Building on our exploration of why executive minds need strategic downtime, the critical question becomes: how do you design a personal recharge strategy that works for your unique leadership style, responsibilities and cognitive needs? The most successful executives don’t leave mental restoration to chance. They approach it with the same strategic rigour they apply to business planning and operational excellence.

Your approach to recharge isn’t one-size-fits-all. The method that restores one leader’s strategic thinking might leave another feeling restless or unfulfilled. Understanding your personal recharge profile and designing systems around it can mean the difference between genuine restoration and merely going through the motions of taking time off.

 

Identifying Your Executive Recharge Profile: Three Approaches to Mental Restoration

The Total Disconnection Approach Some executives find their greatest insights emerge during complete breaks from business content. If you’re experiencing decision fatigue, feeling trapped in tactical thinking, or finding that business content during downtime creates more stress than insight, you are likely to benefit from complete cognitive separation.

Signs you’re a Total Disconnection leader:

  • You dream about work problems and wake up feeling unrested
  • Business podcasts during exercise make you think about pending decisions
  • You find it difficult to be present with family when work content is nearby
  • Your best ideas come during completely unrelated activities

 

Optimal recharge activities:

  • Nature-based experiences that engage different cognitive processes
  • Physical challenges requiring present-moment focus (rock climbing, football, surfing, martial arts)
  • Creative pursuits that activate different brain regions (music, art, cooking)
  • Travel experiences that shift environmental context entirely
  • Meditation or mindfulness practices that require quiet analytical thinking
  • Strategic games with friends and family, including computer and board games like chess, which have been found to strengthen capabilities including decision-making, problem-solving, leadership, cognitive abilities and team functions.

 

The Adjacent Learning Approach Other leaders maintain mental engagement whilst gaining strategic distance through carefully chosen content that expands thinking without adding work pressure. If you find complete disconnection makes you anxious but work-related content feels too close to your daily challenges, adjacent learning provides the perfect balance. Audio options offer further opportunities for passive learning and deeper relaxation. (See previous insight for podcast and audiobook suggestions here.)

Signs you’re an Adjacent Learning leader:

  • You enjoy business content but need it to be outside your direct industry
  • Historical or biographical content sparks strategic insights
  • You prefer learning that feels optional rather than required
  • Cross-industry case studies give you fresh perspectives on familiar challenges

 

Optimal recharge activities:

  • Industry-adjacent case studies revealing transferable patterns
  • Historical accounts providing perspective on current challenges
  • Behavioural psychology content sharpening decision-making capability
  • Technology and innovation content broadening strategic options
  • Biographies of leaders from completely different sectors or eras

 

The Reflective Integration Approach Many successful executives combine downtime with structured reflection, using external content as a catalyst for deeper strategic thinking about their own leadership challenges. If you process complex ideas through discussion, writing, or systematic analysis, this approach leverages your natural thinking style.

Signs you’re a Reflective Integration leader:

  • You think out loud or need to discuss ideas to fully understand them
  • Writing or journaling helps you process complex challenges
  • You naturally connect new information to current situations
  • You prefer structured rather than completely open-ended downtime

 

Optimal recharge activities:

  • Journaling sessions prompted by podcast insights
  • Walking to process complex challenges
  • Mind-mapping exercises connecting new ideas to current opportunities
  • Strategic questioning sessions inspired by other leaders’ experiences
  • Book clubs or discussion groups with other executives

 

Defining Your Personal Strategy

Once you’ve identified your recharge profile, honestly assess your current recharge effectiveness.

Energy Assessment:

  • Do you return from time off feeling genuinely refreshed?
  • Are you able to approach familiar challenges with fresh perspective?
  • Do you have mental energy for creative problem-solving after downtime?
  • Can you maintain emotional regulation during high-stress periods?

 

Cognitive Assessment:

  • Do breakthrough insights come during or shortly after downtime?
  • Are you able to see patterns and connections that weren’t obvious before?
  • Can you think several moves ahead on complex strategic decisions?
  • Do you approach familiar problems with renewed curiosity?

 

Performance Assessment:

  • Are your decisions as sharp after intense work periods as they are when well-rested?
  • Do you maintain consistent leadership presence regardless of workload?
  • Can you communicate complex ideas clearly even when under pressure?
  • Are you modelling sustainable leadership practices for your team?

The next step is tailoring your approach to your specific leadership context. Whether you’re navigating crisis situations, driving innovation, or managing complex operations, your restoration strategy should complement rather than compete with your professional demands.

The key is finding the right balance between complete disconnection and strategic engagement that allows your mind to process, integrate and generate fresh perspectives on familiar challenges.

 

Implementation: Making Strategic Downtime Non-Negotiable

Successful implementation starts with treating your recharge time as seriously as you would any critical business commitment. This means protecting time in your calendar, communicating boundaries to your team and creating environments that genuinely support mental transitions away from operational thinking.

Consider how you might transform routine activities like commuting or travel into opportunities for strategic restoration. The goal isn’t to fill every moment with activity, but to be intentional about when and how you engage different cognitive modes.

 

The Leadership Return on Strategic Recharge

Executives who invest consistently in mental restoration report noticeable improvements in decision quality, leadership presence and sustainable performance. They process information faster, regulate emotions more effectively and articulate vision with greater clarity. Just as importantly, they model sustainable performance for their teams demonstrating that longevity and impact in leadership require thoughtful recovery, not just relentless output.

Your mind is your most valuable leadership tool. Like any high-performance instrument, it requires intentional maintenance, strategic rest and thoughtful input to operate at peak effectiveness. By designing and implementing a personal recharge strategy aligned with your cognitive style and leadership demands, you ensure that your thinking quality consistently supports breakthrough leadership.

The path to better decisions, clearer vision, and more effective leadership runs directly through strategic downtime. The question isn’t whether you can afford to invest in mental restoration – it’s how long you can maintain focus and performance without it.

The paradox of executive leadership is stark: the more complex your responsibilities become, the more essential, yet elusive, true mental downtime can become. For senior leaders navigating today’s relentless business environment, stepping away from operational pressures isn’t indulgent luxury, it’s strategic necessity. When your mind escapes the grip of routine tasks and constant decision-making, it becomes receptive to breakthrough insights, innovative solutions, and the kind of big-picture thinking that transforms organisations.

Even the most driven senior leaders benefit from intentional downtime. Research consistently shows that our most creative and strategic insights emerge not during intense focus, but in moments of relaxed awareness. The executive brain, constantly processing information and making high-stakes decisions, requires intentional recovery periods to maintain peak performance and avoid the cognitive tunnel vision that can plague overworked leaders.

 

The Neuroscience of Executive Recovery: Why Your Brain Needs Strategic Rest

Executive decision fatigue is real and measurable. Studies indicate that after making numerous decisions throughout the day, even the most accomplished leaders experience declining judgement quality. Your prefrontal cortex, responsible for strategic thinking, complex problem-solving and innovative insight, operates most effectively when it can cycle between focused work and restorative rest.

During downtime, your brain shifts into what neuroscientists call the “default mode network,” where connections between disparate ideas strengthen, patterns emerge and creative solutions crystallise. This isn’t empty time, it’s when your subconscious processes complex challenges you’ve been wrestling with consciously.

Stepping away from day-to-day pressures lets you reclaim clarity, prevent burnout and build resilience. It creates mental space to reflect on bigger questions without distraction. Calm mindsets often produce breakthroughs that intense focus cannot achieve.

Different leaders require different approaches to mental restoration. Some need complete disconnection – total breaks from business content to allow their minds to reset entirely. Others find that engaging with compelling, adjacent content -thought-provoking books, podcasts or conversations outside their immediate domain – provides the perfect balance of mental stimulation and strategic distance.

 

Strategic Learning Through Audio: The Executive Advantage

Holiday listening, as opposed to traditional reading, enables passive learning with an ideal balance: it feels less like work, but can still prime a relaxed, open mind to high-calibre thinking and vision. The great thing about podcasts is the enormous wealth of free online resources, enabling individuals to pick and choose subjects most pertinent to their own spheres of interest and responsibility in their own time.

Whether reflecting on the bigger picture while freed from the daily grind or investing in more focused learning around the intersection of technology and leadership, there’s content with the right tone and expertise level for every executive need.

We have surveyed our consultants and clients to compile the most entertaining and inspiring holiday audio for executives and senior leadership that blend insight with entertainment, weeding out those with heavy sales pitches or unedited content – ideal for holiday walks, poolside moments, or travel time.

 

Curated Podcasts for Executive Thinking

Essential Business Strategy and Crisis Management

“When It Hits the Fan” (BBC Radio 4) Inside the world of crisis managers and spin doctors, David Yelland and Simon Lewis watch the week’s biggest PR disasters unfold. In each episode, they go behind the scenes of the latest news stories to find out how, where, and when it all began to hit the fan.

In today’s social media world, all C-suite and senior leadership need to be PR savvy. This means communicating safely and productively with stakeholders and customers during business-as-usual, but also being prepared to respond to crises and negative coverage swiftly, publicly, and effectively. This podcast is like a free lesson from two of the best in the business, based on current, relatable case studies.

Start with: How to Deal with Redundancies or How to Use Storytelling.

 

“The Bottom Line” (BBC Radio 4) The definitive business podcast from the BBC, hosted by Evan Davis. This BBC Radio 4 offering provides weekly dives into different aspects of business, some niche and micro, such as the businesses of death or car parks, others macro such as hype and DEI (diversity, equality and inclusion), plus interviews with business leaders on “decisions that made me.”

