Across the United States, leading, innovative health systems are setting the tone. They have turned to executives with broad, cross-industry experience to modernize how large, complex healthcare organizations attract, retain, and engage talent at scale. Their decisions reflect an understanding that the challenges of today’s healthcare workforce—staffing shortages, rising costs, and a fatigued labor base—require capabilities honed in other high-velocity, distributed sectors.
Historically, healthcare systems drew their senior HR talent from within the sector—leaders who understood clinical hierarchies, credentialing, and compliance frameworks. Today, boards and CEOs are prioritizing operators of scale, individuals who have managed complex, multi-site workforces and built digital HR architectures capable of supporting tens of thousands of employees.
Several structural forces have converged to make this the moment for “outside-in” HR leadership:
Over the next half-decade, the influence of outside-in HR leadership will be most visible in three domains.
These shifts will not occur without challenge. Translating non-healthcare practices into clinical contexts requires humility, credibility, and respect for mission. The most effective outside-in leaders will move deliberately—testing new models in pilot environments, earning trust, and demonstrating results before scaling.
For boards and CEOs, this trend underscores the need to re-define success profiles for HR leadership. Future CHROs in healthcare will be expected to combine operational sophistication with cultural dexterity. They will manage the complexity of an academic medical center with the responsiveness of a consumer enterprise, and they will interpret workforce data with the nuance of patient-care analytics.
The first generation of these leaders is already demonstrating measurable impact. Over the next five years, their influence will be evident in improved retention, stronger engagement, more sustainable staffing models, and an HR function that operates not as a support service, but as a strategic engine for transformation.
The decision to recruit from outside the healthcare sector reflects more than a hiring trend—it represents a reimagining of what leadership looks like in mission-driven institutions. As integrated health systems evolve into diversified, consumer-connected enterprises, their people strategies must evolve just as quickly. Leaders who have mastered scale, complexity, and innovation in other sectors are now being called upon to shape the next era of healthcare’s most valuable resource: its people.
Sarah Eames leads the Russell Reynolds Associates’ Healthcare Services practice. She is based in New York.
Amy Saddington is a senior member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Healthcare Services and Health Tech Practices. She is based in Dallas.
Sarah Brooks is a senior member of the Russell Reynolds Associates’ Healthcare Services practice, and leads the firm’s Academic Medicine practice. She is based in New York.
Annabel Toren is a senior member of Russell Reynolds Associates' Human Resources Officers capability, and leads the firm’s Healthcare Services HR Practice. She is based in New York.
Olivia Floto leads Russell Reynolds Associates’ Healthcare Services practice knowledge team. She is based in Chicago.