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F1 drivers use the formation lap to warm tires, test systems, and gather intelligence about track conditions—all before the race officially starts. Similarly, an executive's first 90 days aren't the race itself; they're the preparation phase that determines whether they'll thrive or crash out in Turn 1.

Formation Lap Preparation - The Critical Warm-Up Before Racing Begins
Formation Lap Lessons: The Critical 90 Days of Executive Onboarding
Why the F1 Formation Lap Reveals Everything Wrong With How Companies Onboard Executives—And How to Fix It
Picture this: It's race day at Monaco. Twenty F1 cars line up on the grid, engines idling, drivers mentally preparing for 78 laps of one of the most demanding street circuits in motorsport. Then, before the race officially begins, they complete what appears to be a leisurely parade lap around the track.
Casual observers might see this formation lap as mere pageantry—a chance for fans to see the cars one more time before they start racing at 200 mph. But to drivers and engineers, the formation lap is one of the most strategically critical moments of the entire race weekend.
During this "warm-up lap," drivers aren't just following the leader. They're:
- Heating tire compounds from 70°C to the optimal 100°C operating window
- Testing brake temperatures and responsiveness
- Finding grip levels across different track zones
- Assessing rubber buildup, wet patches, or debris
- Confirming radio communication and telemetry systems
- Making final mental adjustments to race strategy based on real-time conditions
Get the formation lap wrong—come to the grid with cold tires, miss a wet patch, fail to identify low-grip zones—and you're fighting from behind before the race even starts. Some of F1's most spectacular first-lap disasters stem from formation lap mistakes.
Now consider your organization's executive onboarding process.
A new COO, CTO, or Chief Product Officer joins your company. You give them an org chart, access credentials, and a welcome lunch. You schedule some introductory meetings. You ask them to "dive in" and "hit the ground running."
Essentially, you're sending them into a high-speed race on cold tires, with no understanding of where grip exists, no sense of track conditions, and no clarity on which corners require aggressive braking versus flat-out acceleration.
Then, 90 days later—roughly when tires should just be reaching optimal temperature—you're surprised when they haven't yet delivered transformational results.
The first 90 days of executive tenure aren't the race. They're the formation lap. And just like in F1, what happens during this phase determines whether your executive crosses the finish line in first place or crashes out in Turn 1.
The Formation Lap Philosophy: Preparation, Not Performance
Here's what most organizations get wrong about executive onboarding: they confuse activity with progress.
They measure success by how quickly the new executive makes decisions, implements changes, or delivers visible wins. This is the equivalent of judging an F1 driver's formation lap by how fast they complete it—missing the entire point.
The formation lap isn't about speed. It's about preparation.
During the formation lap, F1 drivers deliberately weave side-to-side across the track. This looks chaotic to untrained eyes, but it's precisely calculated. The lateral movement generates friction in the tire sidewalls, pushing heat into the rubber compound. Drivers aren't trying to "look busy"—they're engineering the specific thermal conditions required for peak performance when it matters.
Similarly, an executive's first 90 days should be spent deliberately "weaving"—moving across organizational functions, engaging with different stakeholders, testing assumptions, gathering intelligence. This looks less productive than making decisions immediately, but it creates the conditions for sustained high performance.
Charles Leclerc learned this lesson the hard way at the 2022 Brazilian Grand Prix. During the formation lap, he crashed his Ferrari into the barriers while trying to warm his tires too aggressively. The race hadn't even started, and his weekend was over.
Executives who skip proper onboarding and immediately start "making their mark" often suffer similar fates—costly early mistakes that damage credibility and trust before they've built the organizational capital to recover.
The Four Phases of F1 Formation: A Framework for Executive Onboarding
Formula 1's formation lap breaks down into four distinct phases, each with specific objectives.
These map perfectly onto a strategic 90-day executive onboarding framework.
Phase 1: Grid Position Assessment (Days 1-30)
F1 Context: Drivers start from their qualifying positions but use this phase to understand the actual starting conditions. Track temperature has changed since qualifying. Rubber buildup has altered grip levels. Wind conditions affect aerodynamics. Drivers gather real-time intelligence that might differ from practice data.
