The Talent Sherpa Podcast

The Clock Started at Close


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The moment a PE deal closes, a bet gets made on the inherited CHRO — whether anyone names it or not. In the absence of a named standard, the rational response on both sides creates a loop that costs the exit: the CHRO performs stability, the OP reads it as contribution, and the real assessment never happens until the window for a clean decision has quietly closed.

This episode is the briefing neither side gets. Jackson and Scott — a former CHRO with real scar tissue — dismantle four assumptions that stall action, name the hidden loop that compounds inside compressed hold periods, and introduce the Translation Test: three questions that reveal whether a CHRO is operating at enterprise altitude. With PE hold periods now stretching to seven years per Bain 2026, the cost of waiting isn't abstract. It shows up in the exit.

What You'll Learn

  • The four assumptions that stall the inherited CHRO assessment — and why each one is avoidance disguised as due diligence
  • Why "wait and see" burns runway in a compressed hold — and why it never appears on a dashboard until the exit
  • The Translation Test: three questions a CHRO should answer cold, before anyone asks
  • Why "no drama" and "high altitude" look identical from the outside — and why confusing them is expensive
  • How to separate CEO sentiment from a real strategic assessment of the CHRO
  • The five plays for a clean, early decision — including how to name a development contract that doesn't become a delay

Key Quotes

  • "Fit to prior state and fit to future state aren't the same measure."
  • "Waiting for sufficient evidence means paying for every insight with time you just can't get back."
  • "No drama is the primary thing people say is your contribution? You may be delivering real value while your strategic contribution remains completely invisible."
  • "When you finally get to the table — too many of us ask if we can talk."
  • "Capable of what, by when, and at what cost to the thesis if the answer turns out to be no?"

Sources for Statistics Cited

  • 6x more likely for top PE exits to have a CHRO hired during hold (30% vs. 5%) — The People Space
  • Financial engineering: ~25% of PE value creation, down from ~70% in 2000 — CAIS Group
  • PE hold periods now ~7 years, up from 5–6 — Bain Global PE Report 2026

Keywords: inherited CHRO, CHRO assessment, private equity talent strategy, CHRO altitude, PE hold period, human capital value creation, CEO CHRO alignment, CHRO first 90 days, PE exit performance, talent risk in business language

Support the show

If this episode landed, the next move is yours. 

Coaching is where it closes fastest — Jackson has developed CHROs from both sides of the table, as their leader and as their coach. The CHRO Ascent Academy, CHRO Chronicles, and the best-selling Substack are there too. 

All at mytalentsherpa.com.

In private equity: Propulsion AI surfaces workforce risk before the close and translates strategy into individual accountability after it. Before AI automation -  drive outcome clarity with digital teammates to do the work fast and at scale. 

All at getpropulsion.ai.

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The Talent Sherpa PodcastBy Jackson O. Lynch