CEO Incompetency
Deb S
16 Posts
I need help with a touchy issue. Our CEO is experiencing diminishing mental capacity that has steadily progressed from an annoyance to serious incompetency. We, as a management team, have been covering for him - kinda stuck between our duty to make our boss look good, our fondness for him, and the well-being of the company. We approached him with our concern for him about a year ago; he promised to see his doctor. He tells me that his doctor finds nothing (physically) wrong with him. We don't know if he a)went to the doctor, b)the doc did find something wrong but our boss will not admit is, c)the doc found something wrong and our boss can't remember it. We also approached the board of directors regarding this situation. The board acknowledged that they had "noticed something" but seems more comfortable with micromanaging now than doing something about the CEO. We are very concerned that the CEO may cause significant harm to the company, not only financially but to our reputation as an industry leader in this state. We have been approached by employees as well as his peers about his health. He has no intention of retiring any time soon. By the way, the rest of the management team is documenting events to illustrate our concerns. Any advice?
Comments
Forced retirement with a severance package for the next 5 years? that might be cheaper than taking yoru chances.
Our CEO had a different set of problems than yours does, but you have to keep after the situation so that it eventually doesn't bring everyone down.
Pinpoint the problems with his job and have the board set up a performance improvement plan. If the health stuff comes up during that discussion, deal with it then. If there is an accomodation, decide if you can do it and then monitor his performance and terminate if necessary.
You also indicated you have already had some private discussions with him regarding his health. If your relationship is close, perhaps again you could talk with him with friendly advice to seek medical help before the board has to take more embarassing actions against him. But if he doesn't recognize any work performance problems, and you can't tactfully help him see what the rest of you do, then let the board handle it.
Oh, and by the way, Livindonsouth, welcome to the forum. You'll find alot of weird comings and goings around here.
#1 thing a consultant shouldn't say: "I could tell you the answer right now, but we're committed to a three month project..." #-o
>crapped my pants...' >
That was one of my all time favorite skits. I was about to crap MY pants I was laughing so hard.
Anyone going to Margaret Morford's workshop in Las Vegas this week?