19/02/2026
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In many organisations, leadership gaps do not appear as abrupt failures. They emerge quietly. The business is still operating. Meetings are held. Decisions are taken, at least in theory. Yet execution slows, alignment weakens, and confidence subtly erodes. Growth becomes harder to sustain. Transformation initiatives lose momentum. Talented people disengage.
Leadership is rarely the problem that gets named first. It is often hidden behind operational complexity, market pressure, or organisational growth.
And yet, leadership gaps are among the most expensive risks an organisation can carry.
This article offers a strategic lens to identify leadership gaps early, understand what truly causes them, and explore how organisations can address them with precision, without defaulting to rushed or misaligned long-term decisions.
Leadership gaps are often misdiagnosed
Most organisations do not suffer from a lack of talent. They suffer from a lack of leadership capacity aligned with their current reality.
A leadership gap exists when the organisation’s strategy, complexity or pace of change outgrows the leadership model that once worked.
This gap can emerge even when all leadership roles are formally filled.
It typically appears in moments such as:
- Rapid growth or international expansion
- Organisational or cultural transformation
- Mergers, acquisitions or carve-outs
- Sudden executive departures
- Market disruption or crisis situations
The mistake many organisations make is treating leadership gaps as a recruitment issue, rather than a strategic one.
Read more: How Leadership Shapes Organisational Culture and Employee Engagement
The underestimated cost of leadership gaps
Leadership gaps are not neutral. They compound over time.
Strategic dilution
When leadership capacity is insufficient or misaligned, strategy loses clarity. Priorities shift. Initiatives multiply. Execution becomes inconsistent.
The organisation remains busy, but progress slows.
Decision-making imbalance
Leadership gaps often lead to either excessive centralisation or decision paralysis. In both cases, agility suffers and accountability becomes blurred.
Talent erosion
High performers expect direction, coherence and trust. When leadership fails to provide this, disengagement follows, often long before resignation letters appear.
Pressure on HR and remaining leaders
HR teams and key managers are forced to compensate for leadership voids. They become firefighters rather than strategic partners. Burnout risk increases.
By the time the organisation reacts, the gap has already affected performance, culture and employer reputation.
How to identify leadership gaps in the workplace
Leadership gaps rarely announce themselves directly. They reveal themselves through patterns.
1. Strategy is clear, execution is not
When strategic intent is sound but results remain inconsistent, leadership alignment is often the missing link.
Key questions to ask:
- Are leaders translating strategy into clear priorities?
- Is accountability explicit at leadership level?
- Do teams understand the rationale behind decisions?
Strong leadership turns strategy into disciplined execution.
2. Activity replaces impact
An overload of initiatives with limited measurable outcomes is a classic signal.
It often reflects:
- Insufficient prioritisation
- Weak leadership arbitration
- Lack of ownership at senior level
3. Middle management is stretched or disengaged
Middle managers are the first to absorb leadership gaps above them.
Warning signs include:
- Increased turnover
- Escalation of minor issues
- Declining initiative and confidence
4. Leadership roles exist, authority does not
Titles do not guarantee leadership impact.
When leaders hesitate to decide, avoid accountability, or seek constant validation, the organisation experiences a leadership vacuum — even with a full org chart.
5. Change initiatives stall repeatedly
Transformation requires visible, credible leadership. When change programmes slow or fail, the issue is often insufficient leadership sponsorship rather than resistance.
Read more: How to Face Leadership Gaps and Sudden Departures
The limits of traditional executive recruitment
Executive recruitment remains essential, but timing matters.
In periods of uncertainty or transition, organisations face several constraints:
- Lengthy hiring processes
- Limited ability to assess real leadership impact pre-hire
- High cost of misalignment
- Internal disruption during prolonged vacancies
Leadership, however, cannot remain in suspense.
Interim leadership: restoring clarity and momentum
Interim management is not a tactical patch. It is a strategic leadership instrument.
An experienced interim leader brings immediate value through:
- Rapid decision-making capacity
- Proven experience in complex or transitional environments
- Objective perspective, free from internal politics
- Clear mandates focused on outcomes and knowledge transfer
Interim leadership allows organisations to stabilise, execute and regain perspective, before committing to long-term decisions.
When interim management becomes the most strategic option
Interim leadership proves particularly effective when:
Navigating transition
Growth phases, restructurings or transformations demand leaders who have already faced similar challenges.
Protecting performance
When leadership gaps threaten operational stability, speed matters more than perfection.
Preparing succession
Interim leaders can structure teams, professionalise functions and mentor future leaders.
Ensuring objectivity
Sensitive decisions are often better handled by leaders without long-term political constraints.
A strategic advantage often overlooked: flexibility
Interim management offers organisations something permanent recruitment cannot: optionality.
It enables:
- Immediate leadership impact
- Reduced long-term risk
- Clear deliverables and timelines
- Informed, confident permanent hiring decisions
For HR Directors, it also reinforces their role as strategic partners to the business.
A familiar situation
A Belgian organisation undergoing rapid growth faced persistent execution delays. The strategy was sound, budgets approved, teams committed, yet progress stalled.
The root cause was not competence, but leadership bandwidth. The executive team was stretched, and cross-functional ownership unclear.
Rather than rushing a permanent hire, the organization mandated Morgan Philips Belgium to find an interim executive with experience in scale-up environments.
Within weeks, priorities were clarified, governance strengthened, and momentum restored.
Six months later, the organisation appointed a permanent leader, with clarity, alignment and confidence.
Leadership gaps are signals, not failures
Leadership gaps indicate evolution. They signal that the organisation has outgrown a previous leadership model. They signal the need for adaptation. They signal opportunity.
The strongest organisations are not those without gaps, but those that identify and address them early.
Leadership is not a fixed structure. It is a dynamic capability.
When leadership gaps appear, the strategic question is not whether to act, but how.
Interim management offers a discreet, effective and results-driven way to restore leadership capacity, protect performance and prepare the future.
Organisations that act early preserve optionality. Those that wait often inherit constraint.
If leadership alignment has become a strategic concern, a confidential discussion is often the first step toward clarity.
With its unique expertise, Morgan Philips Interim Management positions itself as a trusted partner for Belgian organizations seeking to rapidly identify, engage and deploy experienced interim leaders capable of driving transformation, managing critical transitions and delivering immediate, measurable value.