Yet scarcity of ready-now CEO talent remains a real constraint. Exit expectations are higher, ownership cycles are shorter, and boards too often focus narrowly on hiring “proven” repeat CEOs. This overreliance on a small subset of experienced leaders has created bottlenecks in succession – companies frequently operate for extended periods without a permanent CEO or delay key decisions during searches, slowing value creation in the process.
To help software investors navigate this landscape, Russell Reynolds Associates examined the backgrounds of more than 300 CEOs across leading US PE-backed software companies. Our analysis reveals where today’s leaders come from, how investors are approaching succession, and how widening the aperture – both within software and into adjacent industries – can uncover overlooked pools of high-performing CEO talent.
As in other global markets, the pace of PE deal activity in the US software sector has amplified demand for proven CEOs. However, the scale and maturity of the US ecosystem create different dynamics compared to Europe. Our analysis shows:
Together, these patterns point to a market that is both deep and dynamic – but still constrained by legacy assumptions. The US PE-backed software ecosystem benefits from a richer leadership bench than Europe, yet many boards continue to prioritize prior CEO experience over demonstrable readiness for the role.
To understand how the leadership profile itself is evolving, we examined the functional routes-to-the-top among first-time CEOs versus seasoned leaders. The findings reveal a gradual but meaningful broadening of the talent pool – and a growing recognition that high-performing CEOs are emerging from more diverse functional backgrounds than ever before.
The traditional US PE archetype – a repeat CEO with a pure GTM pedigree – is steadily giving way to more varied pathways. Our analysis of the route to the top for first-time CEOs shows:
The implication is clear: Appointing a first-time CEO is not a compromise, but a viable strategy that can deliver equally strong outcomes.
Experience still is critical, just in different ways. Nearly two-thirds of US CEOs had prior PE-backed experience within their previous two roles, and close to 60% have led or participated in an exit. Importantly, however, more than a fourth achieved their first exit in their first CEO role, proving that success in PE-backed settings depends less on holding the title before, and more on execution under ownership.
Timing also plays a role: most CEOs are appointed pre-deal, while those hired post-deal tend to serve shorter tenures, reflecting the compressed timeframes and heightened urgency of executing value-creation plans immediately after close.
Despite this depth, constraints remain. Boards continue to over-index on repeat CEOs even as first-timers prove equally effective. Representation gaps persist, with fewer than one in 10 CEOs being women. And talent remains concentrated in core verticals like ERP, CRM, and SaaS, often recycling the same leaders rather than drawing in fresh perspectives from adjacent markets such as data subscription, analytics, and tech-enabled services.
Even in the US, where the CEO talent pool runs deeper than Europe’s, scarcity is real. Ownership cycles are tightening, exit expectations are rising, and boards too often default to a narrow definition of readiness. Investors that adapt in the following ways can gain a major advantage:
Sponsors who take a broader view—embracing first-time leaders, strengthening pipelines, tapping adjacent sectors, and embedding diversity into their strategies—will build more resilient CEO pipelines. In doing so, they will convert leadership scarcity from a constraint into a competitive advantage.
Our analysis focused on the leadership profiles of CEOs at private equity-backed software companies headquartered in the US. To ensure comparability and relevance, we applied the following parameters:
This dataset was used to identify patterns in leadership backgrounds, experience, and archetypes across the US software landscape. While not exhaustive of the entire market, the criteria provide a representative view of how scaled, PE-backed US software companies are shaping their leadership profiles.
Todd Savage leads Russell Reynolds Associates’ Software & Cloud practice globally. He is based in Miami.
Connor Krikawa is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Software & Cloud practice. He is based in Miami.
Robert Alexander leads commercial strategy and insights for Russell Reynolds Associates’ Software & Cloud practice. He is based in New York.