Interleaving + Succession Planning

Interleaving is actually a term used in education: It is a process whereby students mix, or interleave, multiple subjects or topics while they study, in order to improve their learning. For example: when learning about Italy, the math segment might teach about how to calculate the angle of the Leaning Tower of Pisa. The history segment might teach about Italy’s alliance with Germany during WWII, and the health segment might teach about the people who live in “blues.”

The way that I like to think of interleaving is similar to this piece of fabric where you have multiple colors that are intertwined with one another, and it's hard to tell where one begins and one ends. They all work together simultaneously to make one pattern.

Similarly, succession planning isn't a standalone.

It includes career paths that you create for every role and every department in your organization so that people know where their careers can go and what they can achieve in your organization.

As well as learning paths that are cobbled on top of - or done in conjunction with - career paths. So not only do people know where their career will go, but they also know what learning or accomplishments they have to achieve in order to hit all of those career milestones.

And it includes performance appraisals. What are you rewarding people for?

And regular performance appraisal conversations tie all of these things together.

Do your managers know how to have worthwhile performance conversations? Are they asking, “Where do you see yourself in five years? What would you like to learn more about, in this organization? Is there a job you'd like to move to, laterally?” These are questions that generally aren't heard in performance appraisal conversations because most performance appraisal conversations look backward rather than looking forward.

And again, when it comes to succession planning, all of these things are done simultaneously. They aren’t done consecutively, they don’t build upon one another, they are interwoven.  You're doing all of these things simultaneously, which bolsters your pipeline of future employees.

I often say that succession planning isn't hard, but it is time-consuming and quite tedious. You have to maintain extraordinary attention to detail because there are so many moving parts that have to function on their own as well as intertwined with one another. And the organization has to support all of these things simultaneously.

The reason that I use the term interleaving when talking about succession planning (and I’m probably the only person who does!) is because it is a perfect descriptor of the intertwining of the different “threads” that organizations must define and then commit to support in the long term, in order to ensure they have capable and ready future leaders in their pipeline.

This article was originally published on LinkedIn.