Start with: One of the range of interesting interview subjects relevant to your sector, or Being the New Broom, which considers how best to change the direction of an organisation in a new leadership role.

 

Innovation and Growth Strategy

“Acquired” “Learn the playbooks that built the world’s greatest companies—and how you can apply them.” The Wall Street Journal says: “By turning case studies into cinematic spectacles, they have built the business world’s favourite podcast.”

Deep-dive stories into companies like Pixar and Nvidia. Each episode, while thoroughly researched, feels more like a compelling narrative than a business lecture. The blend of strategy, history, and storytelling is perfect for relaxed yet focused listening.

Start with: Charlie Munger, LinkedIn, Bitcoin, and Epic Systems.

 

“Masters of Scale” Iconic business leaders share lessons and strategies that have helped them grow the world’s most fascinating companies. Founders, CEOs, and dynamic innovators join candid conversations about their triumphs and challenges with a set of luminary hosts, including founding host Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn co-founder.

A polished podcast mixing sharp insights with engaging, often humorous storytelling from some of the biggest names in business.

Start with: Esther Perel: Build Better Relationships at Work or From Data Breach Scandal to AI Darling with Snowflake’s CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy.

 

Leadership Development and Team Dynamics

“People Managing People” with David Rice He says: As a long-ti”me journalist and storyteller, I’m dedicated to creating thought-provoking and educational content for leaders and people managers as they tackle the challenges the future of work presents.”

Short, practical discussions on leadership challenges and team dynamics. A favourite for its warmth, brevity, and relevance to real-world leadership.

Start with: AI at Work: Why Businesses Need a New Playbook.

 

“Dare to Lead” with Brené Brown A mix of solo episodes and conversations with change-catalysts, culture-shifters and troublemakers. Based on Brown’s Wall Street Journal bestseller, there’s a big focus on ethical business use of AI, calling on leaders to step up and take responsibility for ensuring the impact of this technological revolution is positive.

Start with: Futurist Amy Webb on what’s coming and what’s here.

 

Strategic Thinking and Mental Models

“The Diary of a CEO” with Steven Bartlett Steven sits down with some of the world’s most influential people, experts, and thinkers on a curiosity-driven journey to discover untold truths, unlearned lessons, and important insights. One of the world’s most-downloaded podcasts, featuring big-name interviews from former First Lady Michelle Obama to the planet’s most successful CEOs. Some episodes stray from the business arena so be selective.

Start with: Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel reveals how hiring mistakes nearly cost him everything.

 

“Freakonomics Radio” Freakonomics co-author Stephen J. Dubner uncovers the hidden side of everything. A wild card not devoted purely to business but one that explores the minutiae of life, death, and everything in between, perfect for executives looking to expand their minds and ways of thinking. Economics, data, the art of failing better and how your brain works are among the topics.

Start with: Why Are There So Many Bad Bosses?, How to Make Your Own Luck, How to Get More Grit in Your Life.

 

AI and Technology Leadership

“The AI-Powered Business Leader” Cuts through the hype to deliver practical business solutions for real business challenges. It’s almost impossible to find a podcast on AI in business that isn’t either dry and tech-based, an extended ad for the creator, or just plain dull. Here’s an easy-on-the-ears, informative, relevant, and plain-speaking delve into what business leaders need to know about AI.

Start with: How Do Business Leaders Navigate AI? or The Smart Way to Automate.

 

“The Next Big Idea” In-depth interviews with the world’s leading thinkers – conversations that might just change the way you see the world. From Amazon’s Wondery stable, featuring high-quality production and interviews with leading thinkers across business, psychology, technology, and personal growth.

Start with: Superagency: What Could Go Right with AI? or DRIVE: A Fresh Look at the Science of Motivation (with Daniel Pink).

 

Strategic Audiobooks for Executive Development

Self-help type personal and professional development books have their place: great for commuting and delayed appointments, but perhaps less so on a beach in the Seychelles or an adventurous bus ride over the Andes. So here we have focused on more absorbing memoirs, biographies and other accounts with a story—business page-turners, if you will—filled with insights and inspiration.

 

Entrepreneurial Leadership and Business Building

“Shoe Dog” by Phil Knight The co-founder of Nike offers an engaging, humorous and fascinating look into the highs and lows of building a business from the ground up, full of insights and lessons. Bill Gates says: “A refreshingly honest reminder of what the path to business success really looks like… It’s an amazing tale.”

“That Will Never Work” by Marc Randolph Narrated by Netflix’s co-founder himself, this memoir charts the company’s unlikely origins. Randolph mixes humour with humility as he recounts the failed pitches, early missteps and relentless experimentation behind what became a global media giant. A light, honest listen about entrepreneurship, vision and pivoting with agility.

“The Burger King” by Jim McLamore A conversational and candid memoir from the founder of Burger King. Full of colloquial charm, business mishaps and behind-the-scenes war stories, ideal for executives looking for a frank, fast-paced story of entrepreneurial grit.

 

Risk Management and Corporate Responsibility

“Conspiracy of Fools” by Kurt Eichenwald A masterclass in narrative non-fiction that reads like a corporate thriller – except every detail is true. Kurt Eichenwald reconstructs the stunning collapse of Enron with journalistic precision and the flair of a novelist, exposing not only the financial engineering and regulatory failures but the deep-seated cultural rot and hubris that infected the company’s leadership. Executives will recognise many of the pressures and rationalisations that fuelled the downfall.

“Exposure: A Twenty-Year Battle Against DuPont” by Robert Bilott Narrated by Jeremy Bobb (with Mark Ruffalo reading the first chapter), it chronicles Bilott’s long legal crusade exposing DuPont’s toxic pollution. Intensely human, profound and deeply moving, extraordinary in its clarity, ethical reflection and unwavering persistence. Ideal and inspirational for leaders concerned with accountability, public purpose, and change through quiet resilience.

 

The Power of Passive Learning for Executive Minds

We all know it can be incredibly difficult for people whose working lives are characterised by relentless, multiple pressure points to switch off. Even finding the focus to read a book can be challenging, while the busiest minds will continue to whir and spin long after their computer has been shut down for the holidays.

Podcasts and audiobooks offer a perfect compromise, allowing the brain to listen passively, instead of having to engage with everything around it; clearing the mind of emails, meetings, strategies, challenges and actions on the infinite to-do list, but assuaging any guilt or anxiety about leaving work responsibilities behind; unlocking mental space where insight, creativity, and foresight can thrive.

Thanks to the technology we carry in our smartphones, when inspiration does come, it can be dictated and left as a voice note for another time. With thoughtful curation of listening content, executives can return rested, reinvigorated, and ready for the next challenge.

In our next article, we’ll explore how to create your personal recharge strategy and implement strategic downtime practices that maximise your leadership effectiveness.

The competition for increasingly scarce executive and board-level positions has intensified dramatically, with AI-powered recruitment making the process both more sophisticated and more demanding. We have surveyed our executive career consultants and seasoned interviewers to share insider insights on how the process works in 2025, what employers are truly seeking and how to optimise your performance at every stage.

Securing a board or senior leadership position represents one of the most demanding, high-stakes career transitions an executive can face. The process typically unfolds over 90–120 days, involving multiple layers of rigorous assessment. Success requires not only compelling credentials and relevant experience but also strategic maturity, leadership courage, AI fluency and acute alignment with the organisation’s long-term vision.

In 2025’s candidate-rich environment, AI-powered algorithms can distil the global talent pool into highly targeted shortlists, making differentiation more critical than ever.

 

Step 1: Building Executive Visibility and Digital Readiness

Optimise Your Professional Brand for AI-Driven Search

Being discoverable starts with an online profile that is current, strategically worded and aligned with emerging skills in your target sector. Search firms and internal talent teams typically source around 200 potential candidates through databases, AI algorithms and executive networks. Your digital presence must immediately signal both your current capabilities and future potential.

Key elements include:

  • LinkedIn optimisation with sector-specific keywords and AI-related competencies
  • Thought leadership content demonstrating strategic thinking
  • Board-ready professional imagery and comprehensive experience summaries
  • Testimonials and recommendations from C-suite peers and board members

The conversion funnel is steep: from 200 initial candidates, approximately 18 are formally longlisted, an average of 6–8 processed to initial shortlist and interview rounds, with final interviews typically narrowing to 3 candidates. This high conversion rate from first contact to final round makes every touchpoint critical.

 

Step 2: Understanding the Multi-Stage Interview Process

Navigate Each Phase with Strategic Purpose

The executive interview process follows a predictable yet nuanced pattern across most organisations and often includes:

  • Initial Screening: Search consultants or HR conduct baseline assessments focusing on experience verification, cultural alignment and strategic role fit. This 45–60-minute conversation establishes mutual interest and assesses your understanding of the position’s complexities.
  • Competency Assessment Rounds: Multiple interviews with future colleagues, direct reports and key stakeholders. These sessions delve into leadership style, delivery track record and ability to manage ambiguity or transformation. Expect behavioural questions, leadership scenarios and a detailed exploration of your decision-making process.
  • Strategic Evaluation Phase: Case studies, crisis management scenarios and deep discussions about the company’s strategic challenges become central. You’ll engage with senior teams on complex business problems, demonstrating both analytical capability and collaborative leadership.
  • Final Executive Panel: The culminating assessment involves meeting with multiple C-suite executives and board members simultaneously. This may include dinner meetings or extended sessions designed to evaluate your ability to contribute to senior team dynamics, strategic discussions and organisational culture.
  • Due Diligence and Reference Verification: Comprehensive background checks, reference calls with former board colleagues and final stakeholder alignment before appointment confirmation.

