Executive Hiring Predictions for 2023

Dec 14, 2022

Leaning into transformation and uncertainty in executive leadership & hiring as we head into 2023


With market uncertainty on the minds of senior executives as we move into the new year, we asked our consultants to offer predictions and insights on the executive jobs they expect to be in hiring demand in 2023.

The past few years have seen one of the most volatile business environments in memory. Political, social, economic, health, and regulatory factors combined to form the perfect storm, creating a turbulent path for boards and those in the C-suite to navigate.

According to ON consultants who provided input for the list, embracing transformation in an uncertain landscape, continued digital transformation efforts, and building strong financial organizations are among the key factors expected to drive executive hiring in the coming year.

“Companies should be investing in roles that support transformation and forward thinking in to 2023,” notes partner Lynda Robey. “We’ve learned from other market dips that companies that didn’t simply brace for the changes but actually leaned into transformation during changes came out winners. Readiness for what may come as well as the knowledge that the organization will be stronger for it coming out of any macro impact should be the focus.”

Adds partner Bryan Buck, who along with partner Brad Westveld recently shared hiring predictions with Hunt Scanlon, “We’re likely to see more opportunistic hiring in the coming year. Companies need CEOs, CFOs, CSCOs, VPs of engineering and top cybersecurity executives right now. There’s an opportunity for those not rushing to the sidelines to find top-tier talent despite a more conservative stance on broader hiring volume, talent that is the right fit in terms of skills, culture and cost.”

So, what roles did our consultants highlight in our executive leadership hiring forecast for 2023?

 

#1: Chief Product Officer

 

Whether it be IT, supply chain, banking, or retail, companies across nearly every market sector have had to become more responsive and agile, with the top product executive tasked with leading the organization to solve problems, differentiate in a crowded landscape, win customers or simply drive to digital if a company is behind the curve on that front.

Businesses lacking an innovative, execution-oriented product leader to navigate through the pandemic & after have suffered, while those that have been successful are either doubling down and expanding product talent and scope or looking for the person who can move them forward more quickly.

“The ability to put yourself in the customers’ shoes is a key capability for product leaders,” said partner Lynda Robey. “There was a time when companies only asked this of their marketing department, but it has quickly evolved to be expected of the product role as well. Product leaders who possess true customer empathy are in high demand.”

“Many of the product searches we’ve been doing in the past twelve months or so have been focused predominantly on driving innovation and future offerings vs. scaling an existing team or perfecting the relationship with engineering,” noted partner John Morrow. “Forecasting what customers want now and what they’ll want two to four years from now – and how to put that in motion – is most important.”

In such a hypercompetitive market, alignment and motivation around product is key. Product leaders must understand how to influence others and help get everyone aligned around product goals. Coming together around product milestones and deliverables helps organizations to be successful – and those organizations that have underestimated the importance of a strong product leader are now finding themselves playing catch up.

Adds partner Nina McMaster, “We’ve also seen a shift to focus more on platforms and services, so executive roles have evolved to encapsulate not just a product or platform but the associated wraparound services as well. The chief product officer requires a different set of skills than a CTO, chief digital officer or a more traditional CIO profile.”

{Read more on product leader demand in our thought leadership blog}

 

#2: Chief Operating Officer

 

A leader who has hands in all aspects of the customer experience and P&L and is equipped to pull levers to drive performance and growth is key, as is someone who has successfully navigated through choppy waters before.

COOs must manage a complex, global network of relationships and quickly adopt new technologies and innovations. The broadening scope and higher impact of supply chain management require leaders who are strategic, profit-oriented, champions of change, and technically and operationally superior.

Clients understandably tend to focus on numbers – spend dollars, budget, team size – but it’s really about the level of complexity and how it all fits together. In this market, where access to chips is limiting the manufacture of, well, just about everything, supply of ocean containers limits how quickly your product can ship, lack of drivers limits the ability to get resources where you need them – this is all about the complexity of the network.