Executive Translation: The first 30 days are about understanding the actual organizational reality versus what was described during the interview process.
Key Activities:
- Conduct 30-45 stakeholder interviews across all organizational levels (not just direct reports)
- Document what people say AND what they don't say—the gaps reveal hidden issues.
- Identify inconsistencies between stated strategy and actual resource allocation.
- Map informal power structures and decision-making networks
- Understand historical context for current initiatives (why things are the way they are)
Critical Insight: Resist the urge to make ANY major decisions in the first 30 days. Your job is intelligence gathering, not action. In F1 terms, you're still on the formation lap—the race hasn't started.
Deliverable: By day 30, produce an anonymized summary of your stakeholder interviews highlighting key themes, contradictions, and surprises. Share this with your CEO as evidence that you understand the landscape. This single document can establish immediate credibility.
Phase 2: Tire Temperature (Days 31-60)
F1 Context: This is when drivers aggressively work their tires—heavy braking zones, acceleration phases, lateral weaving. They're generating heat through friction, bringing compounds into the 90-100°C operational window. Too cold, and you lose grip. Too hot, and you degrade prematurely.
Executive Translation: Days 31-60 are about building relational friction (in a good way)—creating the heat and energy in organizational relationships that enable high performance. This is when you establish trust, demonstrate competence, and build the social capital required to drive change.
Key Activities:
- Schedule deep-dive working sessions with each functional leader—not status meetings, actual collaborative problem-solving
- Identify 2-3 "quick wins" that demonstrate competence but don't require massive organizational change.
- Begin testing your hypotheses from Phase 1 through small experiments and pilots.
- Establish your communication rhythms—what you'll report, when, and to whom
- Build alliances with key influencers (not just formal authority figures)
Critical Insight: You're generating organizational "heat" now—friction that transforms potential energy into kinetic energy. But just like tire temperature, you need the right amount. Too little, and nothing moves. Too much, and you burn out relationships.
Deliverable: By day 60, complete your SWOT analysis for your function/domain and share it with leadership. Include specific, time-bound recommendations for 3-5 strategic initiatives you believe should be pursued.
Phase 3: System Checks (Days 61-90)
F1 Context: As drivers complete their formation lap and slot back into grid positions, they're running final system checks. Radio communication confirmed. Brake temperature is optimal. Engine systems nominal. Telemetry functioning. The race engineer confirms that all data is green.
Executive Translation: Days 61-90 are when you confirm your organization is ready for the "race" (your strategic initiatives). You're not launching yet—you're doing final checks to ensure systems, people, and resources are aligned.
Key Activities:
- Present your 6-12 month strategic plan to leadership for feedback and buy-in.
- Identify resource gaps, organizational barriers, and political obstacles to execution.
- Secure explicit commitments from peer executives whose support you'll need
- Begin building your team (recruiting, reorganizing, or developing existing talent)
- Establish success metrics and accountability structures for your initiatives
Critical Insight: If your "systems checks" reveal critical gaps—lack of executive alignment, insufficient budget, wrong team composition—DO NOT proceed to execution. Just like an F1 driver who discovers a brake issue on the formation lap and returns to the pit lane, you should flag issues now rather than launching initiatives destined to fail.
Deliverable: By day 90, present a comprehensive plan document that includes: strategic priorities, success metrics, resource requirements, organizational structure, key dependencies, risks/mitigation strategies, and timeline. Get explicit sign-off before proceeding to execution.
Phase 4: The Green Flag (Day 91+)
F1 Context: The formation lap ends. Cars slot into their grid positions. Five red lights illuminate one by one, then extinguish. The race begins. Drivers execute on the strategy they've been building since arriving at the circuit three days earlier.
Executive Translation: Day 91 marks the shift from onboarding to full operational mode. Your tires are at the correct temperature. You understand the track. Your systems are checked. Now you race.
Critical Difference: Most organizations expect executives to start "racing" on day one. This is why 40% of external executive hires fail within 18 months, and why 30% of new hires leave in the first six months.
Starting the race on cold tires (inadequate onboarding) virtually guarantees sub-optimal performance and increases the likelihood of early mistakes that damage long-term effectiveness.
