Succession Planning in Sri Lanka's Freight Forwarding Industry – An Ageing Workforce
Walk into any established freight forwarding office in
Colombo. Look at the senior management team. Now look at the junior staff. The
age gap is striking. Many senior managers are in their late 50s or 60s, having
built their careers over three decades. Below them are young workers in their
20s and early 30s. The middle layer, experienced professionals in their 40s, is
remarkably thin. This is not a coincidence. It is a succession planning
crisis.
The nature of the problem
Sri Lanka's freight forwarding industry expanded rapidly in
the 1980s and 1990s following economic liberalization. Those pioneers are now
retiring. Meanwhile, the industry struggled to attract mid-career talent due
to:
- Relatively
low starting salaries compared to other private sector employments
- Perception
of logistics as a "blue-collar" field
- Migration
of experienced professionals overseas post 2022 economic crisis
The result? When senior managers retire, there is no obvious successor. Firms resort to hiring retired officers back as consultants or promoting underqualified juniors.
Theoretical lens – Succession planning
From a strategic human resource management (SHRM) perspective,
succession planning is the systematic process of identifying and developing
future leaders for critical roles. Rothwell (2010) distinguishes between replacement
planning (filling specific vacancies) and true succession
planning (building a talent pipeline over time). Most Sri Lankan
freight forwarders practice only the former, and poorly.
What global best practice shows
Leading logistics firms (e.g., Kuehne+Nagel, DB Schenker)
operate formal succession programs:
- Talent
reviews conducted annually for all manager-level roles
- High-potential
identification using objective assessment centers
- Structured
job rotations across functions (customs, warehousing, ocean freight)
- Mentoring
by retiring executives with documented knowledge transfer
Best fit for Sri Lanka
A pragmatic best fit approach for smaller
Sri Lankan firms could include:
- Retirement
notice protocols – Requiring 12 months' notice so succession
planning can begin
- Shadowing
periods – Retiring managers spend final six months formally
training successors
- Knowledge
capture – Documenting supplier relationships, customs procedures,
and client histories before departure
- Phased
retirement – Senior staff work three days a week while successors
take increasing responsibility
The cost of inaction
Without succession planning, institutional knowledge walks
out the door. Supplier relationships disappear. Customs shortcuts and client
preferences are forgotten. The industry does not need more young workers. It
needs an HR system that transfers expertise before it retires.
What do you think?
Have you witnessed a critical knowledge loss when a senior
logistics professional retired in Sri Lanka?
References:
Rothwell, W. J. (2010). Effective succession planning
(4th ed.). New York: AMACOM.
DB Schenker. (n.d.). Talent development. https://www.dbschenker.com/global/careers/inside-dbschenker/talent-development
This is a very strong and realistic HRM discussion.
ReplyDeleteWhat stands out is your clear explanation of the succession gap in Sri Lanka’s freight forwarding industry, especially the missing middle-management layer. That makes the problem easy to understand and very practical.
Your use of Rothwell (2010) is well applied, especially the difference between replacement planning and true succession planning. The practical ideas like shadowing, phased retirement, and knowledge capture are also very relevant and realistic for Sri Lankan companies.
One small improvement could be linking it briefly to knowledge management, since the main issue is also loss of tacit experience.
Do you think Sri Lankan logistics firms currently document employee knowledge properly, or is it still mostly informal?
Thank you, that’s a great insight.
DeleteYou’re absolutely right to link this issue with knowledge management. The core problem is not just succession gaps, but the loss of tacit knowledge, experience that exists in people’s heads rather than in formal systems.
In most Sri Lankan logistics firms, knowledge documentation is still largely informal. Important know-how, like customs practices, client preferences, and supplier relationships, is usually shared through experience, not properly recorded. This works only while the employee is present.
Even in more structured global firms like Kuehne+Nagel or DB Schenker, tacit knowledge transfer still relies heavily on mentoring.
So, without integrating knowledge management into succession planning, even capable successors may struggle to step into these roles effectively.
I completely agree with your point when senior logistics professionals retire without proper succession planning, the industry faces a serious knowledge drain. I’ve seen cases where client relationships and customs expertise were lost because there was no structured handover, which reinforces the urgency of adopting shadowing and phased retirement practices.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing that example, it really highlights how real and immediate this issue is.
DeleteWhat you’ve described is exactly the risk many firms underestimate. When client relationships and customs expertise are not formally transferred, the impact goes beyond internal disruption, it can directly affect service quality and customer trust.
Your point strongly reinforces the need for structured handovers, especially through shadowing and phased retirement. These are not just HR practices, but business continuity strategies. Without them, companies end up rebuilding knowledge from scratch, which is both costly and time-consuming.
Your blog clearly explains the importance of succession planning, especially in ensuring continuity and developing future leaders in Sri Lanka. I like how you highlighted the need to prepare employees early and it makes the idea very practical and relevant.
ReplyDeleteOne concern is whether organizations rely too much on seniority or informal decisions when choosing successors. In Sri Lanka, this is quite common and can limit opportunities for high-potential talent . How can HR ensure that succession planning is based more on performance and potential rather than just experience or relationships?
Thank you, that’s a very important concern, and I agree it’s quite common in the Sri Lankan context.
DeleteTo move away from seniority-based decisions, HR needs to introduce more structured and objective processes. This can include defining clear competency frameworks for leadership roles, using performance data over time, and assessing potential through tools like 360-degree feedback or assessment centers.
Regular talent reviews can also help identify high-potential employees early, rather than waiting for vacancies. Most importantly, transparency is key, when employees understand how successors are selected, it builds trust in the system.
Shifting from relationship-based decisions to evidence-based evaluation isn’t easy, but even small steps in that direction can significantly improve the quality of leadership pipelines.
This is a very informative analysis of succession planning that clearly highlights how developing internal talent and building a strong leadership pipeline is essential for ensuring long-term organizational continuity and stability in the Sri Lankan context.
ReplyDeleteHowever, how can HR in Sri Lankan organizations move beyond focusing only on top-level succession and implement structured succession planning across all critical roles within the organization?
Thank you, that’s a great question and a very practical concern.
DeleteIn many Sri Lankan organizations, succession planning is limited to top roles, but the real value comes from extending it to all critical positions, not just senior leadership. HR can start by identifying roles that are essential for daily operations, such as key operational, technical, and client-facing positions, and mapping the skills required for each.
From there, simple talent pipelines can be built by identifying potential backups and giving them targeted development opportunities like cross-training, job rotations, and mentoring. Even basic tools like skill matrices and internal talent reviews can make a big difference.
The key is to treat succession planning as an ongoing process across levels, rather than a one-time exercise focused only on top management.
Researchers conducted an extensive research study on the current structural deficiencies that exist within Sri Lanka's freight forwarding sector. The main finding shows that companies which do not establish formal succession plans face two problems: they fail to handle staff replacements and they experience operational dangers that persist through time.
ReplyDeleteThis blog gives strong insights into why succession planning is so important for long-term stability. I like how you linked leadership continuity with talent development, not just simple replacement. Studies also show that good succession planning helps organisations keep talent and stay competitive by preparing future leaders early. The real challenge is: how can Sri Lankan organisations move beyond treating succession planning as a box-ticking exercise and turn it into an ongoing, development-focused process?
ReplyDelete