Technical excellence got you to management. But the leap to director requires a fundamentally different skill set. Here's what search committees are really evaluating.
Dr. Julia Weber
Head of Leadership Practice
The transition from senior manager to director is one of the most challenging career jumps. Many excellent managers plateau because they don't understand that the rules change at the director level.
1. Strategic vs. Operational Focus At director level, you're expected to shape strategy, not just execute it. You need to demonstrate that you can think 3-5 years ahead and influence company direction.
2. Cross-Functional Leadership Directors must collaborate across departments. Your ability to influence without direct authority becomes critical. We assess this through behavioral interviews about cross-functional projects.
3. External Presence Directors represent the company externally. Board presentations, client relationships, and industry visibility matter. If you're invisible in your industry, you'll struggle to land director roles.
4. Talent Development At this level, you're judged by the leaders you've developed. Search committees ask: "Who have you promoted? Who did you mentor that became successful?"
5. Commercial Acumen Even non-commercial directors need to understand P&L impact. Every decision should connect to business outcomes.
How to Prepare: - Take on cross-functional project leadership - Build your external profile through speaking and publishing - Mentor junior leaders and track their progress - Develop a point of view on your industry's future
Whether you're looking for your next leadership role or need to hire exceptional talent, we're here to help.