The Onboarding Temperature Problem: Why 69% of New Executives Fail
F1 tire blankets heat tires to 70°C before the formation lap. Drivers then have to generate an additional 30°C during the warm-up phase to reach optimal operating temperature. Get to the grid at 75°C instead of 100°C, and you've lost grip that translates to tenths of a second per lap—over a race, that's positions lost.
The same thermal dynamics apply to executive onboarding.
Research shows that executives who experience structured onboarding are:
- 50% more productive and faster than those without structure
- 82% more likely to remain with the organization long-term
- 70% more likely to report high job satisfaction
Yet most executive onboarding is essentially: "Here's your office, here's your team, good luck." That's the equivalent of an F1 driver getting a push start on track at ambient temperature and being told to win the race.
The "temperature" an executive needs to reach includes:
- Social Capital: Trust and credibility with stakeholders
- Organizational Literacy: Understanding how decisions actually get made
- Strategic Clarity: Knowing what success looks like and how you'll be measured
- Resource Alignment: Having the budget, people, and tools required for success
- Political Intelligence: Knowing the minefields, alliances, and unwritten rules
Without these, your executive is operating in a "cold tire" state—limited grip, high risk of mistakes, suboptimal performance. Yet you're judging them as if they should already be at full operating temperature.
The Formation Lap Mistakes: What Destroys Executive Onboarding
Just as F1 drivers make predictable formation lap errors that ruin their races, executives and organizations make parallel mistakes during the first 90 days.
Mistake #1: Excessive Weaving (Saying "Yes" to Everything)
F1 Version: Drivers who weave too aggressively can overheat tires, causing premature degradation. They'll have excellent initial grip but fall off a cliff mid-race as the compound breaks down.
Executive Version: New executives eager to prove value say "yes" to every request, every meeting, every initiative. They generate short-term activity that looks impressive but leads to burnout, lack of focus, and failure to deliver on core responsibilities.
Fix: Establish clear priorities with your CEO in the first week. Identify the 3-5 objectives that define success for your first year. Politely decline or defer everything else, explaining that it doesn't serve the agreed strategic priorities.
Mistake #2: Following Too Closely (Not Building an Independent Perspective)
F1 Version: During the formation lap, drivers must maintain ten car-lengths between vehicles. Drivers who follow too closely can't see track conditions clearly—they're viewing everything through the spray and turbulence of the car ahead.
Executive Version: New executives who rely entirely on their CEO or direct reports for information never develop independent perspective. They see the organization only through others' filters, missing critical insights.
Fix: Create triangulated information sources. For every topic, seek perspectives from multiple levels and functions. Trust but verify. Build your own view of reality rather than adopting someone else's.
Mistake #3: Missing the Debris (Ignoring Cultural Landmines)
F1 Version: Formation laps help drivers spot debris on track—carbon fiber pieces from earlier sessions, fluid leaks, rubber marbles. Miss these, and you hit them at race speeds with potentially catastrophic results.
Executive Version: Every organization has cultural landmines—topics that can't be discussed, people who can't be challenged, initiatives that failed but can't be mentioned. New executives who blunder into these destroy credibility fast.
Fix: During stakeholder interviews, ask explicitly: "What should I absolutely not do in my first six months?" and "What mistakes have previous people in this role made?" People will tell you where the landmines are if you ask.
Mistake #4: Cold Brakes (No Early Wins)
F1 Version: Drivers test brake temperatures during the formation lap with a few hard stops. Show up to the grid with cold brakes, and you'll lock up wheels and potentially flat-spot tires on the first braking zone.
Executive Version: Executives who spend 90 days solely learning without delivering any visible wins lose organizational confidence. People start wondering, "What do they actually do?"
Fix: Identify 2-3 "quick wins" in days 31-60—improvements that demonstrate competence, build credibility, and don't require massive change. These are your brake tests—proving your systems work before the race starts.
The Mexico-USA Nearshoring Context: Formation Laps Across Cultures
For executives joining organizations in Mexico's booming nearshoring sector—or U.S. executives joining Mexican companies—the formation lap becomes more complex.
You're not just learning a new organization; you're learning a new business culture, communication style, decision-making framework, and often a new language.
