PathMBA
Three things tend to decide whether a new manager transition holds or breaks, and the research converges on them. First, new leaders who secure a visible early win inside the first 60 days — something the team can point to — dramatically outperform the ones who spend that window "just listening." [1][3]
Second, the transition almost never fails for technical reasons. It fails on emotional reflexes: a strong IC keeps solving problems instead of delegating them, and the team learns their new manager is still their old peer with a title. Name this out loud with her — the pattern is predictable and pre-empting it lands better than correcting it later. [2][4][5]
Third, schedule the feedback loop before she needs it. Weekly 30-minute 1:1s with you for the first 90 days, a structured skip-level at day 60, and a written debrief at day 90. Without this, problems surface as attrition. [3][6]
Sources · 6
- [1]The First 90 Days: Critical Success Strategies for New LeadersMichael Watkins · Book
- [2]Why New Managers Fail — and How to SucceedLenny Rachitsky · Podcast
- [3]Radical Candor: Be a Kick-Ass Boss Without Losing Your HumanityKim Scott · Book
- [4]Psychological Safety and the Modern ManagerAmy Edmondson · HBR
- [5]High Output ManagementAndy Grove · Book
- [6]The Multiplier Effect: Becoming a Talent AmplifierLiz Wiseman · Book
Rehearse the promotion conversationTurn into a 90-day playbookAsk a follow-up