Senior leaders must work with and through many stakeholders — boards, investors, teams, customers, partners, and more. Managing them well is a defining leadership skill. Here is what it involves.
Leaders depend on many stakeholders
Senior leaders operate amid many stakeholders — boards and investors above, teams below, and customers, partners, suppliers, regulators, and others around them — whose support, trust, and cooperation the leader depends on. Much of what a leader needs to achieve requires working with and through these stakeholders, whom they often cannot simply direct. Recognising this web of stakeholders, and that leadership success depends on managing it well, is the starting point for stakeholder management.
Understanding and engaging
Good stakeholder management begins with genuinely understanding stakeholders — their interests, concerns, expectations, and what matters to them — and engaging them thoughtfully. Leaders who understand their stakeholders and engage proactively build far stronger relationships than those who ignore or take them for granted. This understanding and engagement, tailored to each stakeholder, is foundational, because you cannot manage relationships well without understanding the people and interests involved.
Building trust and alignment
At its heart, stakeholder management is about building trust and, where possible, alignment — earning stakeholders' confidence and bringing them into support of, or at least acceptance of, the leader's direction. Trust, built over time through honesty, delivery, and genuine engagement, is what makes stakeholders supportive rather than obstructive. Leaders who build real trust and align stakeholders around shared goals achieve far more than those who face constant friction or opposition from the parties they depend on.
Navigating competing interests
Stakeholders often have competing interests, and a key part of the skill is navigating these — balancing different, sometimes conflicting, expectations and interests, and managing the tensions constructively. Leaders cannot always satisfy everyone, so they must navigate competing interests with judgement, honesty, and fairness, maintaining trust even when they cannot give every stakeholder what they want. This ability to navigate competing interests while preserving relationships is part of what makes stakeholder management a genuine and demanding leadership skill, and something rigorous assessment considers.
Assessing leaders for stakeholder skill?
We assess senior candidates for the relationship, trust, and stakeholder capabilities that senior leadership demands.
Explore Leadership Assessment →Frequently asked questions
What is stakeholder management for leaders?
Understanding, engaging, and building trust with the many parties a leader depends on — boards, investors, teams, customers, partners, and others — aligning them where possible and navigating competing interests, to earn the support and trust a leader needs to succeed.
Why is stakeholder management important for senior leaders?
Because leaders depend on many stakeholders whose support and cooperation they often can't simply direct — much of what a leader achieves requires working with and through them. Managing these relationships well earns the trust and alignment to succeed; managing them poorly undermines even a capable leader.
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