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By Carson Kolb
Building Confidence When the Leadership Role You Need Does Not Exist Yet > Quick Answer: Healthcare leaders build confidence in hiring for a newly creat...
Quick Answer: Healthcare leaders build confidence in hiring for a newly created role by starting with the organizational problem the position must solve, rather than borrowing job descriptions from other systems. Clear problem statements, defined decision rights, and transparent communication about executive sponsorship and role flexibility give both hiring teams and candidates the clarity needed to succeed in undefined seats.
Confidence in hiring for a newly created executive role comes from defining the organizational problem the position must solve before writing a single line of the job description. When healthcare organizations create roles that have no predecessor, no internal benchmark, and no obvious talent pool, the leaders who succeed are the ones who anchor the search in strategic need rather than borrowed templates. This article is for healthcare executives and board members navigating the unique challenge of filling a leadership seat that has never existed within their organization.
A newly created leadership role is a position designed to address an emerging organizational priority, one where no incumbent has held the title, no job description exists internally, and the scope of authority must be built from scratch. In 2026, healthcare systems are creating these roles at an increasing pace as operational complexity outpaces traditional leadership structures.
Backfilling an existing VP or C-suite seat, even a difficult one, comes with built-in reference points. There is institutional memory of what the last leader did well or poorly. Direct reports have expectations. The board has a mental model of success in that chair.
None of that exists when the role is new. The search team is working without a performance baseline, without a predecessor's strengths to replicate or mistakes to avoid, and often without consensus on where the role sits in the organizational chart. The reporting structure, decision rights, and budget authority are all open questions.
This ambiguity is precisely what creates anxiety for hiring leaders. It is also what makes clarity at the front end so consequential.
The single most effective way to build confidence in a search for a role that does not exist yet is to articulate the problem the organization needs this person to solve. Not the title. Not the department. The problem.
A disciplined problem statement does several things at once. It gives the search team a filter for evaluating candidates who come from different backgrounds and carry different titles. It gives candidates a clear picture of what success looks like. And it gives the board a shared framework for decision making, which matters enormously when there is no historical precedent to fall back on.
When organizations skip this step, they tend to borrow job descriptions from other systems or industries and end up with a role that sounds impressive on paper but does not map to their actual needs.
Scoping a newly created role requires working backward from desired outcomes rather than forward from existing structures. Healthcare leaders who do this well typically follow a deliberate sequence.
Identify the two or three measurable outcomes this role must deliver within 18 to 24 months. These outcomes become the backbone of both the job description and the interview evaluation criteria.
Determine the decision rights the role will carry. Will this person own a P&L? Approve capital requests? Have hiring authority over existing departments? These questions often reveal hidden disagreements among senior leaders that are far better resolved before a candidate is in the seat.
Map the role's interdependencies. A new position always takes something away from an existing one, whether that is budget, headcount, or strategic influence. Naming those intersections early prevents turf conflicts later.
Pressure test the reporting line. Newly created roles sometimes report to the wrong person simply because the organizational chart has not caught up with the strategy. The right reporting structure should flow from the problem statement, not from convenience.
Our work as a retained executive search firm since 1998 has shown us that the organizations who invest time in this scoping work before launching the search consistently produce stronger outcomes and shorter time to productivity for the new leader.
Candidates evaluating a newly created role carry their own set of concerns. They want to know whether the organization has genuine commitment to the position or whether it is an experiment that could be eliminated after one budget cycle. They want to understand the political landscape they are walking into.
Healthcare leaders build candidate confidence by being transparent about three things during the interview process.
Candidates who are strong enough to succeed in an undefined seat are also discerning enough to walk away from one that lacks clarity. Transparency is not just good practice. It is a competitive advantage in attracting top talent.
Many organizations treat the initial job description as permanent. For a newly created role, that is a mistake. A more effective approach is to build a formal review point at the six-month and twelve-month marks, where the new leader and the executive team jointly evaluate whether the scope, authority, and reporting structure still align with the original problem statement.
This is not a performance review. It is a structural review. The question is not whether the leader is performing well. The question is whether the role itself is designed correctly now that real-world data has replaced assumptions.
Healthcare organizations that build this recalibration into the process from the start give both the new leader and the broader team permission to adjust without interpreting change as failure. That flexibility, paired with the rigor of a well-defined problem statement at the outset, is what gives leadership teams genuine confidence when they are building something that has never existed before.