Extended Formation Lap Requirement: If a typical executive onboarding is 90 days, cross-cultural executive onboarding should be 120-150 days. You need additional time to:
- Understand implicit cultural expectations around authority, hierarchy, and decision rights
- Build language proficiency if operating in your non-native tongue
- Navigate different approaches to conflict, feedback, and relationship-building
- Learn industry-specific norms that differ across borders (manufacturing practices, regulatory approaches, talent management)
The Temperature Challenge: In cross-cultural onboarding, you're essentially heating two sets of tires simultaneously—your operational capabilities AND your cultural fluency. Trying to rush this process is like attempting to start a race with one set of hot tires and one set cold. You'll spin out.
Best Practice: For executives joining nearshoring operations, explicitly extend the formation lap. Say to your board or CEO: "I need 120 days to reach full operational effectiveness, given the cross-cultural dimension. Here's my phased plan to get there."
Setting this expectation upfront prevents the false urgency that destroys cross-cultural executive transitions.
Building Your Organization's Formation Lap Protocol
The tragedy of poor executive onboarding isn't just individual failure—it's institutional waste.
Consider the economics: Executive search costs run 30-33% of first-year compensation. A COO at $300K costs $90-100K to recruit. Add their salary, benefits, and the opportunity cost of delayed initiatives, and a failed executive hire can easily exceed $1M in total impact.
Yet organizations invest six figures in finding the right executive, then invest almost nothing in ensuring they succeed.
F1 teams would never dream of sending a driver to the grid without proper formation lap protocols in place. They've invested $200M+ in car development. They're not going to waste it by skipping the 5-minute tire-warm-up phase.
Here's how to build a formation lap protocol for your organization:
- Pre-Arrival Preparation (2 weeks before start date)
- Send the executive comprehensive background materials (org charts, strategy docs, financial reports)
- Schedule their first 30 days of stakeholder meetings before they arrive
- Assign an "onboarding buddy" (peer-level executive who can answer culture/political questions)
- Prepare their workspace, technology, and administrative logistics
- Week 1: Grid Assessment
- CEO sets explicit expectations: "Your job for 90 days is learning and relationship-building, not decision-making."
- HR facilitates comprehensive orientation (beyond compliance—culture, history, dynamics)
- The executive meets their direct reports and key cross-functional partners
- The CEO and executive co-create the 30-60-90-day onboarding plan
- Weeks 2-4: Intelligence Gathering (Formation Lap Begins)
- Executive completes stakeholder interview tour
- No major decisions made; executive is explicitly in "listening mode."
- Weekly check-ins with the CEO to surface emerging themes
- Executive starts identifying quick-win opportunities
- Weeks 5-8: Hypothesis Testing (Tire Warming)
- Executive shares stakeholder interview insights with leadership
- Begins testing hypotheses through small experiments
- Delivers 2-3 quick wins that build credibility
- Increases operational involvement while still primarily learning
- Weeks 9-12: System Checks (Final Prep)
- Executive presents a strategic plan for their function/domain
- The leadership team provides feedback and commits resources
- The executive makes any necessary team changes or reorganizations
- Success metrics and accountability structures finalized
- Week 13+: Green Flag (Execution)
- Executive shifts to full operational mode
- Quarterly reviews assess progress against 90-day plan commitments
- CEO provides course-correction guidance as needed
This framework transforms onboarding from a compliance checklist into a strategic process that dramatically increases executive success rates.
The Formation Lap Mindset: Permission to Warm Up
Perhaps the most critical element of successful executive onboarding is psychological: giving executives explicit permission to spend time warming up.
High-performing executives are typically doers. They're action-oriented. They want to prove their worth by delivering results. Telling them to "spend 90 days learning" feels counterintuitive, even indulgent.
But as Charles Leclerc's formation lap crash demonstrated, rushing to the race before you're ready doesn't prove competence—it proves recklessness.
Great CEOs tell their new executives explicitly:
"I didn't hire you to make decisions in your first 90 days. I hired you to make great decisions for the next five years. Take the formation lap seriously. When you're at temperature, you'll know—and then we'll race."