 

Step 3: Mastering What Organisations Really Want in 2025

Demonstrate Strategic Leadership Beyond Technical Excellence

Technical competence and a solid track record are baseline expectations. Boards and CEOs now prioritise leaders who combine strategic clarity with emotional intelligence, leading with both authority and humility. The ability to challenge entrenched practices constructively and create psychologically safe, high-performing teams has become essential.

Critical Competencies for 2025:

  • AI Fluency and Digital Leadership: Understanding how technology reshapes operations, people management, and strategic planning
  • Systems Thinking: Ability to see interconnections and manage complex organisational dynamics
  • Data Literacy: Making informed decisions using analytics while maintaining human judgement
  • Transformational Leadership: Guiding organisations through continuous change and uncertainty

LinkedIn research indicates 80% of leaders now prioritise AI fluency over traditional experience when recruiting senior executives. However, these expectations are often unspoken, requiring proactive demonstration of these capabilities through storytelling and real-world examples.

Use concrete narratives to illustrate where you’ve employed advanced leadership techniques, your learning process and measurable results. This approach transforms abstract competencies into tangible value propositions.

 

Step 4: Leveraging Each Interview Stage for Continuous Learning

Treat the Process as Strategic Intelligence Gathering

Rather than viewing each interview as an isolated event, successful candidates approach the process iteratively. After every interaction, reflect on key questions: What did I learn about the organisation’s challenges? How did my responses resonate? What assumptions did I make, and were they accurate?

Research Evolution Strategy: As you advance through stages, your understanding of the company, its people and its culture should become demonstrably sharper. Final-round interviewers expect you to articulate informed perspectives on:

  • Market positioning and competitive dynamics
  • Strategic options and potential pivots
  • Internal capabilities and development needs
  • Likely organisational pain points and solutions

The most successful candidates don’t merely answer questions, they ask compelling ones that demonstrate their ability to think alongside the board rather than simply report to it. This consultative approach signals strategic partnership potential.

 

Step 5: Excelling in Final Interviews and Decision-Making Conversations

Demonstrate Executive Presence and Strategic Partnership

The final interview transcends competence assessment; it evaluates confidence, chemistry and conviction. Interviewers seek someone capable of leading peers, representing the organisation externally and inspiring teams internally. Your communication style, active listening ability and emotional agility receive intense scrutiny.

Success Factors for Final Rounds:

Leadership Narrative with Future Value Focus: Articulate how you will create value in the role, underpinned by evidence from past achievements.

Trust and Gravitas: Demonstrate the credibility, presence and interpersonal depth to earn trust quickly across peers, boards, and stakeholders.

Strategic Vision Anchored in Market Insight: Show how your strategy aligns with the organisation’s current position and what’s needed to drive future growth.

Self-Awareness and Composure: Discuss your development areas with emotional intelligence, humility and readiness for board-level challenge and growth.

Successful candidates articulate a compelling leadership story while expressing genuine purpose and alignment with the organisation’s mission. They engage in strategic dialogue that reveals both analytical depth and collaborative intelligence.

Professional coaching provides invaluable support throughout this process, offering objective perspective, strategic rehearsal and psychological space to refine your message and presence. Coaches help test narratives against likely questions, strengthen performance examples and manage mindset throughout the journey.

 

Turning Setbacks into Strategic Advantages

Extract Maximum Learning from Every Experience

Even exceptional candidates aren’t selected every time. When this occurs, extracting comprehensive learning becomes essential. By building a strong relationship with search consultants, you increase your chances of receiving valuable feedback. Ask for input on perceived strengths, potential gaps and what set the successful candidate apart.

Create your own Post-Interview Reflection Framework:

  • What did the process reveal about your leadership story?
  • Which competencies require strengthening?
  • How can you adjust positioning for future opportunities?
  • What organisational insights can inform your search strategy?

Document these insights, update your professional positioning and use the experience to enhance future interview performance. Rejection at the executive level rarely indicates failure.  More often, it reflects fit considerations that may be nuanced or situational.

The key is maintaining visibility, remaining coachable and staying prepared. Each completed interview process strengthens your candidacy for subsequent opportunities, building both competence and confidence for that defining executive career transition.

 

Embracing the Executive Interview Journey

Leadership evolution never stops. For executives seeking transformational roles, embracing the interview process as discovery rather than mere performance evaluation can be transformative. With strategic preparation, professional support and a learning-oriented mindset, your next interview may open the door to the most rewarding chapter of your career.

The world is evolving from Generative AI – passive and prompt-based – to Agentic AI: active, autonomous systems. As these agents integrate into core business functions, they are reshaping the world of work. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang envisions having a workforce one day made of 50,000 people and 100 million agents.

This shift demands a fundamental rethink of leadership. Unlike traditional automation, Agentic AI performs multi-step tasks, applies judgement, learns and acts on goals with far less oversight. It’s more than process efficiency – it’s a redefinition of roles, workflows and governance. In our last insight, we looked at the ways in which leaders can futureproof their own careers, adapting their offering to exploit new opportunities in the face of AI-driven structural change in the executive job market. Here, we look at how they can lead hybrid human/agentic workforces effectively, harmoniously and ethically, a skill that will become increasingly critical to organisational success – and sought after – in the months and years to come.

 

The Strategic Leadership Imperative

As machines move further into the realms of white-collar and knowledge-based tasks and functions, organisations might opt to prioritise efficiency savings or growth.

While a third of CEOs are looking to reduce headcounts through AI, the more strategic approach is to augment human productivity and build blended workforces that work in harmony to drive growth, innovation and employee engagement.

The presence of autonomous software agents introduces a novel dimension to organisational leadership. Leaders will be expected to supervise hybrid teams composed of human personnel and algorithmic agents. This requires the development of new competencies. Familiarity with the operational logic of digital agents will be essential. Leaders must be equipped to evaluate outputs critically, interpret process transparency and respond proportionately when systems operate beyond their intended parameters.

Crucially, leaders will also need to communicate clearly with their human teams about the purpose and limitations of automated counterparts. Trust, which has traditionally been fostered through interpersonal credibility and relationships, must now be extended to the technological instruments of the organisation, and language will be important: framing AI agents as co-pilots or support systems, not the competition. This can only occur through transparency, continuous education and robust governance frameworks that ensure human agency remains at the centre of decision-making.

Every executive function has a part to play:

  • CEOs must set a vision rooted in human dignity and long-term employability.
  • CFOs should fund re-skilling, mobility and adaptive workforce planning.
  • COOs need to redesign workflows to preserve meaning and clarity.
  • CTOs must deliver tailored training based on user needs and experience.
  • Diversity Officers must prevent inequality by ensuring inclusive access to tools and training.
  • HR should coordinate all of this, monitor sentiment and protect trust during change.

 

Redefining Roles and Responsibilities

The rise of agentic systems requires a thorough reassessment of job structures across multiple domains. As well as the more obvious deployments, such as next-gen natural language chat bots offering hyper-personalised customer services and sales, these systems are increasingly capable of performing complex tasks such as project coordination, data interpretation, predictive planning such as maintenance and supply chains, talent acquisition and even elements of strategic planning.

Within the next five years, digital agents could hold operational responsibility for roles traditionally reserved for junior to mid-level professionals including research analysts, procurement coordinators, account managers and elements of compliance monitoring.

Autonomous agents offer multiple potential advantages including operational consistency, accelerated task execution, round-the-clock availability and increased productivity.

There is also a clear opportunity for diversification of career trajectories. As digital agents assume routine functions, leaders should seek opportunities to release and upskill human workers to pursue more complex, collaborative or experimental work, increasing employee engagement, satisfaction and productivity. They will also need to consider hiring externally or redeploying from within to integrate the new human-AI coordination roles that will become core to successful hybrid workforces, including ethical oversight officers, systems auditors, data managers and verifiers and augmentation strategists. Every task and product created and serviced by AI will need human oversight.

 

Managing Risks and Governance Challenges

Human-AI integration raises tough questions. Displacement is real, especially in task-heavy sectors. Training helps, but change is accelerating and jobs are being lost in vast numbers before new ones emerge to replace them in this most disruptive stage of adoption. Salesforce’s Agentforce AI now handles 85% of customer queries – half of one 9,000-person department was redeployed. Just 500 of those reassigned to tech roles could save $50 million – but 4,500 risk unemployment.

Agentic systems can also embed bias or make decisions with no clear accountability. If left unchecked, or allowed to run without boundaries, they could undermine fairness, culture and trust. Those boundaries must be reviewed and redesigned constantly, employing human nuance, creativity and empathy.

Over-reliance is another danger. Agents are tools, not substitutes for judgement or ethics. Leaders must draw clear lines between what machines can do and what only humans should do. Strong governance is essential: audit systems, ensure traceability and keep decision-making transparent.

 

Preparing for the Future of Work

In the short term, expect AI agents in scheduling, reporting and knowledge management, embedded in existing tools and acting on contextual triggers. In five years, probably less, we are likely to see them support decisions in client services, forecasting and procurement, or even initiate and execute actions independently, within set boundaries.

Agents trained on internal data will align more closely with company goals. But success hinges on more than rollout – it’s about education. Workers need to understand why AI is here, how it works, and what it means for them.

