The retainer question: how regulatory deadlines are rewriting executive search economics in Europe

Retained versus milestone executive search fee models
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For fifty years, senior executive search in Europe has run on one commercial architecture: the retainer — a third of the fee upfront, a third at shortlist, a third at placement, exclusivity throughout, three to six months end to end. That architecture assumed the client’s clock was flexible. In 2026, across most of Europe’s major economies, it is not: the clock is regulatory, and it is redistributing power between clients and search firms.

Seven clocks

Consider what boards are now scheduling against. In France, executive bodies must reach 40% of each sex by March 2029 — in a 12-person Comex, arithmetic says most upcoming appointments must go to women. Germany’s void-election rule and the Dutch nullity sanction mean a mis-run appointment does not merely embarrass, it legally fails. Belgium and Italy tie quotas to renewal cycles, making every AGM season a deadline. Norway is phasing ~20,000 private companies into its 40% regime by July 2028 — needing thousands of new women board members on a legislated timetable. Even the USA, with no statute, runs on the hardest deadline of all: proxy season, every year.

A six-month retained search fits none of these calendars. And clients have noticed the misalignment at the heart of the model: the retainer pays for process, not outcome.

Time versus cost in executive search fee structures

The alternative model — and why it can afford to exist

The challenger model inverts the economics: no retainer, fees in instalments triggered by actual milestones, no exclusivity — and shortlists in 7–10 days. The speed and the pricing come from the same structural choice: vetting is done continuously, on a standing pool, before any mandate exists, so the marginal search is a matching exercise rather than a discovery project. (Female Executive Search has run this model since its parent CEO Worldwide’s founding in 2001, with a vetted community now spanning 183 countries.) The honest caveat: milestone models fit defined seats with deadlines — a quota-driven board appointment, a sudden CFO exit, an interim bridge. Multi-year succession advisory remains natural retained territory. The practical consequence of no-exclusivity is more interesting than the fee itself: a board can run both models on the same live mandate and let delivery decide — the cheapest due diligence available in executive search.

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Frequently asked questions

Q: How can a search firm work without a retainer? A: By front-loading its costs into continuous vetting of a standing candidate pool instead of billing discovery to each client — payment then follows delivery milestones.

Q: Is a 7–10 day shortlist compatible with a compliant, documented process? A: Yes — written criteria and a comparative assessment are natural outputs of a structured pool search; speed comes from pre-vetting, not from skipped steps.

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