May 2026
 

When the Margin Is Gone: Q1 2026 Consumer Leadership Review

 

Slayton Search Partners

Share:

The consumer and CPG sector entered 2026 carrying unresolved tension from the prior year. Price increases drove revenue but volume did not follow. Volatile trade policy, cautious consumers and margin compression, conditions many companies treated as temporary, proved otherwise. They are the new operating environment

Trade Disruption and Supply Chain Reconfiguration

Tariffs moved from headline risk to operational reality in Q1. With consumer-facing companies projecting close to $15 billion in tariff-related cost exposure for 2026,(1) the burden fell unevenly and hit ingredient-intensive businesses hardest. Staples like coffee, cocoa, dairy and palm oil, sourced predominantly from tariff-affected trade partners, faced cost increases that retail pricing could no longer absorb. Equally disruptive was the uncertainty surrounding policy itself. Companies that had not yet been directly impacted still absorbed real costs by accelerating purchases, restructuring supplier contracts and rerouting logistics in anticipation of changes that may or may not materialize. Nearshoring and supplier diversification are the right long-term responses, but they introduce operational complexity that requires experienced leadership to execute without losing continuity.

 

Portfolio Strategy and Investment Activity

M&A remained active in Q1 but grew more deliberate. Deal values rose as volume moderated, reflecting a market in which buyers pursued fewer, higher-conviction targets rather than broad expansion. The strategic logic shifted as well, as acquisitions became less about adding scale and more about acquiring capabilities including speed to market, digital infrastructure and innovation pipelines that legacy portfolios lacked. Portfolio simplification ran alongside, as major consumer companies exited categories where their competitive position had weakened. Private equity remained engaged but increasingly concentrated capital in categories with proven resilience, favoring operators who came to market with institutional-grade reporting and clear operational visibility.

 

What This Means for Executive Leadership

PE activity in industrial manufacturing accelerated through Q1, supported by two dynamics. First, middle market manufacturers represented an increasingly attractive investment thesis due to stable cash flows, clear operational improvement levers and the potential for technology-enabled margin expansion without proportional capital investment. Second, generational succession was creating significant deal flow as baby boomer owners of family-held manufacturing businesses sought exits without clear internal successors.(2)

The result was a significant volume of ownership transitions. Each transition demanded executives who understood both the operational realities of manufacturing and the pace and accountability structures of PE ownership. Organizations that had oriented succession planning around those criteria entered Q1’s talent competition from a position of strength.

 

The Technology-Talent Gap

The leadership profile consumer organizations sought in Q1 is meaningfully different from two years ago. Pricing power, the primary margin lever for much of the post-pandemic period, is effectively gone, and the executives who commanded the most attention were those who had already figured out how to grow without it. Demand was strongest for commercial leadership that can drive top line growth, supply chain and operations leaders with hands-on experience managing sourcing transitions and cost restructuring and finance leaders who can build and stress-test scenarios under shifting trade conditions.

 

Select Q1 Highlights – Consumer Searches

Successfully Closed

Chief Financial Officer

Premium Frozen Food & Baked Goods Company

Search executive: Rick Slayton

Successfully Closed

Chief Procurement Officer

Global Specialty Ingredients Leader

Search executive: Molly Hull

Successfully Closed

Chief Executive Officer

Leading Sugar Provider

Search executive: David Turner

Successfully Closed

Chief Financial & Operating Officer

Private Equity-Backed Beauty Brand

Search executive: Charles Southwick

Successfully Closed

Head of Technology

Specialty Bakery

Search executive: Molly Hull

Successfully Closed

Head of Major National Retail Chain

Leading Global Food & Beverage Manufacturer

Search executive: Rick Slayton

Successfully Closed

Senior Vice President, Supply Chain

Multi-Billion Dollar Food Manufacturing Company

Search executive: David Cech

Successfully Closed

Vice President of Supply Chain

$1 Billion Food Co-Manufacturer

Search executive: John Ratliff

 

View More Closed Searches >>

 

 

Select Insights

View More Insights >>

 

Meet the Team

 

Richard Slayton
Managing Partner & CEO
312-706-7860
rslayton@slaytonsearch.com
Molly Hull
Managing Director & Executive Vice President
312-706-7885
mhull@slaytonsearch.com
John Ratliff
Executive Vice President
312-706-7897
jratliff@slaytonsearch.com
David Turner
Executive Vice President
312-706-7866
dturner@slaytonsearch.com
David Cech
Senior Vice President & Principal
312-706-7871
dcech@slaytonsearch.com
Dan Plourde
Senior Vice President & Principal
312-706-7878
dplourde@slaytonsearch.com
Charles Southwick
Senior Vice President & Principal
312-667-1835
csouthwick@slaytonsearch.com

 

Meet Slayton Search Partners >>

 


 

SOURCES

(1) Reuters 

Our Insights