When two of the most powerful brands in retail and packaged foods ousted their CEOs last month, it signaled that corporate boards are more ready to toss top executives before activist investors tell them to.
The tenure for U.S. retail and packaged-goods company CEOs has this year on average been about 7 months shorter than chiefs who were in office in 2024 in the autos, finance, tech, and manufacturing industries, shows data (to August 31) from executive compensation research firm Equilar.
And now, their time in the top job may be shrinking as consumers buying iced lattes, chocolate bars, and detergent become pickier, leaving companies with less time to innovate and demonstrate performance. At the same time, corporate directors are quicker to act, say bankers, lawyers and academics, forcing CEOs to deliver quickly or face an abrupt exit.
“There is a fresh lack of patience at the board level,” said Jim Rossman, global head of shareholder advisory at Barclays. “With the COVID-19 pandemic behind us and some stronger economic data, there is plenty to judge a CEO’s management abilities by; and if they aren’t performing, they are out.”
Monday marked the first day on the job for Starbucks chief Brian Niccol who replaces Laxman Narasimhan after the board gave him only 16 months on the job. Nestle’s Mark Schneider had only 24 hours to digest his firing in the face of a sagging share price after eight years as CEO.
While activist Elliott Investment Management was pushing for a board seat at Starbucks, the board fired the CEO without the hedge fund’s input, sources familiar with the events said. At Nestle, which has faced activist pressure before when Third Point pushed for changes, the board again acted without public pressure from a hedge fund.
Consumer-packaged goods and retail chiefs have held the top job for 7.7 years on average, according to Equilar, which tracks Russell 3000 companies.
This compares with other big industries like finance CEOs who had their jobs 10 years on average, and tech CEOs who lasted nearly 9 years on average, Equilar data shows.
“There is a huge amount of pressure on consumer-goods CEOs,” said Richard Sumner, managing partner of the Consumer Markets Practice for Europe and Africa at executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles. He pointed to increased activism from investors and CEOs being forced to drive innovation in the face of challenged margins and sales performance.
“Rocky road”
In 2023, Alan Jope, the former CEO of Unilever, the London-based maker of Dove soap, was out after less than five years as the company tried to offload its ice cream brands. Activist investment firm Trian Fund Management, which has a seat on Unilever’s board, endorsed Jope’s successor.
Miguel Patricio led Kraft Heinz for 4-and-a-half years until late 2023 and while he remains a board member, the company said its change in leadership reflected thoughtful succession planning with an eye to growth.
Nicandro Durante exited Reckitt Benckiser in 2023 after less than two years as CEO. His replacement, Kris Licht, was credited with engineering a turnaround in the company’s health business.
“It’s been a rocky road in consumer goods the last few years,” Heidrick & Struggles’s Sumner added. “The impact of COVID across the consumer products space has meant that sales spikes have gone up and down.”
Shorter CEO tenures can also be partly explained by executives being worn out. Keeping up with consumer tastes as inflation surged has made the job much tougher, executive headhunters, bankers, and lawyers said.
But the speed with which some chiefs were terminated may point to a new trend: Corporate boards are acting before outsiders publicly force them to.
Board members “worry about what the stock did during their tenure on the board and are ready to act more quickly to make sure that they preserve their desirability as a director,” Barclay’s Rossman said.
Even so, many boards are sticking with their executives even in the face of pressure from hedge funds, bankers said, but several said that the pace of calls to discuss questions like executive changes suggest greater nervousness.
Nestle and Starbucks share that prices dropped this year—more than 8% for Nestle and nearly 20% for Starbucks as the company struggled with sales in the United States and China. They recovered as CEOs were replaced, with Starbucks surging 25%, marking the biggest single day gain since going public.
As the pace of investor activism at corporations has picked up this year with shareholders pushing for changes at a record number of companies globally in the first half, corporate boards are under pressure.
Fixing a business or selling it often takes time; and with impatient investors at the door, the fastest way to signal action is underway is by axing a top executive, said bankers, lawyers, and academics.
“Repairing operational problems can’t be done overnight,” said Georgetown University professor Jason Schloetzer, an expert in corporate governance. “But what you can do more quickly is remove a board member or an executive. Heads rolling is meant to signify that change is coming.”
—Svea Herbst-Bayliss and Richa Naidu, Reuters
Additional reporting by Abigail Summerville.