The Leadership Gap Nobody Talks About:

Why Your Best Employee May Struggle as a Manager.

By Mara Benner, True North Executive Coaching

You did everything right.

You identified your strongest performer, recognized their potential, and promoted them. It was the right call, they had earned it.

Six months later, their team engagement scores are slipping. Two strong performers have quietly started looking elsewhere. And your new leader is doing three people’s jobs, unable to let go of the work that made them great in the first place.

This is not a failure of talent. It is a failure of transition, and it happens in Fortune 500 organizations every single day.

The skills that make someone exceptional as an individual contributor are almost entirely different from the skills that make someone effective as a leader.

Delivering results independently, solving problems quickly, being the expert these are the traits that earn promotions. But leading a team requires a completely different operating system: communicating strategically up and across the organization, delegating meaningfully, coaching direct reports instead of doing their work, building executive presence in high-stakes rooms.

None of these develop automatically. None of them come with the promotion
letter.

We measured what actually changes when leaders get structured support.

Download the Leadership Impact Report, pre and post data across six leadership dimensions from a Fortune 100 cohort.

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What the Data Shows

In a recent program delivered to 15 leaders at a major national healthcare organization, we measured leadership effectiveness across six dimensions before and after.

The results were unambiguous: 

Organizational Impact Indicators

These are not satisfaction scores. They are pre-and-post measurements on defined dimensions, from a real cohort inside a Fortune-level organization.

And what did leaders say changed in how they actually show up?

“I’m far more focused on setting vision than specific tactics.” 

“Asking more thoughtful questions of the team, seeking inspiration from them vs. doing the work myself.” 

“Greater confidence in my ability to influence others at the executive leadership team level.”

What This Means for Your Organization

The leaders who will run your organization in five years are already inside it. The question is whether they will arrive at that moment prepared, or spend their first two years in a leadership role figuring out through trial and error what a structured program could have given them in nine months.

The promotion trap is not inevitable. It is the predictable result of promoting talented people without giving them the tools to lead, and it is entirely solvable 

True North Executive Coaching delivers a hybrid leadership development program
combining cohort-based sessions with individualized 1 on 1 executive coaching. This case study with a cohort of 15, people was performed within a Fortune 100 organization.