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Matt Dallisson’s career started in Sales & Marketing with a leading branded food manufacturer. His move to executive search was driven by his interest in how organisations improve performance through Leadership. He has 25 years’ experience ad...
The consumer landscape is not pausing for breath. Cost pressures, technology acceleration, regulation and shifting consumer expectations are reconfiguring how value is created. For senior leaders and boards the immediate question is straightforward: how do you position the organisation now so it can compete and grow through the next phase of change?
The answer lies less in tactical programs and more in strategic simplification, capability building, and different types of leaders. Here we explore five predictions relevant to consumer Boards in 2026.
In 2026, many consumer businesses are likely to move beyond incremental efficiency efforts and address structural complexity. More companies will rationalise SKUs and brands, exit non-core or underperforming categories, and redirect investment to a smaller number of clear priority areas. Cost-efficiency programmes are likely to be combined with sharper, more focused growth bets rather than broad, undifferentiated cost-cutting.
Strategically leadership teams will, if not already, need to answer fundamental questions about where the company genuinely has the right to win, which brands, channels, or geographies are distractions, and which capabilities are truly differentiating. Operating models will need to be realigned around fewer, bigger priorities, with simpler structures, clearer accountabilities, and faster decision-making.
From a leadership perspective, boards will seek CEOs and business unit heads with genuine transformation credentials, rather than purely steady-state growth experience. CFOs capable of acting as strategic co-pilots, rather than primarily cost controllers, will be in demand. CHROs will be expected to support large-scale change while protecting engagement and reshaping culture. Leaders will be assessed not only on results but also on how effectively they manage employees, unions, investors, and regulators through restructuring. Matt Dallisson, Global Head of Signium’s Consumer Practice Group says
“Cost programmes that feel like pruning won’t be enough — the most successful companies will pair efficiency with focused growth investment, simplify their operating model, and create one‑line accountability. When decision‑making speeds up and accountability tightens, organisations can redeploy resources faster into value creation.”
By 2026, AI is likely to move from isolated pilots to fully embedded, scaled capabilities in leading consumer organisations. AI will increasingly be applied to demand forecasting and inventory optimisation, dynamic pricing and promotion planning, personalised marketing and content generation, and supplier risk and logistics management. The performance gap between companies that integrate AI throughout their value chain and those that do not will widen.
Strategically, successful organisations will treat data as a core asset. They will invest in clean, connected data foundations and embed AI in frontline decision-making processes, not just within central analytics teams. Governance and ethics will become more visible issues, particularly where AI interacts directly with consumers and where potential reputational risks are material.
Leadership implications are significant. New or strengthened roles such as Chief Data and Analytics Officer or Chief AI Officer are likely to become more common. Functional leaders, particularly in marketing, operations, and commercial roles, will need to be data-fluent and able to translate AI capabilities into P&L impact. Boards will increasingly probe data and AI strategy, governance frameworks, and cybersecurity and consumer data protection. Leaders who can bridge technology and commercial outcomes, build cross-functional teams around AI use cases, and lead cultural shifts toward more data-driven decisions will be at a premium.
Some of the most valuable leadership profiles in 2026 will sit at the intersection of digital, sustainability, and deep consumer understanding, and they will be in short supply. The leaders most in demand will combine a strong grasp of consumer behaviour and markets, digital and data fluency, sustainability literacy, and experience leading through ambiguity and change.
These profiles will be contested not only within consumer companies but also by technology platforms, healthcare and consumer health players, and financial services and fintech firms. Organisations that manage to attract and retain this talent will move faster on innovation, channel transformation, and ESG initiatives that create real business value.
Internally, there will be greater emphasis on building a robust pipeline of high-potential leaders, particularly in digital- and sustainability-related roles. Companies will need to design career paths that build broad capabilities through cross-functional and international moves. Externally, hiring is likely to become more targeted, focusing on specific capability gaps.
Executive search partners will be asked to map talent across sectors and geographies, identify unconventional candidates with transferable strengths, and support robust assessment and onboarding to reduce risk. CHROs will play a central role in succession planning, particularly for critical digital, data, and sustainability roles. Dallisson says “the future C‑suite will be defined by hybrids — leaders who combine consumer instinct with digital fluency and a genuine sustainability IQ. Those people are rare, so organisations that build internal pathways and offer rapid, meaningful stretches will win the most talented.”
When 2026 closes, the sources of growth for many consumer businesses will look materially different. Growth is likely to come more from specific high-growth markets and cities than from broad geographic expansion and from well-defined segments such as aging populations, younger value-driven consumers, and pet owners. “Affordably premium” and niche propositions designed around precise needs and occasions are expected to gain importance.
Strategically, companies will need to reprioritise markets and channels based on profitability and strategic relevance rather than size alone. They are likely to form more local partnerships to reach customers and manage regulatory complexity. Investment in granular segmentation and local innovation will be crucial to staying relevant.
