For decades, FMCG rewarded specialization. If you’d spent 15 years climbing in the same category—beverages, beauty, personal care—you were seen as “low-risk, high-knowledge” talent. That depth was how leaders were groomed, how careers were built, and how hiring managers made safe bets.
But the market has shifted. In 2025, the very depth that once made you valuable can make you rigid.
The Restructuring Reality
McKinsey research shows that over 70% of consumer companies have restructured in the past two years, flattening hierarchies and combining functions. Consumer goods dominated restructuring filings in 2024, and the pattern is unmistakable: companies are cutting layers and demanding more range from fewer people.
Suddenly, leaders aren’t running single-category fiefdoms. They’re steering cross-functional, leaner teams where breadth wins over depth. The “10,000-hour expert” who mastered one domain is getting passed over for the leader who can connect three.
What Changed (And Why It Matters)
- Translate between commercial and supply chain
- Bridge digital and traditional trade
- Move from strategy to execution without needing a translator
- Ask different questions and secure goals with fewer resources
The Uncomfortable Truth
- “I led beverages, but I also rebuilt our e-commerce P&L”
- “I’m a marketer, but I’ve run end-to-end innovation pipelines”
- “I came from supply chain, but I’ve presented commercial strategies to the C-suite”
Reframing Your Value
- What adjacent functions do you understand well enough to speak their language?
- Where have you translated knowledge across categories or geographies?
- How have you demonstrated adaptability when your organization restructured?
- Can you point to moments where you connected dots others missed?
The Question Ahead
Will the era of the single-category expert truly end, or will the pendulum swing back once restructuring fatigue sets in?I don’t have a crystal ball. But I do know this: right now, in the searches I’m running across Europe for FMCG and beauty clients, the leaders getting hired aren’t the ones who stayed in their lane the longest. They’re the ones who learned to drive in multiple lanes—and proved they could merge when it mattered.The fix isn’t to abandon your expertise. It’s to prove you can apply it beyond the borders of where you built it.

