Coach Tomlin is likely to be inducted into the Hall of Fame by the time he is done. During his tenure, the Steelers have played in two Super Bowls (winning Super Bowl XLIII in 2008 and losing to the Green Bay Packers in Super Bowl XLV in 2010). Coach Tomlin has an overall record of 183-107-2 as head coach (including an 8-11 record in the playoffs), and he has NEVER had a losing season.
And yet, after the Steelers were defeated by the Baltimore Ravens in the Wild Card Round of this year's playoffs (ending their season with five straight losses), all the pundits are asking if it's time for both Tomlin and the Steelers to mutually part ways! At least one sports journalist keeps mentioning that the Steelers haven't won a playoff game since Barack Obama was President!
Upon a closer look, Coach Tomlin has done an amazing job getting the most out of his players. He's not had a good quarterback, arguably the most important position on the team, since Ben Roethlisberger retired at the end of the 2021 NFL season (Roethlisberger won't be eligible for the Hall of Fame until 2027). The Steelers had 18 seasons with Roethlisberger as their quarterback, and since his retirement, they've gone through a string of less than stellar quarterbacks, including Kenny Pickett, Mitchell Trubisky, Mason Rudolph, Justin Fields, and Russell Wilson.
There are two pathways to getting what is called a "franchise quarterback" (one who will win championships) - the NFL Draft and free agency. The only legitimate way to secure a "franchise quarterback" via the NFL Draft is to get incredibly lucky at picking up a great quarterback that nobody thought would be great in the later rounds (think about Tom Brady who was selected 199th by the Patriots in the 2000 NFL Draft and more recently, Brock Purdy, who was drafted with the last pick by the 49ers in the 2022 NFL Draft) or pick someone at the top of the first round. The only way to get a pick at the top of the round is to either "trade up" or have a really bad season. You're never going to be picking at the top of the first round of the NFL Draft with a Coach Tomlin at the helm. He's just too good at what he does.
All of this could perhaps have been avoided, if the Steelers had drafted a quarterback while Ben Roethlisberger was still playing. Think about how the Green Bay Packers have done it - they drafted future Hall of Fame quarterback Aaron Rogers while Hall of Fame quarterback Brett Favre was still playing, and they drafted their current starting quarterback, Jordan Love, while Rogers was still playing. In other words, the Steelers should have had a better succession plan.
Enough about sports. What's important here is to recognize the importance of developing a succession plan. It is the job of every leader to develop an orderly succession plan with multiple potential candidates to replace them at some point in the future. It is the job of every organization to make sure that they have a succession plan for every executive position within the organization. Unfortunately, the available research suggests that most organizations are like the Pittsburgh Steelers - they don't do succession planning well and so are ill-prepared for the departure of a key leader (see "The High Cost of Poor Succession Planning" and "Succession Planning: What the Research Says" in Harvard Business Review). If you or your organization choose to learn anything from the Steelers, choose this - don't get caught without a solid succession plan for your key leaders! Succeed by succession!