Organisations must invest in critical thinking, digital literacy and cross-disciplinary collaboration. Structures should support integrated teams – humans and AI agents working together, not in parallel.

Inclusion is vital. Transformation must account for geographic, demographic and educational diversity. Tailored support, designed by humans, for humans, is essential to ensure everyone can take part.

 

Leadership Responsibility and Societal Impact

The shift to human-AI teams affects more than companies – it touches labour markets, income, regional economies and cohesion. How many jobs it will displace is a matter of debate. A Goldman Sachs report estimated 300 million jobs could be lost by 2030, the World Economic Forum (WEF) places it at a far less dramatic nine million, while Ford CEO Jim Farley said half of white-collar jobs could go.

However, the WEF also says 11 million jobs could be created by AI.

Executives have their part to play in what happens next. They must not only manage internal change but engage with policy, education and social impact. That means supporting displaced workers, reporting automation’s effects and acting transparently.

Ethical leadership balances innovation with inclusion. The opportunity is real – but so is the obligation. AI agents won’t define success. Leadership will. Aligning people and technology around shared goals is the ultimate goal for humanity.

 

Rialto support executives and leadership teams to protect core business operations while integrating emerging technologies to develop disruptive strategies and models. Our expert teams help leaders to reflect and gain perspective on their leadership approach, organisational processes and strategies to breakthrough stagnation and drive sustainable progress.

Whether you’re seeking to accelerate innovation, redesign operation, or strengthen your teams, Rialto executive career and business change coaches are ready to support you. Contact us today to explore how our strategic leadership and collaboration solutions can propel your organisation forward.

The Executive job market presents a puzzle that’s capturing attention across both boardrooms and Executive Search firms. As of June 2025, the UK had seen 35 consecutive periods of decline in job vacancies against a backdrop of GDP growth – albeit minimal. This suggests a structural shift rather than a cyclical downturn. With the rise of AI and automation, this trendline can only become more acute. What can executives do to ensure they thrive in this new normal?

James Reed, CEO of Reed, said his company had seen a 25 per cent fall in advertised vacancies year on year. “In my decades of working in recruitment, I have never seen anything like this,” he admitted. “After the financial crisis of 2008, we had 16 months of declining vacancies, which was bad enough, but then they started to come back.”

He warns that the hollowing-out effect impacting junior and mid-tier white-collar roles is now reaching senior management layers. Data backs this up: Hiring for white-collar roles dropped 12.7% in the year to Q1 2025, outpacing even blue‑collar decline.  Graduate and entry-level job ads have dropped 33%, while mid-senior roles – especially in project management, operations, and generalist leadership – are increasingly automated or outsourced. Meanwhile, the number of job applications posted on LinkedIn has risen to 11,000 per minute – up 45% in just a year.

However executive compensation and demand for AI-literate leadership are rising. High-value roles that integrate AI governance, strategic transformation, and innovation oversight are growing. Those who can shape and lead change – not just manage the status quo – are thriving.

That reflects what we at Rialto are seeing in the market and hearing from executive clients. Those who first come to us seeking new positions or looking for a career change are finding it harder and harder and it is taking longer without professional support. Those in position may feel insecure and intimidated by the march of the machines.

However, there are steps executives can and should take now to secure their futures and take control of their career trajectories: first and foremost, they need to evolve with the AI-driven economy, to review and update their skillsets. That applies equally to any senior leadership in position or on the market. New roles are being created globally to manage this broad and rapid business transformation, and existing roles are changing to incorporate AI adoption, deployment and oversight.

In order to plan effectively, leaders should start by gaining a greater understanding of economic drivers – what has happened in previous periods of seismic change, who profited and how, and what might be coming next? Identify which services and products will people always want or need, look to the horizon, how is it shaping up? Leaders need to show vision and imagination, as well as a genuine understanding of the flow of traffic. They should read tech-based news as well as that covering their own sector and seek out knowledge that is outside of the public scope through personal relationships with mentors, coaches and networks.

 

Cyclical vs Structural Employment: The Critical Distinction

Cyclical unemployment occurs during normal economic fluctuations, the ebb and flow of business cycles. When demand decreases temporarily, companies reduce hiring and may implement layoffs, but these positions typically return as economic conditions improve.

Structural unemployment, by contrast, represents permanent changes in how economies function. Rather than being caused by the ups and downs of the business cycle, structural unemployment is caused by fundamental shifts in the makeup of the economy.  For example, jobs lost in the coachbuilding sector, once automobiles came to dominate. These changes don’t reverse when economic conditions improve – they represent the new normal.

 

Historical Precedents: Lessons from Past Transformations

The Industrial Revolution of 1750 – 1860 provides perhaps the most instructive historical parallel to today’s AI-driven employment changes.  Technological progress, education and an increasing capital stock transformed England into the workshop of the world, fundamentally reshaping the nature of work itself.

Mechanisation displaced huge swathes of the workforce, eliminating many roles altogether. Despite early disruption, resistance, and societal unrest, the Industrial Revolution ultimately created more jobs than it destroyed, though in entirely different sectors and requiring different skills. The transformation wasn’t just about technology – it fundamentally changed how society organised work, education, and economic opportunity. The same can be said, though to a lesser extent, of the Great Depression of the 1920s, the 2007-2009 global recession and, arguably, the Covid pandemic.

As with industrialisation, there is no going back on AI, and those who adapt most quickly, embrace new technologies and business models and develop new skills will thrive, just as they did in the 19th century. Periods of significant structural change often create opportunities for those who adapt quickly, while leaving behind those who wait for conditions to “return to normal” or until they feel the direct impact – redundancy or difficulty getting back into the market.

Unlike previous downturns that primarily affected lower-skilled roles, today’s changes are reaching senior management layers. AI and automation are transforming decision-making processes traditionally handled by middle and senior management. Meanwhile we are seeing the emergence of entirely new C-suite roles such as Chief AI Officers, Chief Transformation Officers and Chief Resilience Officers, again indicating structural rather than cyclical change.

Instead of focusing on the 92 million jobs expected to be displaced by 2030, leaders could plan for the projected 170 million new ones and the new skills those will require. This represents net job creation, but with fundamentally different skill requirements, as we have explored in previous insights such as this one.

Wage premium for AI – and AI-adjacent skills for workers in the same role – is up to 56%, according to PwC, from 25% in 2024, showing that the market is already rewarding adaptation. The opportunity exists for executives who proactively develop relevant capabilities.

 

Strategic Responses: What Executives Can Do Now

1.Reframe Their Value Proposition

Traditional executive roles focused on oversight and coordination are most at risk. The opportunity lies in repositioning around areas where human judgment, creativity and strategic thinking provide irreplaceable value, such as AI Governance and Ethics leading responsible AI implementation, Transformation Leadership, guiding organisations through fundamental change, Innovation Strategy, identifying and capitalising on emerging opportunities, and Cultural Leadership, maintaining human connection and purpose during technological transformation.

2. Develop Hybrid Competencies

The executives thriving in this environment combine traditional leadership skills with technological fluency, including data literacy – understanding how AI-generated insights inform strategic decisions – change management, scenario planning and ecosystem thinking – managing partnerships between human teams and AI systems. They are taking charge of their own role evolutions – before others decide for them. That includes auditing daily tasks to determine what is strategic vs. automatable, building internal influence as a change agent and aligning closely with value creation metrics – revenue, productivity, culture health – to remain indispensable.

3. Adopt an “AI Co-Pilot” Mentality

Marc Benioff, CEO of Salesforce, recently said AI is now doing 30–50% of the company’s work: “Digital employees are here. Every department is being reshaped,” he said. While tech companies are the outliers, the rest of the world will inevitably follow. According to PwC, 100% of industries are increasing AI usage. Executives must now view AI as a strategic partner. Leaders should upskill in AI governance, prompt engineering, and data ethics, lead transformation initiatives that embed AI into daily workflows and model adaptive learning behaviours across their teams.

4. Position as a Specialist, Not a Generalist

Employers don’t want general managers; they want problem-solvers who can lead under uncertainty, integrate AI, and transform operations. Traditional methods of job searching, such as broad CV distribution and passive networking, are increasingly ineffective. A sharper strategy is required: highlight domain-specific transformation results, demonstrate fluency in tech-led change and leadership based in values, especially guarding and guiding culture through disruption.

5. Create Opportunities

Rather than competing for traditional roles, successful executives are designing new pathways including portfolio careers, advisory positions offering transformation expertise to multiple organisations, thought leadership and entrepreneurial ventures that address structural market needs.

Navigating structural change requires more than individual effort – it demands strategic guidance and systematic skill development. Professional executive coaching and advisory services provide several critical advantages. Structured support can offer objective assessment, for example, helping to identify blind spots and growth areas that internal reflection might miss. The best professional executive career services will have their own, exclusive market intelligence. This includes specialists who maintain current knowledge of emerging role categories and skill premiums across sectors.

Coaches can also help with strategic positioning, reframing executive value propositions to align with structural market changes rather than fighting against them. They should also have access to hidden networks, through which they can provide introductions to emerging opportunities and industry leaders navigating similar transitions.

 

Looking Forward: Optimism Through Adaptation

While structural employment changes create uncertainty, they also generate tremendous opportunities for executives willing to embrace transformation, value creation and leadership impact. History shows that periods of fundamental economic shift often create the conditions for exceptional career growth and impact.

The executives who will thrive over the next five years are those who recognise structural change as permanent rather than temporary and understand the urgency in investing in developing AI-complementary skills now rather than waiting until they hit a problem.

