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When should a charity consider an interim leader?

With tips on how to give your interim manager the best chance to succeed.
5 peopel sitting at desks in a modern office. 1 black lady with big hooped earrings, 2 men with beards, 1 lady with long hair

Five situations when a charity should consider an interim leader and how to set them up for success

In the life of any charity, there are moments when continuity matters more than permanence.

Interim leaders are sometimes still seen as a last resort or a stop‑gap but in practice, the opposite is often true. In the right circumstances, an experienced interim can bring stability, focus and momentum at exactly the point an organisation needs it most.

Drawing on Eastside People’s experience of placing senior interim leaders across the charity and social enterprise sector, here are five common situations when bringing in an interim can be a smart, strategic decision rather than a reactive one.

Blog by Bernice Rook, Eastside People Deputy CEO.

  1. A sudden CEO or senior leader departure

Unexpected leadership changes happen, through resignation, illness, funding uncertainty or workforce issues. What matters most is how the organisation responds.

An interim leader can:

  • Provide stability and reassurance for staff, funders and partners
  • Maintain service delivery and performance while the board takes stock
  • Create space for a proper, unhurried permanent recruitment process.

For boards, this can be particularly valuable. Rather than rushing to appoint, an interim allows time to reflect on whether the role needs to change and what skills the organisation really needs next.

To set them up well:

  • Be clear on the mandate – holding steady vs making changes or something in between!
  • Agree decision-making authority early (especially with the chair/board)
  • Prioritise key stakeholder relationships in the first couple of weeks.
  1. Delivering a change or transformation programme

Digital change, cost‑saving programmes, restructures or new operating models are demanding pieces of work, often on top of an already stretched leadership team.

An interim leader can be brought in to:

  • Design and deliver a defined change programme
  • Provide capacity and specialist expertise that is not available in‑house
  • Make difficult decisions at pace, with clarity and objectivity.

Because interims are not focused on long‑term career progression within the organisation, they can concentrate fully on the task at hand and then leave behind stronger systems and clearer ways of working.

To set them up well:

  • Define success in concrete, time-bound terms (what will be different in 3–6 months?)
  • Provide the internal capacity to support delivery, not just design
  • Be realistic about what can be achieved within the timeframe.
  1. Supporting merger or partnership work

Partnerships and mergers can unlock huge value, but they also place intense demands on senior teams and boards.

Interim leaders are often used to:

  • Lead or stabilise one part of the organisation while negotiations progress
  • Manage operational delivery alongside complex relationship building
  • Act as a neutral presence during periods of cultural or structural change
  • Project manage merger or partnership planning and/or implementation.

In some cases, an interim can hold a role between organisations, helping to translate strategy into workable plans while permanent structures are being agreed.

To set them up well:

  • Clarify roles between interim leaders, existing executives and advisors
  • Invest time upfront in aligning expectations across boards/partners
  • Give the interim licence to surface and navigate cultural issues, not just operational ones.
  1. Stabilising a struggling service or team

When a service is underperforming, financially, operationally or culturally, it often needs short-term, hands-on leadership before longer term fixes are possible.

Interim leaders can help by:

  • Diagnosing problems rapidly and credibly
  • Rebuilding confidence with staff, commissioners and beneficiaries
  • Putting practical recovery plans in place.

In many cases, this stabilising phase lays the groundwork for successful permanent recruitment once the organisation is in a healthier position.

To set them up well:

  • Back the interim visibly – its important for staff to see clear authority
  • Create quick and clear feedback loops between board and interim
  • Be open to challenge and uncomfortable findings early on.
  1. Preparing for inspection or regulatory change

Regulatory scrutiny, whether from the Care Quality Commission, Ofsted, the Regulator of Social Housing or other bodies, can be high‑stakes and time‑critical.

An experienced interim can:

  • Assess readiness quickly and objectively
  • Strengthen governance, compliance and reporting
  • Support staff through inspection preparation without creating panic.

Crucially, interims who have been through inspections before know where to focus effort, and where not to overcomplicate things.

To set them up well:

  • Provide rapid access to information and key staff
  • Be honest about current gaps and risks from the outset
  • Avoid overloading with multiple competing priorities, focus on what matters most right now.

Across all situations:

The most successful interim assignments are those where expectations are clear, authority is aligned, and the organisation is genuinely ready to use the interim’s expertise, not just contain the situation.

Interim doesn’t mean temporary value. The best interim appointments don’t just hold the fort. They leave organisations clearer about their future, stronger in their systems, and more confident in their leadership.

At Eastside People, interim leadership is seen as part of a wider toolkit, alongside permanent recruitment, consultancy, mentoring and coaching, to help charities navigate change thoughtfully and sustainably.

Find out more about our interim management services here.

If you’d like a confidential conversation about whether an interim could support your organisation please get in touch.

Unexpected leadership changes happen, through resignation, illness, funding uncertainty or workforce issues. What matters most is how the organisation responds.

Bernice Rook, Deputy CEO, Eastside People

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Phone: +44 (0) 203 821 6174
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