
For much of the past eighteen months, organisations have adopted a cautious approach to senior hiring. Economic uncertainty, persistent inflation, rising employment costs and a slower rate of growth encouraged many boards to delay leadership appointments, restructure existing teams or extend the tenure of incumbent executives rather than embark on significant new searches.
That caution has not disappeared, but there is growing evidence that confidence is beginning to return.
The picture is far from uniform and few would describe the market as buoyant. However, across a number of sectors, organisations are once again making carefully considered investments in leadership where the appointment is expected to drive transformation, growth or long-term resilience.
Recent market indicators suggest that hiring activity has begun to improve after an extended period of restraint. The latest KPMG and Recruitment and Employment Confederation Report on Jobs indicates that the decline in permanent appointments has eased significantly, while temporary hiring has strengthened at its fastest pace for more than three years.
At the same time, several sectors have experienced notable increases in demand for experienced professionals. Technology, manufacturing, utilities and logistics have all reported stronger vacancy growth during recent months, reflecting continued investment in digital capability, infrastructure, supply chain resilience and industrial modernisation.
These are precisely the sectors where leadership decisions have become increasingly strategic rather than operational.
Despite these encouraging signs, the overall labour market remains more subdued than many commentators suggest.
The Office for National Statistics estimates that UK vacancies remain below the levels seen during the post-pandemic peak, while there are now significantly more jobseekers competing for each advertised position than there were only a few years ago.
At first glance this appears to favour employers, but in reality, executive search continues to operate in a very different market.
Exceptional chief executives, finance directors, HR leaders, commercial executives and operational specialists rarely become available simply because vacancy numbers increase. The individuals capable of leading complex organisations are almost always already succeeding elsewhere, and attracting them requires a compelling opportunity rather than simply an attractive remuneration package.
The executive search market has proved more resilient than many areas of the wider employment market because organisations do not appoint senior leaders simply to replace headcount. Boards invest when leadership capability becomes critical to delivering strategy.
Across the UK we are seeing mandates driven by business transformation, digital investment, international expansion, operational improvement, succession planning, regulatory change and private equity activity rather than routine replacement hiring. These appointments are fewer in number, but considerably more significant in their impact.
A single executive appointment can alter the direction of an organisation for many years. That reality means businesses continue to invest in identifying outstanding leaders even during periods of economic uncertainty.
One misconception is that a softer employment market automatically makes senior hiring easier, but our experience suggests precisely the opposite. Although more candidates may technically be available, organisations continue to compete for a relatively small group of proven leaders who combine commercial judgement, strategic thinking, cultural intelligence and the ability to deliver change.
Those individuals are rarely active applicants, they are carefully approached, thoroughly assessed and highly selective about the organisations they choose to join and increasingly, they are evaluating far more than salary. They want clarity of purpose, confidence in the board, a credible growth strategy, an inclusive culture and genuine autonomy to make a difference.
As confidence gradually returns, the organisations achieving the greatest success will not necessarily be those recruiting most aggressively, they will be those asking better questions before beginning a search.
The answers to those questions determine whether a search attracts merely competent candidates or truly exceptional ones.
The UK leadership market is undoubtedly becoming more active, but this should not be mistaken for a return to the broad-based hiring conditions experienced several years ago. Organisations remain disciplined in their investment decisions and are placing greater emphasis on leadership quality than leadership quantity.
From Friisberg UK's perspective, this represents a healthy evolution rather than a temporary recovery.
Businesses are becoming more deliberate about the appointments they make, more rigorous in defining the capabilities they require and more focused on securing leaders who can create lasting value.
For executive search, that is exactly the kind of market in which experience, judgement and a deep understanding of leadership make the greatest difference.
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