They will position themselves as transformation leaders rather than status quo managers, build diverse, portfolio-based career strategies to fill in any gaps in their experience, skills and knowledge and seek professional guidance to navigate complex transitions effectively.

At Rialto Consultancy, we help executives recognise and capitalise on these structural shifts through strategic coaching, transformation planning and career repositioning programmes. The question isn’t whether the employment landscape will continue to evolve – it’s whether you’ll lead that evolution or be shaped by it.

The future belongs to executives who embrace adaptation as a core competency and professional support as a strategic advantage. The structural shifts we’re experiencing today are creating tomorrow’s leadership opportunities for those prepared to seize them.

In an increasingly complex global business environment, ethical leadership and governance has emerged as a critical determinant of long-term success and resilience. From decisions about diversity, sustainability and AI adoption to questions of societal trust, boards today must align purpose, strategy and values more intentionally than ever before. While recent political shifts have prompted some organisations to retreat from established ethical frameworks, forward-thinking boards recognise that strong ethical foundations are not optional – they are essential for sustainable growth, stakeholder trust and competitive advantage.

At Rialto, we support organisations navigating transformation – ensuring that human-first, values-based governance remains front and centre. This article explores the board’s critical role in protecting and promoting ethical standards in 2025 and beyond.

 

Navigating the Ethics Imperative in Uncertain Times

The corporate world has witnessed significant changes in ethical priorities over recent years. According to industry surveys, 92% of Chief Finance Officers previously planned to increase sustainability spending, while 85% of companies maintained dedicated Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity (EDI) budgets as of 2024. However, recent policy changes have created uncertainty, leading some major corporations to reconsider their ethical commitments.

This retreat presents both risks and opportunities for boards willing to maintain their ethical stance during uncertain times. The challenge for modern boards lies not in choosing between profitability and ethics, but in recognising their fundamental interdependence.

 

The Compelling Case for Ethical Governance

Driving Performance Through Ethical Leadership

Research consistently demonstrates that ethical business practices deliver measurable returns that extend far beyond reputation management. Companies with gender-diverse leadership are 25% more likely to be profitable, while diverse teams demonstrate 19% higher innovation rates. The competitive advantage becomes even more pronounced when examining market performance, with inclusive firms achieving market share increases of up to 45%. Perhaps most significantly for boards concerned with operational efficiency, strong ethical cultures experience up to 59% lower employee turnover, reducing recruitment costs and preserving institutional knowledge.

 

Protecting Against Strategic Risk

Organisations that abandon ethical frameworks face significant exposure across multiple dimensions. Legal and reputational risks manifest through potential employment tribunal claims and brand damage that can take years to repair. The talent retention challenge has become particularly acute, with high-performing employees increasingly choosing employers whose values align with their own. This creates vulnerability to competitors with stronger ethical credentials who can attract top talent more effectively. Furthermore, the erosion of stakeholder trust – among customers, investors, and communities – can undermine business relationships that took decades to build. Beyond these immediate concerns, organisations face reduced readiness for future regulations, such as the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) in the EU and UK gender pay reporting requirements.

 

Strategic Ethical Priorities for Board Leadership

Environmental Sustainability: Building Climate Resilience

The environmental sustainability landscape presents both immediate challenges and long-term opportunities for board oversight. Some organisations have withdrawn from climate coalitions and scaled back sustainability commitments in response to regulatory changes, creating a divergence in corporate approaches to environmental responsibility.

Forward-thinking boards are taking a different approach, conducting comprehensive scenario planning for future environmental regulations while assessing the long-term financial risks of climate change on their business operations. They are developing resilient sustainability frameworks that can adapt to political changes without compromising core environmental commitments. Crucially, these boards maintain transparency in environmental reporting to stakeholders, recognising that environmental performance increasingly influences investment decisions, customer loyalty, and regulatory compliance.

 

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion: Sustaining Progress Through Change

Political uncertainty has created a complex environment for EDI initiatives, with some organisations scaling back programmes while others adopt more subtle approaches, rebranding initiatives under terms like “belonging” or “wellbeing.” This shift reflects the challenge of maintaining commitment to inclusion while navigating changing political and regulatory landscapes.

Effective boards are responding by conducting thorough assessments of legal requirements across all operating jurisdictions, ensuring compliance while maintaining ethical standards. They are developing risk-based approaches to EDI that align with business strategy rather than treating diversity as a separate initiative. Clear metrics and accountability structures provide the foundation for progress, while ensuring board oversight of inclusion initiatives at the highest governance levels demonstrates organisational commitment.

Legal & General exemplifies leading practice in this area, having embedded ESG metrics, including inclusive leadership, into executive performance reviews and pay structures. This approach directly links culture to accountability, ensuring that ethical commitments translate into measurable outcomes and executive responsibility.

 

Artificial Intelligence: Governing the Future Responsibly

As we enter the era of generative and agentic AI – technologies capable not only of learning, but of acting independently – boards face decisions with sweeping implications for algorithmic bias, workforce impact, societal consequences and environmental sustainability. The International Monetary Fund projects that generative AI will impact nearly 40% of global jobs, with disproportionate effects on lower-wage workers, highlighting the social responsibility dimension of AI adoption decisions.

The environmental considerations are equally significant, as AI systems consume substantial energy resources that can conflict with sustainability goals. Additionally, algorithmic bias can perpetuate or amplify existing inequalities, creating ethical obligations that extend beyond immediate business interests.

Responsible boards are establishing comprehensive AI governance frameworks before widespread deployment, ensuring that ethical considerations are embedded from the outset rather than retrofitted later. They are developing workforce transition strategies that prioritise retraining and redeployment, viewing AI adoption as an opportunity to enhance rather than replace human capability. Environmental impact assessment of AI systems has become standard practice, with energy consumption analysis integrated into AI investment decisions. Most importantly, these boards are creating robust accountability mechanisms for AI-related decisions, ensuring that the benefits and risks of AI adoption are carefully managed and transparently reported.

 

Leading with Purpose and Accountability

The current environment presents a defining moment for corporate leadership. Boards must recognise that ethical governance requires leadership to ask not just “Can we?” but “Should we?” Ultimately, ethics is not a branding exercise or compliance tick-box – it is a strategic differentiator that determines long-term viability and success.

This means embedding ethical key performance indicators into performance and reward structures, making values visible in public reporting and corporate governance and committing to investment in EDI and sustainability even when market pressures shift. Most critically, it requires leading AI adoption through a lens of equity, security and environmental stewardship.

As we advance into an era of rapid technological change and evolving social expectations, the question for boards is not whether to prioritise ethics, but how to do so most effectively. The companies that answer this challenge with courage, transparency and strategic focus will define the future of business leadership. They will be the organisations that thrive, not despite their ethical commitments, but because of them, building sustainable competitive advantage through the trust, talent and stakeholder relationships that ethical governance creates.

Identifying Growth Areas in a Cautious Market

Economic conditions across key global regions are beginning to shift, with early signs of recovery emerging in select areas. In the UK and beyond, nearly three years of declining vacancy levels appear to be levelling out and some businesses are cautiously beginning to explore growth opportunities. Although uncertainty remains, particularly around tariffs and ongoing macroeconomic pressures, several of the factors that have weighed down performance and confidence are starting to stabilise.

In this evolving environment, the executive job market reflects a mixed picture shaped by regional economic dynamics, sector-specific trends, and changing leadership requirements. Some regions are experiencing renewed demand for senior talent, while others remain restrained, continuing to adapt slowly in the face of structural and market disruption.

Sector momentum is most evident in technology, healthcare, and defence, where demand for leadership remains strong. Meanwhile, leadership skillsets are shifting in response to accelerating change. Executives are increasingly expected to navigate disruption, lead transformation and deliver value in uncertain conditions.

As highlighted in our recent Blog, Generative AI is playing a growing role in shaping the executive landscape. It offers significant potential as a productivity tool, while simultaneously posing a disruptive threat to roles at the Board level, in middle management and across routine and administrative functions, many of which are now susceptible to partial or full automation. At the same time, it is enabling new efficiencies and innovation across industries.

For senior leaders looking to progress, reposition, or lead change, a clear understanding of these regional and sector-specific dynamics is essential.

Below we offer a snapshot of the executive market across key global regions, examining trends and opportunities across the UK and Europe then exploring the high-growth and high-volatility regions of the United States and Asia Pacific. The snapshot is designed to provide executives with a greater insight into current and emerging growth areas and in-demand skills to support continue personal growth and transition.

 

The Global Context

According to the latest ManpowerGroup Employment Outlook Survey, which canvassed 39,449 employers across 41 countries, global hiring intentions are up 3% year-on-year, with a Net Employment Outlook (NEO) of 25%. However, regional disparities remain pronounced.

Confidence is highest in Asia Pacific and lowest in the Middle East and Europe, with the UK a surprising outlier, ranking seventh globally with a robust 31% NEO. India leads with 43%, followed by the US, Mexico, Canada, and China.

Almost half of employers looking to hire in 2025 cite business expansion as the main driver, with technology transformation a close second, particularly in Asia Pacific.

By sector, IT leads globally, followed by financial services and life sciences. Energy and utilities, despite the push toward green solutions, remain soft, possibly impacted by the Trump administration’s hostility toward climate-forward policies.

One option opening up is for senior project management professionals, now increasingly in demand. The World Economic Forum projects that 16 million new project-focused roles will be needed by 2030.

