To better understand this evolution within the industrial sector, Russell Reynolds Associates conducted an analysis of our recent successful placements within North American private equity (PE) portfolio companies, learning that:
Economic tides continue to rapidly shift, finding the right talent remains a challenge for private equity portfolio companies. As holding periods extend, talent availability remains tight, and the risks around retention and burnout increase, PE firms must be more proactive in addressing these challenges to ensure a successful exit.
According to RRA’s Global Leadership Monitor, 58% of industrial leaders are looking to move beyond their current roles. Additionally, recent AlixPartners research found that approximately 75% of CEOs exit after a change in control.1 Surprisingly, 54% of these exits occur one to two years following the transaction, and are most often initiated by the CEOs themselves. The consequences of unplanned CEO turnover are not to be underestimated, as they cause significant disruption within the organization. A substantial 46% of PE firms revealed that such unplanned CEO turnover erodes the rate of return on their investments. Furthermore, a staggering 83% of them stated that unplanned CEO turnover leads to longer investment hold times.
These statistics serve as a stark reminder of the detrimental effects of unplanned CEO turnover. They highlight the critical importance of strategic alignment and expectations between the sponsors and the CEO. Nearly 17% of portfolio company executives have expressed experiencing major operational challenges due to a clash of working styles with their PE investors. 1
As the PE playbook evolves, so must the industrial portfolio company CEO. An analysis of Russell Reynold’s CEO placements in industrial portfolio companies shows that the successful candidate is often not a traditional match.
In order to source high-quality talent, private equity firms must remain open-minded about looking outside of their primary industry. We are seeing a growing migration of talent between subsectors. In our analysis of RRA’s industrial portfolio company placements in the US, two-thirds of CEOs came from outside of the client’s primary industry.
Source: RRA Industrial Portfolio Company CEO Placements in North America, 2018 – Oct 2023, n = 66 placements
59%of CEOs placed were first-time CEO/set-up candidates |
While a “seasoned, successful PE CEO” remains the gold standard, step-up candidates are gaining traction. Our analysis showed that 59% of our recent CEO placements in the space were step-up candidates in the role for the first-time. Many PE firms are embracing first-time CEOs, as these candidates are eager to prove themselves, often more technologically savvy, and typically less expensive. Oftentimes these are second-in-command leaders (COOs and presidents) from the PE world, or P&L leaders from heavily decentralized organizations who have run their businesses with a CEO mindset. These first time CEOs almost have proven success in areas imperative to the investment thesis (e.g., operational turnaround, M&A roll-up experience, commercial transformation).
44%of CEOS had prior senior experience at a PE backed company |
While prior private equity experience used to be viewed as a requirement for success, that sentiment has started to shift. Our analysis found that only 44% of these CEOs had prior senior experience in a PE-backed company. The trade-off between prior PE and public experience is gradually shrinking as a wider range of candidates continue to demonstrate successful transitions into the PE environment.
Empowering functional and business leadership (particularly early in investment cycles) is critical in delivering investment outperformance. Intensified focus by sponsors on these functional leaders beyond CEOs, and even beneath the C-suite is becoming an imperative. PE has long relied on the CEO role to drive value creation but it is apparent that today’s environments demands additional scrutiny of management team roles, operating models, corporate structure, and company culture. To avoid misalignment, PE firms are placing greater emphasis on functional leadership and teams.
In our analysis of RRA industrial portfolio company placements over the past few years, we’ve seen a marked increase in placements focused on three key functional areas for industrial portfolio company leadership:
Source: RRA Go-to-Market, Human Resources and Operations & Supply Chain Industrial Portfolio Placements in North America, 2018 – Oct 2023, n = 164 placements
Typically these executives are brought in to upgrade a function core to the portfolio company deal thesis. These are two common archetypes for these functional leadership hires: 1) executives from best-in-class “academy” companies with the depth of applicable sector, customer, or transformation experience that can be easily leveraged into the new role; or 2) proven PE operators who can drive change at pace. Typically, ideal candidates come with both sets of experiences but, as with CEOs, prioritizing critical competencies is key in a tight talent market.
Creating a high-performing, cohesive team for an industrial portfolio company is more challenging than ever, but there are proven levers that improve talent management (and, by extension, ROI) across a fund portfolio.
Many private equity firms have established a senior-level leadership role (chief talent officer, chief people officer) that owns talent strategy across the portfolio. While backgrounds of these executives—and the roles themselves—vary widely across firms, there’s a consistent mandate for these leaders:
50% of PE firms with AUM>$2B have a dedicated talent leader, however, these executives are rare in smaller firms.3 This represents an opportunity for smaller firms to differentiate their talent strategy and derive additional value across the deal cycle. And larger funds will continue to mature the directive for their CTOs and CPOs, focusing on data-driven talent insights to drive future decision-making.
Achieving a successful executive hire quickly requires prioritization around the leadership profile. Additionally, PE firms benefit when they are open-minded about an executive’s PE or CEO experience—or lack thereof. In the industrial world, flexibility between sectors is particularly applicable, and we have seen successful candidates move from adjacent spaces (from discrete manufacturing to process manufacturing businesses) or make even broader leaps (from automotive to consumer durables).
Even when the need for change is clear, PE sponsors often struggle to align on the mission-critical functional and experiential competencies. Furthermore, PE leadership is often comprised of dealmakers who may place a premium on “charismatic” leadership and rapid-fire execution, instead of heavily weighting the value drivers specific to the portfolio company.
Defining the truly critical competencies up front, (rather than creating a laundry list of “nice-to-haves”) is a key success driver, typically accelerating C-suite executive placement.
Talent management remains the top strategic priority across the PE landscape. Funds that adapt to today’s talent market can attract and develop top-tier industrial CEOs and establish a top talent pipeline for the future.
Sarabeth Tukey is a senior leader in Russell Reynolds Associates’ Industrial and Natural Resources practice and Private Equity practice. She is based in New York.
Kannitha Than is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Industrial and Natural Resources Knowledge team. She is based in New York.
Bililies, Ted. “Private Equity Needs a New Talent Strategy.” Harvard Business Review, October 16, 2023. https://hbr.org/2023/11/private-equity-needs-a-new-talent-strategy.
Jules, Claudy, and Jason Phillips. “Chief Performance Officers Can Be a Secret Ingredient for Private Equity Success. Here’s Why.” McKinsey & Company, November 4, 2022. https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/private-equity-and-principal-investors/our-insights/chief-performance-officers-can-be-a-secret-ingredient-for-private-equity-success-heres-why.
Bililies, Ted, Richard Wallace, Clark Perry, Pippa Ross, and Josh Tecchio. “Eighth Annual PE Leadership Survey.” AlixPartners. Accessed November 28, 2023. https://features.alixpartners.com/private-equity-leadership-survey-2023/#section-About-the-Survey-5AMwqFjEuU.