The short answerPromote from within when you have a ready internal candidate whose capability and potential genuinely fit the role, to reward and retain talent and preserve knowledge and culture; hire externally when the role needs experience, skills, or fresh perspective the business lacks internally. The best answer depends on an honest assessment of the internal option against what the role truly requires.

When a senior role opens up, the first question is often whether to promote someone internally or hire from outside. Here is how to weigh the two.

The case for promoting internally

Promoting from within has real advantages: it rewards and motivates your people, signals that growth is possible, retains talent, and brings someone who already knows the business, its culture, and its people. Internal promotions also carry less risk of a cultural misfit and often integrate faster. Where a capable internal candidate genuinely fits the role, promotion is frequently the stronger choice — and a sign of good succession planning.

The case for hiring externally

External hiring brings what the business may lack internally: experience the role now demands, specialist skills, fresh perspective, and leaders who have navigated challenges the business is facing for the first time. When no internal candidate is genuinely ready, or when the business needs new thinking or capability it does not have, hiring externally is the right answer. It also avoids the trap of promoting someone into a role they are not yet ready for out of loyalty.

Assess honestly against the role

The decision should rest on an honest comparison: what does the role genuinely require, and does the internal candidate truly meet it — not just are they a good person who deserves a chance? The common mistakes are promoting someone loyal but not ready, or overlooking a strong internal candidate through a reflex to hire externally. Assessing the internal option rigorously against the real demands of the role, ideally with objective input, is what leads to the right call.

Sometimes, benchmark both

For important roles, it can be worth considering both — genuinely assessing the internal candidate alongside the external market to make the strongest decision. A good search partner can benchmark an internal candidate against external options objectively, giving the business confidence either way — either validating the internal promotion or surfacing a stronger external hire. This is often the most rigorous approach for senior roles.

Weighing an internal candidate against the market?

We benchmark internal candidates against the external market — so you make senior appointments with confidence.

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Frequently asked questions

Should you promote from within or hire externally?

Promote from within when you have a ready internal candidate who genuinely fits the role, to reward talent and preserve knowledge; hire externally when the role needs experience, skills, or perspective the business lacks. It depends on honestly assessing the internal option against the role.

What is the biggest mistake in the hire-vs-promote decision?

Two opposite ones: promoting someone loyal but not truly ready for the role, or reflexively hiring externally and overlooking a strong internal candidate. Both come from not assessing the internal option honestly against what the role requires.

Related: In-House vs External Executive Search · What Is Succession Planning? · Leadership Assessment

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