 

UK & Europe in Focus

United Kingdom: Surprising Resilience Amid Complexity

UK headlines have been dominated by gloomy forecasts: the flight of high-net-worth individuals, rising employer costs and a stalling economy. Inflation hit 3.5% in April 2025, driven largely by utility price spikes, limiting the Bank of England’s room to cut interest rates.

Vacancies fell 15% year-on-year to April according to the ONS and  real wages rose by 2.6%. However, ONS data reliability has increasingly come under question.

There are signs of underlying resilience and recovery, however. The Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) reported a 0.4% increase in new postings between March and April 2025, led by London and the South West. GDP grew 0.7% in Q1, exceeding expectations, while exports surged 3.5% and investment rose 6%.

The Lloyds Business Barometer showed confidence down 10 points in April to 39%, following a strong Q1. Despite this dip, sentiment remains well above the 10-year average of 29%. Hiring intentions dropped slightly to 37% but remains among the strongest globally.

Fastest-growing executive roles include Chief Digital Officer, Head of Transformation and Chief Human Resources Officer while key growth areas include sales and business development, environmental services and digital and cybersecurity leadership (spurred by recent breaches at Marks & Spencer, Co-op, and Harrods).

New trade deals with India, the US, the EU and the Middle East could soften the impact of US tariffs and Brexit aftershocks.

The financial sector, especially fintech, insurtech, and sustainable finance, remains buoyant, with increased demand for executives experienced in digital transformation, compliance, and mergers & acquisitions.

In manufacturing, there’s high demand for leaders focused on supply chain resilience and sustainability, particularly those with cross-border trade experience.

The green energy transition is another driver, fuelling demand for executives in grid modernisation, energy storage and circular supply chains.

Meanwhile, regional hotspots, Manchester, Edinburgh, and Birmingham, are gaining traction as executive opportunity hubs, reflecting broader economic rebalancing and tech investment.

 

Europe: Strategic Opportunity Amid Caution

Across Europe, the hiring outlook remains cautious but not without opportunity. Executives may need to be flexible, considering roles in high-growth countries in the Nordics or pivoting into expanding sectors such as renewables and ESG leadership.

Europe’s push toward net-zero by 2050 is a major driver of executive demand in renewable energy, ESG and sustainability strategy and circular economy leadership. Complex regulation and technology integration are accelerating demand for executives in compliance and risk, cybersecurity and digital innovation

Across the EU, Chief Sustainability Officers (CSOs) and Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) are among the most in-demand roles.

 

Regional snapshots:

  • Germany: Demand for executives in EVs, battery tech, industrial software, and supply chain management
  • France: Opportunities in aerospace, defence, and industrial policy as the country reinforces its tech sovereignty
  • Nordics & Netherlands: Leading on ESG adoption and circular business models; seeking sustainability-focused leadership

So, the UK and Europe present a cautiously optimistic executive landscape for H2 2025. While hiring sentiment is more conservative than in Asia or the US, quality opportunities exist for executives with strong track records in the growth areas mentioned.

Those who balance technical fluency with people-centric leadership, crisis management and operational excellence are best positioned for advancement.

Executives should start by seeking professional support to assess their transferable skills, refine and update their value propositions and identify how they align with in-demand sectors. While deep sector expertise remains valuable, executives who can transfer leadership capabilities across industries often have broader opportunity sets. Crisis management capabilities, developed through recent global disruptions for example, remain highly valued as organisations seek leaders who can maintain performance during uncertainty and guide strategic agility.

For executives willing to expand their horizons geographically, managing multi-region operations or seeking to build international portfolio careers, part two will look at the landscape and forecasts for the US and Asia.

Anyone looking to accelerate their professional development and career trajectory with data driven, modern and insightful structured and highly personalised support, tapping into the Rialto resources of sector-based knowledge, GenAI-fluency, regional expertise and established global networks, should get in touch for a free initial consultation.

 

United States & Asia Pacific in Focus

United States: Opportunity in Transition

The US market remains resilient with a Net Employment Outlook of 25%. However, uncertainty persists due to inflation, tariff wars, and fears of a “Trumpcession” – a downturn triggered by erratic economic policy shifts and increasing debt.

A record 646 CEOs exited in Q1 2025 while interim executive placements rose 29% year-on-year, revealing a broader trend of leadership re-evaluation and succession restructuring.

This turnover creates cascading leadership vacancies, offering real opportunities for executives with proven crisis management skills, strategic agility and change leadership experience

In-demand roles and skills include Chief Growth Officers (CGOs), Chief Experience Officers (CXOs), dealmakers in investment banking, leaders in digital transformation and fintech and healthcare tech and telemedicine executives

While Silicon Valley remains a key hub, Austin, Denver, Seattle, and North Carolina are emerging as executive talent hotspots offering more flexible and affordable alternatives.

 

Asia Pacific: Ambitious, Accelerated Growth

Asia Pacific shows the strongest hiring intentions globally, with an NEO of 30%. The region is marked by sharp contrasts; mature markets like Japan and Australia face talent shortages, while India and Southeast Asia are experiencing explosive demand.

85% of Asia-Pacific CEOs are optimistic about global growth, fuelling M&A, innovation and green investment.

 

Key country-level trends:

  • India: Tech services, healthcare, and biotech continue to surge; demand high for global delivery leaders
  • China: Executive demand in semiconductors, energy, and manufacturing amid a push for tech self-reliance
  • Japan: Leaders needed in automation, international expansion, and healthcare innovation
  • Singapore: Strong demand for regional strategy executives and green finance leaders

Top roles in the region include CTOs and CFOs, with increasing expectations for AI fluency and financial rigour in driving growth.

 

Cross-Regional Trends and Insights

AI as a baseline: AI, data science, and digital automation are no longer differentiators, they’re expected. The edge lies in applying these tools strategically across business functions.

Geographic flexibility: Distributed teams and hybrid leadership models are becoming the norm. Willingness to relocate or manage regionally can expand opportunities.

Crisis readiness: Executives with experience managing uncertainty and leading transformation are highly prized.

Cultural intelligence: Especially critical in Asia Pacific, but increasingly important across global leadership roles.

So, although uncertainty prevails, solid opportunities are also emerging with developing markets and technologies driving growth in selective areas. To thrive as we move to H2 2025 and beyond, executives must stay ahead of these regional and sector-specific trends, reassess and adapt their skillsets for emerging opportunities and articulate a clear, differentiated value proposition. They will find professional support, including executive coaching, market intelligence and career strategising, more valuable than ever.

The global executive landscape in H2 2025 demands agility, foresight, and bold leadership. For those ready to embrace transformation, the opportunities are real, across industries, continents and roles.

To explore how the Rialto data-driven career strategy support can help you navigate this disruptive Executive market and accelerate your leadership journey, do get in touch for a free consultation.

Three-fifths of C-suite executives in the US currently leveraging Generative AI are actively seeking roles in organisations that demonstrate more advanced AI adoption, according to a late 2024 survey.

This trend underscores the transformative impact of Generative AI on leadership expectations, where forward-thinking leaders perceive advanced AI integration as a catalyst for innovation and strategic advantage. Those ahead of the curve recognise that the gap between AI adopters and laggards is widening and with it, the risk of Executive profile irrelevance.

GenAI is transforming how organisations operate, including automating routine tasks, driving strategic decisions and innovation, sharpening customer insights, lowering costs and enabling highly personalised services.

According to McKinsey’s 2024 Global Survey, nearly 70% of businesses now use at least one GenAI tool, with 40% planning significant investment increases. In the UK, the House of Lords has urged targeted AI upskilling for leaders. Meanwhile, US boards are already demanding AI literacy as a core competency, while countries like Singapore, China, and South Korea are outpacing much of the West in AI infrastructure investment and policy development.

Despite the momentum, an EY survey found that only 27% of UK executives feel confident navigating AI transformation. Many admit they’re uncertain how AI will impact their roles, teams, or business models. This, coupled with the rapid pace of technological advancements and concerns about workforce displacement, can lead to heightened anxiety amongst some, hesitancy, and even active resistance.

At the same time, global contrasts are becoming more pronounced. While some regions and sectors, particularly in Asia, demonstrate a greater appetite for innovation and calculated risk, others are proceeding more cautiously. China and South Korea, for instance, are making significant investments in AI infrastructure and policy frameworks, aiming to secure leadership positions in the next wave of technological progress.

In contrast, the UK and EU are working to strike a balance between regulating AI responsibly and pushing forward to maintain competitiveness. This dual focus on ethics and innovation reflects a broader strategic challenge: advancing quickly enough to realise AI’s full potential while building the necessary trust, capability, and governance mechanisms.

For executives, this is not simply a precarious balancing act but a pivotal leadership moment: an inflection point that calls for clarity, agility, and collaboration across disciplines and borders.

Drawing from the Rialto team’s experience with executives across global regions, several capabilities consistently emerge as critical for leading in this dynamic age of GenAI. Embracing these capabilities can empower executives to harness Generative AI’s full potential, transforming challenges into opportunities for growth and innovation.

 

Leadership Capabilities for a GenAI era

Technological Fluency: Executives need not be technologists nor need to code, but they must possess a clear understanding of AI’s capabilities and limitations, to be able to ask smart questions, distinguish hype from substance and align solutions to strategic goals. Equally important is the ability to manage expectations as AI initiatives can require extended timeframes for ROI and organisational integration. Continuous learning is essential.

