put the answers on the flip chart - but make sure they’re anonymous so that the leader won’t later be able to connect the comments to any one specific team member.
  • After a break, reconvene the team with the leader and go over the items on the flip chart. Give the new leader a chance to ask questions about the comments and explore the ways in which he or she can take quick action on some of the issues.
  • This discussion is a great way for the entire team to discover with the leader some of the unspoken issues, misunderstandings, and disconnects. The anonymity of this exercise can bring to the surface more issues in one day than weeks of one-on-one meetings. Dirty laundry is aired. And in this open atmosphere, the team begins to gel. The new leader can now formulate an agenda for the first few months…

3. Neutralize Lingering Resentment

…

  • What should I be thinking about that I wasn’t thinking about when I was head of XYZ division?
  • What should I know that I might not have known before?
  • What’s on your mind?
  • What would you like the new CEO to be doing?...

4. Don’t Disrespect Your Predecessor

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Jeff Killeen had prior CEO/COO experience at Forbes and Barnes & Noble, both of which were “founder-intensive” companies, when he took over as CEO of GlobalSpec, the world’s largest search engine and online information resources for engineers. He succeeded John Schneiter, one of the company’s four founders, who was staying on as president. “There are some who look at an entrepreneurial situation and without even meeting a founder thinks a founder needs to be moved out,” Killeen says. “But unless founders become unmanageable or otherwise destructive, I believe you’re generally better served to build off their vision and make them feel like a million bucks than you are to get rid of them.