Boards may find that previously “core” markets transition into cash-generative but low-growth roles while emerging markets, specific regions, or city clusters become the primary innovation and growth engines. This will have implications for capital allocation, leadership focus, and governance.
Leadership demand will increase for regional and country leaders with greater autonomy, accountability, and the ability to balance global scale with local relevance. Organisations will need more diverse leadership teams that reflect key consumer groups and markets. Boards may bring in non-executive directors with specific regional or segment expertise and push for stronger representation of local voices in global decision-making.
In 2026, many boards will revisit the criteria they use to assess senior appointments. Companies are likely to become more open to leaders from adjacent sectors such as technology, healthcare, logistics, and financial services, and to candidates with non-linear career paths and less traditional experience. There will be greater emphasis on resilience, adaptability, learning agility, and inclusive leadership, alongside commercial and functional expertise.
Organisations that cling to narrow definitions of “fit” such as long tenure in specific categories or only top-tier global backgrounds, risk missing leaders who can drive the next phase of growth and transformation. Culture and leadership development will increasingly be seen as core strategic levers, discussed at the same level as strategy and capital allocation. Dallisson shares “In 2026, boards will broaden their lens: they will look beyond tidy sector pedigrees and value leaders with non‑linear careers, cross‑sector experience, and resilience through uncertainty. The new premium will be adaptability and learning agility as much as domain expertise.”
This will require more structured approaches to executive assessment, including behavioural, potential, and cognitive dimensions as well as experience. External coaching and carefully designed onboarding will be key, particularly for leaders moving across sectors or stepping into newly defined roles. CHROs will be expected to provide a deeper evidence-based view of leadership quality and potential and to partner closely with CEOs and boards on succession and readiness.
These shifts and predictions have clear implications for how organisations think about executive hiring and for how search partners support them. There are four areas where a search partner can add particular value.
First, redefining the brief is essential. Traditional role specifications that simply mirror past incumbents or competitors’ structures are often backward-looking. The starting point should be the problem the leader is being hired to solve and the strategic context in which they will operate. The search partner’s role is to challenge and refine briefs so that they reflect future needs, balancing technical experience with leadership traits such as change orientation, resilience, and learning agility.
Second, broadening and diversifying the talent pool is becoming a priority. The leaders organisations need may sit in adjacent industries, in smaller high-growth businesses, or in different regions than those typically considered. A strong search partner can map talent across sectors, geographies, and company sizes, introduce clients to high-potential stretch candidates alongside more conventional profiles, and help boards weigh the trade-offs between familiarity and transformation.
Third, assessing potential as well as experience is increasingly important. Experience alone is a weak predictor of success in volatile environments. Boards are asking for deeper insight into how candidates think, how they lead in uncertainty, and how they build and develop teams. Structured interviews, psychometric tools where appropriate, and rigorous referencing can provide a much richer view. The search partner’s value lies in presenting comparative insight rather than simply biographies and in being candid about risks and development needs.
Fourth, supporting onboarding and long-term success is critical. The risk associated with senior appointments does not end when the contract is signed. The first 12 to 18 months are decisive, especially for leaders coming from different sectors, joining during transformation, or stepping into newly created roles. There is real value in helping design onboarding plans that clarify expectations, accelerate relationship-building, and identify early wins, and in maintaining a dialogue with both client and executive to surface issues early and adjust support where needed.
Boards and CEOs can use the following questions to frame their own discussions.
On strategy and structure, they should ask whether leadership roles are aligned with where the business needs to be in three to five years, or whether they still reflect how the organisation was designed five years ago. They should clarify which parts of the business require transformational leadership and which need continuity and operational excellence.
On talent and succession, they should ask whether they have clear successors for critical digital, AI, and sustainability roles and where the biggest succession risks lie over the next two to three years. They should be honest about whether current development plans are sufficient to address those risks.
On external talent, they should consider which roles could benefit from leaders with experience outside the traditional consumer background and how confident they are that they are seeing the full market rather than a narrow set of familiar profiles.
On Partnership, they should ask whether they have the right external advisors to challenge their assumptions about leadership profiles, to map and engage scarce talent across sectors and geographies, and to support robust assessment and onboarding.
The organisations that will outperform in 2026 will be those that align clear strategic choices with equally clear leadership choices. Winning in the consumer sector over the next few years will depend not only on portfolios, channels, and supply chains, but also on a willingness to update the definition of great leadership and to invest early and deliberately in securing it.
“Too often we search for a perfect past; instead, look for transferable instincts. Prioritise leaders who demonstrate learning agility, stakeholder dexterity, and a track record of building teams that outlast them. Pair that selection with rigorous evidence‑based assessment and targeted development — and you reduce both appointment risk and time to impact.”
Matt Dallisson, Global Head of Signium’s Consumer Practice Group