The person who can optimize the network, leverage relationships, and devise creative solutions, is the executive who is in the highest demand.  The numbers are secondary.

{Read more on operational roles in our NEXT series examing the evolving profile of the supply chain leader}

 

#3: Chief Executive Officer

 

CEOs with the ability to lead through and even embrace uncertainty, who possess emotional intelligence and self-reflection, and who have the vision to create a compelling value proposition that is bigger than simply profits will be highly sought after into the new year.

“We’re still seeing a ton of uncertainty, notes partner Matt Mooney. “Based on history, I would bet we see a large number of CFO and CEO searches for private equity-backed companies. As the market becomes more challenging, companies will need a different type of leader to guide them through this period of uncertainty. Overall, not sure anyone knows where we are in this economic cycle, so 2023 is starting to look like a coin flip.”

 

#4: Chief Financial Officer

 

The right leader will be strategic and able to scenario plan for how and where to strategically invest for future growth, not simply cut costs in preparation for a potential downturn.

Notes Westveld, “CFOs who have raised funding, secured debt, completed strategic partnerships or partner affiliations are in demand as well. If we look 6-18 months out, the role is really one of a strategic arm of the CEO around funding, investment, debt, M&A and strategic partnerships.”

Adds partner Nina McMaster, “From a functional standpoint, in VC-backed, earlier stage companies, I’ve seen an increased need for strong finance organizations. They’ve mentioned a desire for a CFO to provide strategic guidance and direction.”

 

#5: Chief Revenue Officer / VP Sales

 

With ownership of essentially everything that goes to market – sales, account management, customer success, and sometimes marketing as well – the CRO has emerged as a pivotal position on the executive leadership team. Today’s CRO must have operational depth and an understanding of what tools and processes need to be put in place to scale a business vs. throwing a lot of bodies at a solution. In areas like SaaS in particular, it’s important to think more strategically about the business.

The CRO needs someone who can dive into the ops side, not just back-office tools but also market segmentation, direct sales, and channel strategy, sales rep compensation, and coverage models.

The CRO role demands different skill sets depending on the client. For a smaller growth company, someone who thrives in an early-stage environment and enjoys building things from scratch – hiring, putting key tools and processes in place – requires a unique person who is good at the heavy lifting required to acquire market share and evangelize.

Noted McMaster, “I’ve also seen a need to bring in a strong CRO/VP Sales – I think a strong sales leader who can potentially oversee the marketing organization in smaller companies as well is going to continue to be a desired role in 2023.”

That person can be different from one needed by a more established company doing $10 million to $20 million per year in revenue, who understands how to improve on and tweak the work of his or her predecessor.

For a $100 million-plus organization, the CRO needs to understand how to lead large teams in a complex, matrixed environment selling across multiple market segments on a global basis.

{Read more on the evolving role of the chief revenue officer role in our NEXT series}

 

#6: VP Hardware Engineering

 

Tasked with establishing policies and procedures that produce high-quality hardware products and directing and overseeing all aspects of hardware engineering activities within an organization, the head of hardware engineering is arguably in demand more than ever before.

Hardware engineering roles are also likely to see more demand, according to partner Sean Cantarella. “These are difficult roles to recruit for and, given all the layoffs in tech, we might see a strong push for key hardware leaders to help create new and innovative products in a world that hasn’t seen a ton of ‘new’ gadgets lately.”

 

#7: Diverse Leadership

 

In addition, diversity remains top of mind for hiring all positions right now. Every search we undertake includes several diverse candidates, and it’s no longer something we discuss or call out as a must-have, it’s simply ingrained in our process.

Notes McMaster, “The market for diverse talent has become very competitive over the past several years, particularly across IT leadership roles. We’re committed to partnering closely with our clients to continue their diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging initiatives.”

 

“It is so important for some organizations that I think we will see a shift in mindset where we focus on candidates with transferable skills and core competencies for roles in order to help increase diversity, as opposed to focusing on ‘been there, done that’ types of leaders.”

{Check out our latest updates in our DEI in the ON community resource portal}

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