After working closely with executives across the United States, Mexico, and Latin America over the past several years, one pattern has become increasingly clear to me.
Experience still opens doors. But it no longer explains who will succeed once they walk through them.
For years, executive readiness was defined by accumulation. More years. Bigger titles. Broader scope. Well-known company names on a résumé. These signals gave boards and hiring committees confidence because they were visible and defensible.
They also created blind spots.
As leadership roles have become more exposed to uncertainty, organizations are realizing that past success, on its own, is an unreliable predictor of what comes next. It tells us how a leader performed under a specific set of conditions. It says far less about how they will perform when those conditions no longer exist.
The shift underway is fundamental. Companies are moving from evaluating track records to evaluating trajectories. The question is no longer only “What have they done?” but “How do they think, and how quickly do they adapt?”
Experience Still Matters, but It No Longer Protects
Experience has not lost its value. What it has lost is its ability to protect leaders from new realities.
Many of the executives who struggle today are not inexperienced. They are accomplished, capable, and proven. They built their careers in environments where assumptions were stable, planning cycles were longer, and decision paths were clearer.
When those assumptions break down, experience alone offers limited guidance.
Leadership research has increasingly shown that as roles become more complex, visible achievements matter less than learning ability, judgment, and adaptability in unfamiliar situations. Harvard Business Review has noted that organizations often misread potential by over-indexing on past success instead of the behaviors that predict performance when conditions change.
In practice, we see this repeatedly. Some leaders with impressive résumés stall quickly when context shifts. Others, with less obvious credentials, step into ambiguity with confidence and clarity.
The difference is rarely about intelligence or effort. It is about how they think.
Judgment Shows Up When the Answer Is Not Obvious
One of the clearest signals of potential is judgment under ambiguity.
Not decisiveness. Judgment.
Executives with sound judgment do not rush to certainty when information is incomplete. They ask better questions. They recognize which risks deserve immediate attention and which can be absorbed. They understand when waiting creates clarity and when waiting creates exposure.
Leadership research on decision making in uncertain environments consistently points to the same pattern. Strong leaders prioritize sense-making over speed, particularly when familiar reference points no longer apply.
This capability rarely shows up on a résumé. It reveals itself in conversation, especially when leaders are asked to walk through moments where there was no obvious right answer.
Adaptability Without Creating Instability
Adaptability has become a standard expectation, but it is often misunderstood.
Organizations are not looking for leaders who change direction constantly. They are looking for leaders who can adjust course without destabilizing the organization.
High-potential executives recalibrate thoughtfully. They absorb new information, reassess assumptions, and modify their approach while maintaining coherence for their teams. They do not confuse movement with progress.
Research on leadership during periods of disruption reinforces this balance. The most effective leaders combine responsiveness with consistency, particularly under pressure. In practice, adaptability is not about how often a leader pivots. It is about whether the organization remains steady while change occurs.
Contextual Intelligence Is No Longer Optional
Even highly capable leaders can fail if they misread their environment.
Contextual intelligence, the ability to understand organizational history, cultural norms, informal power structures, and stakeholder dynamics, has become non-negotiable.
This is especially visible in cross-border and multicultural organizations. A leadership style that works well in one context can generate resistance in another, even when the role appears identical on paper.
Work published in Harvard Business Review on contextual intelligence explains why capable leaders often struggle when they move into new environments. They apply approaches that worked before without recognizing that the context has changed.
Executives with strong contextual intelligence listen before acting. They adjust their style without losing authority or authenticity.
How Leaders Explain Their Own Success Matters
One of the most revealing moments in any executive conversation is not when a leader describes success, but how they interpret it.
High-potential leaders speak about their achievements with proportion. They acknowledge the role of teams, timing, and external conditions. They do not overstate personal impact, nor do they deflect responsibility when results disappoint.
Leadership research has consistently linked self-awareness to effectiveness in complex roles. Leaders who understand their own limitations are less likely to be blindsided by them. They are also more likely to create environments where others can perform at their best.
Energy Allocation Has Become a Leadership Signal
At the executive level, effort is assumed. What increasingly differentiates leaders is how they allocate their energy.
Executives with strong potential understand where their involvement creates leverage and where it creates noise. They resist the temptation to be everywhere. They recognize that a leader involved in every decision eventually becomes a bottleneck.
Research on executive burnout highlights that misallocated attention, not lack of effort, is one of the greatest risks facing senior leaders today. Sustainability has become a leadership signal in its own right.
From Familiarity to Readiness
The companies making the best executive decisions today are not abandoning experience. They are contextualizing it.
They are listening for how leaders think, not just what they have done.
For executives, the implication is clear. Career progression is no longer defined by accumulation alone. It is defined by judgment, adaptability, contextual awareness, and the ability to operate when certainty disappears.
Experience is a record of where you have been.
Potential is a signal of where you can go.
That distinction has become the real separator at the highest levels of leadership.

By Octavio Lepe
Executive Vice-President
Octavio is the search practice leader for Executive Management, Food & Agriculture, Sales & Marketing, and D&I in the Americas.
Barbachano International is the premier executive search and leadership advisory firm in the Americas (USA, Mexico, Canada, and Latin America) with a focus on diversity and multicultural target markets. Outplacement, Exe
