Consulting firms are winning the CEO sweepstakes — but that’s not always good news for investors.

Deloitte. Accenture. PwC.
More CEOs are coming from these firms than ever before.
McKinsey, Bain, BCG? They’ve seeded a generation now sitting in boardrooms.

But does their background translate to strong performance and shareholder returns?

At Eagle Talon, we’ve studied this closely. And our data tells us:
Often, the answer is no.

Consultants are trained in structured, siloed environments —
with clean data, defined problems, and slide decks built for certainty.

But public company leadership doesn’t come with a case study.
It’s political. Messy. Fast-moving.
And the first 12–24 months are where the cracks show.

We’ve seen it time and again:
Platinum pedigree. Strong pitch.
But — poor cultural fit. Weak execution.
Underperformance follows.

At Eagle Talon, we have a simple rule:
If the new CEO’s main credential is “ex-consultant,”
the risk-reward rarely pencils out — especially in year one.

Leadership isn’t about framing the problem.
It’s about owning the outcome.

We invest in great leaders — strategists and operators who can do both.

GE, IBM Cede ‘CEO Factory’ Honor to Accenture, PWC and Deloitte

Previous
Previous

A honeybee hive is a high-speed decision engine — Tens of thousands of specialists turning exploration into results.

Next
Next

"Can a CEO really separate their private life from the business?"