In Poor Charlie’s Almanack, Charlie Munger outlines his investment principles in the form of a checklist—a disciplined way to reduce bias, focus on fundamentals, and avoid costly mistakes. Leaders evaluating people, whether current employees or new hires face a similar challenge. Emotions, urgency, or reputation often cloud judgment. What if we applied Munger’s checklist mindset to talent decisions?
Below is a structured framework senior executives can use to evaluate leaders and high-potential employees objectively. It is designed not as a formula, but as a disciplined way to ask the right questions.
1. Character
The foundation of trust and leadership potential.
- Does this person consistently demonstrate integrity, even under pressure?
- Do their actions align with stated values, or are there gaps?
- How do they handle accountability—do they own mistakes or deflect?
2. Work Ethic and Work Style
Beyond effort—are they effective and sustainable?
- Do they consistently follow through, or do they overpromise and underdeliver?
- How do they structure their day—are they proactive or reactive?
- Are they disciplined in the details that matter, or do they thrive only in crisis mode?
3. Interpersonal and Soft Skills
The currency of influence in modern organizations.
- How do peers, subordinates, and clients describe working with them?
- Can they build trust quickly in new relationships?
- Do they adjust their communication style for different audiences?
4. Intellectual Capacity
Not just IQ—applied judgment and adaptability.
- How quickly do they grasp complex information or ambiguous problems?
- Do they connect dots across disciplines, or stay siloed?
- Can they simplify complexity for others, or do they add confusion?
5. Decisiveness
The ability to make the right call under uncertainty.
- Do they have a track record of timely, sound decisions?
- Do they seek input appropriately without falling into analysis paralysis?
- How do they respond when a decision turns out wrong—do they course-correct or double down?
6. Emotional Intelligence
Self-awareness and resilience in action.
- Do they recognize their emotional triggers and manage them constructively?
- How do they respond to stress, conflict or setbacks?
- Do they elevate the team’s energy—or drain it?
7. Experience in the Industry
Context matters—but it isn’t everything.
- Have they demonstrated success in relevant market conditions?
- Are they learning and adapting as the industry evolves, or relying on outdated playbooks?
- Do they bring outside perspectives that challenge conventional thinking?
8. Performance in the Job (Then vs. Now)
Past results don’t always predict future success.
- What explains their historical standout performance? Was it individual skill, team context or favorable conditions?
- Are they equally effective in new roles (e.g., the top engineer promoted to project manager who now struggles)?
- If performance slipped, is it a skills gap, a role misfit or a motivation issue?
Applying the Checklist as a Leader
When evaluating current employees:
- Which of these categories explain their strengths—and which explain their struggles?
- Are underperformers in the wrong seat, or do they lack the capacity to grow into it?
- What interventions (mentorship, realignment, or exit) make the most sense?
When considering new senior hires:
- Are we overly influenced by a polished résumé or big-company brand?
- Have we validated not just what they achieved, but how?
- Have we probed for the conditions under which they thrive—and those where they falter?
The Leadership Imperative
Charlie Munger once said, “Checklist routines avoid a lot of errors.” For executives, this is more than a hiring tool. It’s a lens for diagnosing performance, removing bias, and ensuring leaders are placed where they can thrive.
The cost of a mis-hire—or of allowing a current leader to languish in the wrong role—is measured not just in dollars, but in opportunity lost, morale eroded, and talent squandered. A checklist discipline helps leaders cut through emotion and act on facts.
The question isn’t whether your people are talented. The question is: are they in the right roles, at the right time, with the right support?
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