To stay ahead, many leaders are joining executive groups like the Rialto AI Business Circle to share insights and stay current on emerging trends

Ethical Foresight and Governance: With increasing regulatory scrutiny and stakeholder concerns, leaders need a visible, principled stance on AI’s responsible use. This includes addressing algorithmic bias, safeguarding data privacy, protecting intellectual property and mitigating environmental impact. In fact, 76% of business leaders now anticipate significant cultural and ethical shifts driven by AI that will require proactive management.

One route for influencing and gaining insight in this area is through membership in the UK Government’s All-Party Parliamentary Group on Artificial Intelligence, which allows business leaders to help shape policy and safeguard standards.

Human-AI Collaboration Design: Effective leadership involves integrating AI in ways that complement, rather than replace, human expertise. Leaders must understand where human judgment remains indispensable and craft workflows that enhance rather than diminish it.

Internal resistance remains a challenge. Two thirds of C-suite leaders admit cultural tension risks harming AI rollouts while 42% said they were “tearing their organisations apart”.  Concerns about job security and societal impact remain prevalent. Companies must invest in resilience and cybersecurity, while leaders have a critical role in addressing employee concerns through open dialogue and collaborative planning.

Strategic AI Investment: With finite resources, executive teams must prioritise AI investments that align with core business objectives, balancing immediate efficiencies with long-term capability building. This demands a level of digital and GenAI fluency across all senior leaders. A well-calibrated AI investment strategy may allocate 60% to enhancing current operations, 30% to adjacent innovations, and 10% to exploratory or disruptive initiatives. Avoiding “tech for tech’s sake” is imperative.

Change Management Mastery: GenAI isn’t a plug-and-play fix, it represents a fundamental cultural shift. Effective transformation requires compelling communication, room for experimentation and the empowerment of internal champions. Celebrating early successes builds momentum and trust. Equally, leaders must create psychologically safe environments that support learning, innovation, and adaptive thinking in the face of change.

Cross-Functional Collaboration: With 71% of executives acknowledging that AI remains siloed in many organisations, integration is a clear priority. Leaders must break down traditional barriers between technology, operations and strategy by fostering AI-focused cross-functional teams, aligning KPIs and enabling secure but open access to shared data. In this era, AI transformation must be a seen as a team sport, a collaborative endeavour driven by shared purpose and organisational coherence.

 

What’s Coming: GenAI Leadership by 2030

Over the next five years, Generative AI will continue to mature and with it, the demands and expectations placed on executive leadership will evolve significantly.

Rialto predictions and expectations include:

Regulation Will Get More Serious: The UK may diverge from EU regulation post-Brexit, seeking innovation-friendly policies while maintaining ethical standards. Meanwhile, the US and leading Asian economies are advancing their regulatory approaches more quickly. Executives will need to remain informed, agile, and engaged, shaping policy through industry bodies, public discourse and cross-sector collaboration.

Democratised AI Development: No-code and low-code platforms will enable non-technical teams to build their own AI solutions independently. Leadership will shift away from acting as a gatekeeper and towards becoming a governance steward, ensuring that innovation thrives within strategic, ethical, and security parameters.

Decision Support Systems Will Become the Norm: Executives will increasingly rely on AI-generated insights to model scenarios, assess risks and guide decisions. But human judgment will remain crucial, particularly in areas requiring ethical nuance, stakeholder empathy or complex interpersonal dynamics.

Leadership Styles Will Change: Traditional hierarchical models are giving way to systems thinking and collaborative leadership. The GenAI-ready executive must be a learning leader, comfortable with ambiguity and skilled in facilitating diverse perspectives.

AI as a Team Member: Executives will lead hybrid teams in which AI tools aren’t just assistants but creative collaborators. This will alter how teams are formed, how success is measured and how value is co-created.

Coaching and Feedback Wil Become Increasingly Vital: Expect AI-powered leadership coaching, real-time behavioural analysis and personalised learning paths. Leaders who cultivate self-awareness and value space for reflection, not just technical knowledge, will rise above and stand out.

Authenticity Will Matter More Than Ever: In a world of synthetic content and automated interactions, human presence and integrity will become premium leadership qualities. Both customers and employees will increasingly seek transparency, integrity, and empathy from those at the top.

Board AI Literacy Will Become a Requirement: By 2030, AI fluency is likely to be mandated for directors in regulated sectors and widely expected across others. Progressive leaders are already preparing for this shift, embedding AI knowledge at board level today.

GenAI is more than a technology trend, it represents a strategic and cultural reset. The most successful executives will approach it with vision, humility and a willingness to reinvent. They will view AI not as a threat to manage but as a partner in rethinking how value is created and sustained.

By developing fluency, leading ethically, designing for collaboration and continuously adapting and upskilling, leaders can future-proof not only their careers but also the organisations they serve in a world being redefined by intelligence, both artificial and human.

 

Get Involved

A limited number of spaces are now open for senior leaders to join the Rialto AI Business Leaders Circle. This cross-sector initiative connects business, policy and technology leaders to shape the UK’s AI future.

To explore membership options, schedule a call with Rialto director Richard Chiumento, an APPG AI Permanent Advisory Board Member here.

In today’s high-pressure business environment, where executive turnover is at an all-time high and recruitment freezes are becoming more common, many organisations are facing a growing leadership vacuum at the top.  The Challenge: How to fill key roles swiftly and cost effectively, without disrupting momentum.

A quarter of C-suite leaders say they plan to leave within six months.  Executive positions now remain vacant for an average 4.5 months in the UK and 5.2 months in the US, a 37% increase over the past five years.  These extended vacancies can have a disruptive ripple effect across the organisation, demanding sometimes costly interim solutions, potentially slowing organisational growth and productivity and unnerving staff and stakeholders.

One study found the average cost to recruit a C-suite executive has increased to £213,000 in the UK and $382,000 in the US, including search fees, onboarding costs and productivity losses during transition periods

Yet while the external market tightens, a powerful alternative is already inside the business: untapped leadership potential. Internally-developed executives hit full productivity 50% faster than external hires. They stay longer, align better and cost less to retain.  Deloitte research revealed that organisations with robust internal leadership development programs experience 68% higher leadership retention rates while Harvard says such companies are four times more likely to be among financial performance leaders in their industries.

If future success depends on strong leadership, then developing it from within isn’t a nice-to-have, it’s a strategic imperative.

Five steps to finding your next senior leaders from inside your team:

 

1. Rethink Your Internal Leadership Strategy

Start with an honest review of your current leadership pipeline. Where are the real gaps? What’s working – and what’s not?

Auditing past external hires, internal promotions and development outcomes against your long-term goals (including digital and operational transformation) will reveal where processes need to evolve.

Are your current development programmes future-focused? Are they building resilience, adaptability and cross-functional thinking, the traits leaders need today?

Create appropriate measurement systems to track both development processes and outcomes, and start with pilot initiatives that demonstrate quick wins while building toward systematic approach

 

2. Identify Hidden Talent Early

Most organisations sit on a goldmine of potential leaders they haven’t yet recognised. New tools, including data-informed assessments, can help spot ambition, agility and leadership potential early.

Map that talent to your strategic roadmap and you’re no longer hiring for roles, you’re developing people for outcomes.

 

3. Personalise Development, Don’t Standardise It

Traditional one-size-fits-all leadership development programmes don’t work at the top. Senior leaders and rising stars need tailored development aligned to their strengths, gaps and aspirations.

Executive coaching provides a trusted space to explore real career goals, challenges and capabilities. When paired with role design and business planning, this unlocks powerful alignment between individual and organisational growth.

 

4. Make Learning Part of the Job

Classroom learning and theoretical knowledge have limited impact on executive development. Nothing develops leadership like guided experience. On the job leadership training might include:

Rotation programmes: Executives and future leaders spend time on cross-functional strategic initiatives outside their primary responsibility area, enabling them to develop mental agility, strategic thinking and helps them to gain greater insight into their own capabilities and motivational drivers.

Board apprenticeships: Senior leaders serve as non-voting apprentices on subsidiary boards or partner organisation boards.

Crisis simulation workshops: Regular simulations, virtual or real, addressing different types of organisational crises create safe spaces to practice difficult leadership scenarios with immediate feedback.

Innovation secondments: Brief immersion experiences with fintech partners, other innovators and startups.

Build reflection and coaching into these experiences to help leaders translate insight into long-term value and work with HR to design roles which optimise the strengths of each individual, as realised through experiential development.

 

5. Pair Human Insight with Smart Data

Platforms such as Salesforce, Spire.AI and Microsoft Viva use advanced analytics and AI to systematically gather rich datasets from across the workforce, which can include communication pattern analysis from email and meeting data (with appropriate privacy protections), leadership behaviour assessments from multiple feedback sources, performance metrics across different dimensions, career history and experience data and self-reported motivation and aspiration information.

They can set goals, gather employee feedback, build skills inventories and aid succession planning, identifying current and future need and matching those with candidates who can then be offered hyper-personalised training.

While AI platforms and workforce analytics can surface insights on performance and engagement, it’s human coaching that turns data into growth, helping individuals translate them into actions and drivers for higher performance, innovation and organisational growth.

 

Why Executive Coaching – Especially Now

Leadership today demands more than just strategy and execution. Emotional intelligence, resilience and agility are no longer “soft skills” in the era of AI, they’re survival skills.

Executive coaching creates space for reflection, challenge, and growth. It accelerates readiness for leadership, improves retention and builds confidence in tomorrow’s decision-makers.

