In the search for leadership talent, ‘energy’ is often the most requested trait. At bpe search, we advocate for a broader, more inclusive definition of that word. True energy isn’t just about speed; it is about learning agility and the engagement that comes from having navigated multiple market chapters.
The most successful boards today are moving away from demographic sameness and embracing an intergenerational model. This isn’t about choosing experience over youth; it is about alignment: blending fresh, disruptive innovation with the grounded wisdom of experience.
The Power of Pattern Recognition
While potential is an exciting concept to hire for, pattern recognition is a tangible commercial asset. When a business faces a sudden market shift or a complex restructure, you need leaders who don’t panic because they have quite literally “seen the movie” before.
As Annabel Weeden, who recently joined bpe search, observes: “An experienced leader brings a unique groundedness to the boardroom. They provide the gravitas and emotional maturity required to steady a business. While a younger leader might offer the ‘new world’ fluency, a seasoned professional offers the judgment to ensure that energy is directed toward the right goals.”
Diversity as a Strategic Asset
At bpe search, we view intergenerational leadership as a fundamental tool for better decision-making, rather than a box-ticking exercise. Investors and stakeholders are increasingly recognising that cognitive diversity, which must include a breadth of age and life stages, is a critical component of modern risk management.
A truly balanced board thrives on the friction between two distinct but complementary forces:
The Innovation Edge: Emerging leaders who bring new-world fluency. They are often the ones to challenge the status quo, identify emerging tech trends, and apply a disrupter mindset to legacy problems. They prevent a business from becoming stagnant or out of touch with shifting consumer behaviours.
The Foundational Wisdom: Seasoned executives and directors who provide perspective from the view of experience. They offer institutional memory, complex stakeholder awareness, and the emotional maturity required to steady a business during periods of rapid change. They ensure that disruption is channelled into sustainable, long-term success.
By intentionally bringing these two groups together, a business avoids the sameness trap, a state where a leadership team becomes an echo chamber of similar experiences. When a board mirrors itself too closely, blind spots go unchallenged, and risks are overlooked.
Moving Beyond the “Number of Years”
To build truly high-performing teams, we must move past using years of service as a primary measure of capability. Fixed requirements for exactly 10 or 20 years of experience act as an arbitrary hurdle that often overlooks the profound value found at both ends of the professional spectrum.
What we should be evaluating instead is the richness and relevance of the journey.
On one hand, this means valuing the leader who has navigated multiple market cycles and diverse industries. They bring a level of resilience and seasoned judgement that serves as a vital insurance policy for any board.
On the other hand, we must equally advocate for the emerging leader. These individuals often possess a high degree of "learning agility" and a native understanding of the digital and cultural shifts currently disrupting every sector. By imposing strict year-of-experience requirements, boards risk locking out the very "disrupter" mindset and fresh perspective required to stay competitive.
We look for the Culture Add, the leader who, regardless of their career stage, brings the specific perspective, energy, or depth of judgement that the current board is missing. True intergenerational success happens when we stop counting years and start measuring the impact of diverse lived experiences.
A Commitment to Bravery
At bpe search, we’ve built a culture around the bravery to look beyond the obvious, ensuring we’re always challenging the market to find the best possible outcomes for our clients. We aren’t afraid to have honest, and sometimes difficult, conversations about the true definition of value and the hidden biases that hold boards back.
This Intergenerational Week, we are encouraging our network to be bold. Don't just look for a "safe" hire who mirrors the existing team. Look for the diversity of perspective that will actually move the needle.
Interested in how an intergenerational approach can strengthen your leadership team? Contact the bpe search team to discuss building a truly balanced board.
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