Wait a month. Your new hire's odds go from 50/50 to 90%+
How ClassDojo turned executive hiring from a coin flip into a near-sure thing with a shadowing month — and why new hires love it rather than feel insulted.
The question that changed ClassDojo’s hiring
Matt Mochary asked ClassDojo CEO Sam Chaudhary: “If you could take your odds of a new hire working out from 50/50 to 99% — but you had to wait one extra month — would you take it?”
The answer was obvious. So they tried it.
Their incoming Head of People — ex-Stripe, ten years of experience — flew from New York to San Francisco every week for six weeks. No responsibilities. No deliverables. Just shadow the outgoing leader, sit in on one-on-ones, and watch how decisions actually get made.
The result: by the time she started managing, she had an X-ray view of the company. No guessing about who holds informal power, no misreading the culture, no costly early mistakes to spend a year unwinding.
ClassDojo made shadowing the default for every new hire after that. Four weeks minimum.
Why executive hires actually fail
Senior hires rarely fail on competence — you screened for that. They fail on context: they arrive carrying their last company’s playbook and start running it before learning whether it fits. The expensive failure mode is action, not inaction — reorganizing a team they do not understand yet, making promises the culture cannot absorb, alienating the informal leaders they could not see.
The standard onboarding — a laptop, a slide deck, and “you own this now” by Friday — maximizes exactly that risk. It demands action precisely when the hire knows the least.
Shadowing inverts it. For a few weeks, the new executive’s only job is to absorb: how meetings really run versus how the wiki says they run, which agreements stick and which evaporate, where decisions actually happen. Watching the outgoing leader’s one-on-ones is worth more than any handover document — that is where the real state of the team is visible.
“Won’t they feel insulted?”
This is the fear most CEOs raise: a senior hire — someone with a decade at a great company — being told they will not have responsibilities for a month. Won’t that signal distrust?
The reality is the opposite. Every new hire, no matter how senior, privately fears failing in the first 90 days. Offering a no-pressure learning period is not an insult — it is a gift. They take it every time.
The insult, if anything, is the standard alternative: full accountability from day one with none of the context needed to succeed.
How to apply it this week
If you have an offer out or a start date coming:
- Add the shadowing period to the offer conversation, framed as a gift. “Your first four weeks have no deliverables. Your job is to learn how we actually work, so that when you take over you do it with full context.”
- Schedule the shadowing deliberately. One-on-ones, leadership meetings, customer calls, the outgoing leader’s day if there is one. Watching beats reading.
- Set the takeover date in advance. Shadowing has an end. The point is a sharper start, not a delayed one.
- Debrief weekly. Ask what they are seeing that surprises them. You will learn as much about your company from their fresh eyes as they learn about it from yours.
A month feels expensive when you are desperate for help. It is the cheapest month you will ever buy: compare it to the cost of unwinding a failed executive hire — severance, the restarted search, and a year of the team’s trust.
FAQ
How long should a new executive shadow before taking over?
Four weeks is a strong default; ClassDojo made it their minimum for every hire. For very senior roles inheriting a large org, six weeks is reasonable. The key is that the period is defined in advance with a hard takeover date.
Won’t a senior hire be insulted by a shadowing period?
In practice, no — the opposite. Every new hire fears failing in the first 90 days, and a protected learning period removes that fear. Frame it as a gift of context, not as probation, and senior hires accept it gratefully.
What should a new hire actually do while shadowing?
Sit in on one-on-ones, leadership meetings, and customer conversations; follow the outgoing leader if there is one; and keep a running list of surprises and questions to debrief weekly with the CEO. No deliverables, no decisions — absorbing context is the entire job.
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