In the US, up to 40% of Fortune 500 companies invest in executive coaching for their leaders and listed companies in the UK are increasingly seeing the value and ROI of professional career development services to unlock internal potential and drive success.

Coaches might work with individuals, leadership teams or boards to offer an objective analysis of performance and productivity, identify room for improvement, offer spaces for reflection and professional development, audits skills and unlock opportunities for learning, experiential growth, innovation workshops and insight into those elusive, in-demand soft leadership skills so important in this era of AI and economic uncertainty.

Rialto director Richard Chiumento said: “When I work with clients, I create a trusted space for exploration – not just of leadership capability and blind spots, but also of future impact and opportunities for meaningful influence. In today’s volatile business environment, executives are under immense pressure to navigate complexity, lead transformation, and make fast, high-stakes decisions – often in isolation. Coaching offers the rare thinking space they don’t get elsewhere.

“It helps build the self-awareness, emotional intelligence, and strategic agility needed to lead with clarity and resilience. Whether it’s sharpening decision-making, enhancing communication, managing stakeholder dynamics, or preparing for generative AI and other disruptive forces, coaching equips leaders to perform at their full potential.

“For many, it’s the only space where they can truly pause, reflect, look up and ahead and prepare for what’s next. For emerging leaders, it accelerates readiness, confidence, and credibility. Time and again, executives tell me they would never have opened up, or developed so rapidly, without this kind of support.”

 

Make Leadership Your Competitive Advantage

At Rialto, we help organisations across sectors to unlock and accelerate leadership from within. We combine coaching, data-driven insights and strategy-aligned development to deliver real outcomes.

Whether you’re navigating digital transformation, scaling innovation, or building organisational game changing capability a future-ready leadership will be your key advantage.

If you’re ready to future-proof your leadership from the inside out, do get in touch for an initial confidential exchange.

In an era defined by accelerated technological disruption and shifting global markets, the traditional linear executive career path – climbing the corporate ladder – is increasingly being challenged, no longer guaranteeing long-term relevance, fulfilment, or financial security.

For many senior leaders, the time is ripe to consider a more agile, resilient approach: the portfolio career.

 

The Rise of the Portfolio Career

Once seen as the preserve of semi-retirees or creatives, portfolio careers are now a strategic choice for executives at all stages of their professional life. A portfolio career can combine multiple concurrent roles—such as board appointments, consulting assignments, advisory positions, teaching, entrepreneurial ventures, and speaking engagements—into a cohesive professional narrative.

According to a recent report by Korn Ferry, over 65% of senior executives are actively exploring alternative career models beyond traditional full-time employment. Meanwhile, Harvard Business Review highlights that portfolio careers are increasingly being adopted by experienced leaders seeking greater autonomy, intellectual variety, and purpose-driven work.  PwC’s Future of Work report also highlights a major pivot towards project-based, flexible working structures—especially among senior professionals seeking impact across a variety of domains.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is a key driver in this evolution. As AI automates many transactional and analytical tasks —particularly in finance, operations, and strategic planning—the emphasis has shifted towards uniquely human strengths such as critical judgement, ethical decision-making, relationship building, and creative problem-solving. These are precisely the capabilities that define successful portfolio executives.

For executives in transition, the portfolio model offers the opportunity to test new sectors, refine strategic skills, and expand one’s global network—all while maintaining income diversification and optionality in a volatile job market.

 

How Portfolio Careers are Structured

There is no such thing as a typical portfolio career but executives might generally maintain three to seven different professional engagements simultaneously.  This might include:

  • One anchor role: A part-time executive role (e.g., interim CEO, COO, or CxO) or a substantial non-executive directorship (NED)
  • Board/advisory roles: One or two independent board seats or advisory appointments across sectors which might offer strategic insight, governance, or transformation support
  • Consulting engagements: Project-based assignments tailored to a leader’s specialist knowledge.
  • Thought Leadership contributions: Occasional teaching, keynote speaking, or thought leadership contributions.
  • Entrepreneurial or investment ventures: Engagement in start-ups, private equity, or personal enterprises.

A Spencer Stuart study shows that FTSE 100 boards are increasingly welcoming executives with multi-sector and international exposure—traits often cultivated through portfolio careers.

However, the key is coherence, not volume—ensuring all components align with a central narrative and reinforce each other in knowledge, network, and strategic positioning.

 

Global Outlook

As portfolio careers gain momentum, geographic context plays an increasingly important role in shaping opportunities. Cultural norms, regulatory environments, and market maturity can all influence how portfolio models are adopted and where demand is strongest for executive talent on a flexible or advisory basis.

Understanding the regional landscape allows executives to position themselves more effectively—whether by tapping into global networks, aligning with governance trends, or pursuing cross-border engagements that enhance strategic visibility and impact.

United Kingdom: The UK is particularly fertile ground, with a long-standing tradition of non-executive directorships, a strong consulting culture, and increasing acceptance of part-time executive roles. The Institute of Directors and Financial Reporting Council have both highlighted the growing role of experienced portfolio professionals in enhancing board diversity and governance.

United States: While portfolio structures are more common in tech, finance, and healthcare, adoption is growing across sectors as flexible models gain traction. US executives often tap into the scale of the market and the abundance of venture and PE-backed firms seeking seasoned advisors.

Europe: Nordic countries lead in flexible executive models, while Southern Europe remains more conservative, favouring full-time engagement. The EU’s labour laws can complicate portfolio arrangements, but this is often offset by a thriving independent consulting scene.

Asia-Pacific: Singapore stands out as a hub for senior advisors and portfolio executives, particularly those with Western experience and local cultural fluency. Japan and South Korea, traditionally hierarchical, are increasingly open to flexible models as governance reforms take hold.

 

Preparing for a Portfolio Transition

Making the transition to a portfolio career requires more than intention—it demands strategic foresight, personal clarity, and operational readiness. This shift isn’t simply about doing more things; it’s about doing the right things in a coordinated, purpose-driven way.

Executives considering this path must approach it with the same rigour they would apply to any major business transformation: assessing their market positioning, identifying their core value proposition, and building the infrastructure to operate across multiple domains with consistency and credibility.

Whether you’re planning a full transition or exploring a phased approach, the steps below will help lay a solid foundation for a sustainable and high-impact portfolio career.

Conduct a strategic skills audit: Assess your most marketable capabilities. Engage a coach or mentor to benchmark your value against current market needs, especially in AI, digital transformation, and ESG.

Clarify your proposition: Define your unique offer. Align your LinkedIn profile, website, and public presence with a consistent and compelling message.

Build credibility: Engage in thought leadership, publish insights, speak at events, and serve on expert panels.

Expand your network: Tap into personal and professional contacts. Many roles are secured through trusted introductions rather than public postings.

Start incrementally: Begin with a board role or consultancy alongside traditional employment to test the model before fully transitioning.

Invest in your infrastructure: Build systems for client management, financial planning, digital communication, and time management from the outset.

 

Is a Portfolio Career Right for You?

A portfolio career offers senior executives an attractive alternative to traditional employment—blending autonomy, intellectual variety, and influence across multiple sectors. However, it is not a model suited to every executive.

The flexibility to design one’s professional life around personal values, interests and lifestyle is a key draw. It also allows for diversified income streams, expanded networks, and exposure to varied business models—all of which can extend an executive’s relevance and influence in a fast-changing world.

However, this freedom comes with structural and operational demands that should not be underestimated. Key challenges include:

Maintaining a Clear Professional Identity
Without the anchor of a single title or organisation, it can be challenging to articulate a cohesive professional narrative. Executives must develop a compelling value proposition that unites their various roles and communicates their unique offering clearly and consistently.

Managing Income and Financial Planning
Income can be variable and irregular. Some roles may pay quarterly, others upon delivery or via equity. Executives must be financially prepared for income variability and the need to self-fund traditional employment benefits.  Building a financial buffer of 6–12 months of essential expenses is strongly advised.

Avoiding Overextension
The temptation to accept multiple opportunities can lead to overcommitment. Many portfolio executives report longer hours, particularly in the early stages. Success relies on setting clear boundaries, defining scope in each engagement, and prioritising roles that align with long-term strategic goals.

Handling Operational Complexity
Juggling multiple roles comes with increased administrative burden—contracts, scheduling, compliance, invoicing, and taxes, often across jurisdictions. Leveraging digital tools such as CRMs, calendar managers, accounting software, and workflow automations is crucial to avoid distraction from core value-adding activities.

Sustaining Strategic Direction
Without a clearly defined strategic direction, a portfolio can risk fragmentation.  Executives should regularly review and realign their roles to ensure coherence, value contribution, and progress toward long-term career and lifestyle goals. A trusted mentor, coach, or peer board can support this process.

Crucially, this is not an all-or-nothing decision. Many senior professionals begin their transition gradually—taking on a board seat, advisory engagement or consulting project alongside a primary role—to test the model, refine their proposition, and build momentum.

For some, a portfolio career is a launchpad into new sectors and innovation. For others, it offers a fulfilling path into the later stages of their professional journey—balancing commercial impact with flexibility and personal fulfilment.

In an era of accelerating change, a well-structured portfolio career is not a compromise. It’s a strategic response—designed for those ready to lead on their own terms.

The Rialto team are experienced in guiding senior professionals through executive transitions—whether building a full portfolio, exploring strategic exits, or shaping a second-act career. With deep market insight and an international network, we support our clients in navigating the complex, evolving landscape of executive work.

Contact us today to explore how we can support your transition.