
What You Need to Know About Executive Recruiting
HBR IdeaCastAI Summary
→ WHAT IT COVERS Executive recruiters now play expanded strategic roles in vetting both internal and external C-suite candidates. Mark Thompson and Byron Laughlin explain how aspiring leaders can navigate behavioral interviews, assessments, and reference checks. → KEY INSIGHTS - **Recruiter relationships:** Build connections with top executive search firms before needing them, treating interactions as developmental opportunities to learn market trends and understand how your resume translates across different roles and industries. - **Behavioral interview preparation:** Recruiters examine your entire history from childhood forward, seeking character evidence, learning mindset, and resilience. Prepare stories demonstrating both technical expertise and emotional intelligence across career highs and lows. - **Assessment endurance:** Practice multiple psychometric tests beforehand to build stamina for day-long evaluation sessions. Tests measure pressure response, leadership style, and cultural fit. Fatigue can force candidates into making things up or requesting breaks. - **Reference management:** Proactively cultivate a multi-decade network of professional relationships who can speak to specific job criteria. Recruiters will contact unlisted references and use AI to scrape Glassdoor, proxy statements, and social media for comprehensive background checks. → NOTABLE MOMENT One candidate used AI practice sessions to refine how she articulated both positive and negative news to boards. The CTO developed crisp presentation skills and now runs technology operations for a major global brand. 💼 SPONSORS [{"name": "Deel", "url": "deel.com/hbr"}, {"name": "LinkedIn Ads", "url": "linkedin.com/ideacast"}, {"name": "NetSuite by Oracle", "url": "netsuite.com/ideacast"}] 🏷️ Executive Recruiting, C-Suite Leadership, CEO Succession, Behavioral Interviews