This psychological safety allows executives to:
- Ask "dumb questions" without feeling incompetent
- Admit what they don't know without fear of judgment
- Take time building relationships instead of rushing to action
- Surface concerns or risks they're discovering without being labeled "negative."
Ironically, executives who are given explicit permission to take the full formation lap often reach operational effectiveness faster than those pressured to "hit the ground running" immediately.
Why? Because they build on solid foundation rather than having to backtrack and repair early mistakes.
Conclusion: The Formation Lap Determines the Race
At the 2024 São Paulo Grand Prix, Max Verstappen started 17th on the grid after a disastrous qualifying session. In torrential rain, with terrible visibility and treacherous conditions, Verstappen executed one of the greatest drives in F1 history—passing 16 cars to win the race by 20 seconds.
But this brilliance was only possible because Verstappen used his formation lap expertly. While others focused on staying on track, Verstappen gathered intelligence about grip levels, identified the racing lines with best traction, noted which zones had standing water, and mentally prepared his overtaking strategy.
When the green flag dropped, he wasn't just reacting—he was executing a plan built during the formation lap.
Your new executive's first 90 days serve the identical purpose. They're not the race itself—they're the preparation that determines whether your executive will crash out or dominate.
Stop judging executives on how quickly they can lap the circuit. Start evaluating them on how thoroughly they use the formation lap to prepare for sustainable high performance.
Because in Formula 1 and in business leadership, the race isn't won in the first lap. But it's often lost there, by executives who never reached optimal operating temperature because you sent them to the grid on cold tires.
Key Takeaways
- The first 90 days of executive tenure are a formation lap, not the race—organizations should prioritize preparation over immediate performance.
- F1's formation lap breaks into four phases that map perfectly onto executive onboarding: Grid Assessment (Days 1-30), Tire Temperature (Days 31-60), System Checks (Days 61-90), and Green Flag (Day 91+)
- Research shows 40% of external executive hires fail within 18 months, largely due to inadequate onboarding; executives with structured onboarding are 50% more productive and 82% more likely to stay long-term.
- Common formation lap mistakes include excessive weaving (saying yes to everything), following too closely (lacking independent perspective), missing debris (ignoring cultural landmines), and cold brakes (no early wins)
- Cross-cultural executive transitions (Mexico-USA nearshoring roles) require extended 120-150-day formation laps to build both operational competence and cultural fluency.
- Organizations should invest as much in executive onboarding infrastructure as they do in executive search—spending six figures to find talent, then nothing to ensure success is institutional malpractice.
- The most critical element is psychological safety: explicitly telling executives they have 90 days to learn before being judged on performance results.
Ready to Design a Formation Lap Protocol for Your Next Executive Hire?
At Alder Koten, we don't just find exceptional executives—we help organizations ensure they succeed. Our executive onboarding advisory services combine F1-inspired frameworks with deep expertise in cross-border transitions between Mexico and the USA, nearshoring operations, and C-suite integration. Based in Houston and Guadalajara, I understand both markets intimately. Whether you're bringing a CTO from Silicon Valley to lead your Guadalajara tech hub or hiring a COO to scale your Houston-based manufacturing operations across the border, we'll help you design a formation lap protocol that sets them up for victory.
Great CEOs tell their new executives explicitly: "I didn't hire you to make decisions in your first 90 days. I hired you to make great decisions for the next five years. Take the formation lap seriously. When you're at temperature, you'll know—and then we'll race."
Contact Charlie Solorzano
💼 LinkedIn: Connect with Charlie
Don't let your next executive hire crash on the formation lap. Let's build a strategic onboarding process that delivers sustained high performance.
Charlie Solorzano is a Managing Partner and Executive Search Consultant at Alder Koten, based between Houston and Guadalajara, with a passion for F1 racing and talent acquisition. His approach to executive search is as fast-paced, precise, and thrilling as an F1 race. As a trusted advisor in executive search and talent advisory, Charlie serves clients across Mexico's nearshoring hubs—including Guadalajara, Mexico City, and Monterrey—and key U.S. markets from Houston's energy corridor to Silicon Valley's tech ecosystem. His work is revolutionizing the executive search landscape, one placement at a time.



