Dubai, UAE – 24 June, 2026 – As the UAE moves to run half of its government operations on agentic AI within two years — a world-first commitment — the digital infrastructure underpinning that ambition has become a strategic national priority. Across the Gulf, data centers are now strategic national assets, and with capital, land, and energy aligning at a pace few markets can match, attention is shifting from whether to build to who can lead and execute what's being built.
Russell Reynolds Associates' Global CEO Turnover Index Annual Report 2025 recorded 234 CEO exits globally last year — 21% above the eight-year average — underscoring the pressure on leaders operating in complex, fast-changing environments. In the technology sector, however, global turnover fell from 40 CEO departures in 2024 to 20 in 2025, as boards opted for continuity amid heightened strategic and operational demands — and as the pool of executives equipped to lead at this scale remains limited.
At the same time, governance expectations are rising. Recent Russell Reynolds Associates analysis of 35 leading data center boards globally shows that while board renewal has accelerated since 2023, capability gaps remain in some of the areas most critical to future performance, including hyperscale operating experience, technology expertise, workforce leadership, and operational resilience. The findings point to a broader shift in what effective leadership — at both CEO and board level — now requires.
"A decade ago, success in data centers was defined by operational reliability and incremental growth," said Christopher Bradley, Dubai-based member of Russell Reynolds Associates' global Energy Practice. "Today, these are capital and energy intensive platforms of national strategic importance, deeply embedded in digital and economic agendas. CEOs must align power strategy, capital deployment, hyperscale relationships, and operational execution at scale — and boards must be equipped to govern that complexity with credibility."
The leadership mandate for data center CEOs has expanded fundamentally. The next generation of leaders are integrators — able to align capital, digital infrastructure, energy supply, security and customer demand, while translating between engineers, scientists, investors, regulators, and hyperscale partners. They must secure and manage the hyperscaler relationships that anchor commercial success, deploy private and sovereign capital with discipline, navigate energy cost and security constraints, lead and scale operational excellence, and attract scarce technical and commercial talent — often in parallel.
The UAE presents a distinctive leadership environment. Backed by both private and sovereign capital and a long-term economic diversification agenda, the country is scaling digital infrastructure rapidly — supported by land availability, competitive energy economics, and relatively few legacy constraints. That momentum creates significant opportunity, while increasing the premium on disciplined execution, long-term planning, and organizational depth.
"The UAE is building AI infrastructure at extraordinary scale and ambition," said Marie-Osmonde Le Roy de Lanauze-Molines, Board and CEO Advisor in Russell Reynolds Associates' Dubai office. "Boards and CEOs who get the combination of leadership, governance, and execution right will define the next decade of digital infrastructure in the region."
Dr. Jan C. Cron, Dubai-based member of Russell Reynolds Associates' global technology sector and board practice, noted that the speed of change is reshaping how boards think about leadership readiness. "Technology cycles are now moving faster than traditional succession planning. The boards moving fastest are widening the aperture — bringing in adjacent expertise from cloud, software, and digital infrastructure to build leadership pipelines that match the pace of the industry."
As data centers evolve from real estate-backed assets into systemically critical infrastructure, leadership — across both CEOs and boards — will increasingly determine which platforms convert ambition into lasting commercial success.
In the UAE’s bid to power the AI era, technology defines the opportunity — but leadership, governance, and execution will determine who captures it.
For more insights on leadership in digital infrastructure and data centers, visit www.russellreynolds.com.
Russell Reynolds Associates
Sarah Carlyle, Marketing Director EMEA
sarah.carlyle@russellreynolds.com
Russell Reynolds Associates is a global leadership advisory firm. Our 500+ consultants in 47 offices work with public, private, and nonprofit organizations across all industries and regions. We help our clients build teams of transformational leaders who can meet today’s challenges and anticipate the digital, economic, sustainability, and political trends that are reshaping the global business environment. From helping boards with their structure, culture, and effectiveness to identifying, assessing and defining the best leadership for organizations, our teams bring their decades of expertise to help clients address their most complex leadership issues. We exist to improve the way the world is led.