1 Apr 2026

Who’s Moving in the Sector — and What It Signals About Charity Leadership in March 2026

There has been another notable wave of leadership movement across the UK charity sector in recent weeks.

Individually, these are routine appointments and departures. Collectively, they point to something more structural — how leadership is evolving, how boards are thinking, and what capability now matters at the top.

Below is a snapshot — and then some reflections on what it signals.

Leadership transition is steady — but more deliberate

Recent CEO changes include:

Alongside these, several CEOs are stepping down after meaningful tenures, often leaving organisations in stable or strengthened positions.

What stands out is not disruption — but timing.

Leaders are increasingly choosing when to step away, often after delivering a strategic phase, rather than being driven out by it.

That suggests a more mature approach to succession — one that is planned, not reactive.

Internal progression remains a strong signal of stability

There is a continued pattern of internal appointments and interim-to-permanent transitions:

This reflects a clear board preference in many organisations:

Particularly in mission-led organisations, credibility is not easily imported — it is built over time.

Interim leadership is now strategic, not transitional

The number of interim CEO appointments remains notable:

But the role of the interim has shifted.

These are no longer placeholders.

They are increasingly:

In complex funding or reputational environments, that experience is being actively sought.

Board composition is becoming more deliberate and capability-led

There has been significant movement at chair and trustee level:

The pattern is consistent.

Boards are prioritising:

Governance is no longer passive stewardship.

It is an active lever of organisational performance.

Executive-level specialisation continues to deepen

Beyond CEO roles, there is a clear increase in senior functional appointments:

This reflects a broader shift.

Charities are building leadership teams with the same functional depth seen in complex organisations elsewhere — because the challenges they face now demand it.

What does this all point to?

Four themes stand out.

1. Leadership cycles are becoming more defined

A pattern is emerging where leaders step down after delivering a phase of strategy, often within a 5–10 year window.

Succession is becoming part of leadership — not something deferred.

2. Boards are prioritising capability over representation

There is a clear move towards boards that bring:

This is less about optics, and more about decision-making quality.

3. Cross-sector movement is no longer exceptional

Many of the recent appointments bring experience from:

The boundary between sectors continues to blur.

4. Financial resilience and strategic clarity remain central

Across both executive and board appointments, there is a consistent focus on:

Mission remains the anchor — but sustainability is the lens through which decisions are increasingly made.

The bigger picture

The sector is not experiencing instability.

It is evolving.

Leadership expectations now extend well beyond passion for mission. They include:

For those stepping into senior roles — or building leadership teams — the implication is clear:

The definition of “fit” has changed.

If you are navigating succession, reviewing board composition, or considering your next leadership move, this is a moment worth paying attention to.

Because what we are seeing is not just movement.

It is a shift in what leadership in the charity sector now requires.

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