Since 2023, board appointment activity across leading global data center companies has accelerated markedly, almost doubling in two years. That inflection reflects a clear recognition: governance models designed for a more stable, predictable era are no longer sufficient for the complexity leaders are navigating today.
Yet despite this momentum, structural gaps remain — particularly in people leadership, qualified technology experts (QTE), hyperscale operating experience, and operational resilience. These are not peripheral capabilities; they sit at the center of enterprise risk and long-term value creation.
Execution and day-to-day ownership reside with executive teams. However, boards must have sufficient depth and credibility in these areas to provide rigorous oversight and informed challenge. Without that fluency, governance risks drifting out of step with the scale, complexity, and speed at which CEOs are now operating.
Russell Reynolds Associates recent analysis of 35 data center boards suggests that many boards are still optimizing for yesterday’s pressures. Tomorrow’s risk vectors — and opportunities — will require a different leadership profile, deeper technical fluency, and a more integrated view of resilience and growth.
Data center organizations now sit at the intersection of digital infrastructure, national security, energy systems, and global supply chains. As a result, boards face a convergence of challenges that are broader, faster-moving, and more interdependent than before.
RRA’s Global Leadership Monitor underscores the scale of this challenge (graphic 1):
Data Center Risk Drivers vs Leadership Preparedness
Source: RRA H2 2025 Global Leadership Monitor n=42 Digital Infrastructure Board Members, CEOs and C-Suite.
The result is a governance environment where risk awareness outpaces board capability — a particularly acute issue for organizations operating mission-critical infrastructure.
Boards have not been passive. Since 2022, the sector has experienced rapid board refresh cycles, signaling urgency and willingness to change.
Across the top global data center companies, annual board appointments have increased materially since 2023, reflecting heightened scrutiny and pressure on governance effectiveness (graphic 2).
YoY Board appointments, public vs private (2023–2025)
Source: Proprietary RRA Analysis November 2025 n=35 Boards, 206 profiles.
Public and private boards have responded differently — each emphasizing distinct governance strengths.
Public boards have focused on:
Private boards have leaned into:
Public boards appear to prioritize breadth — diversity, regulatory fluency, and formal governance experience — reflecting broader stakeholder accountability. Private boards, by contrast, emphasize sector depth, energy capability, and concentrated engagement, aligning more directly with execution and capital deployment priorities.
As infrastructure platforms scale and face simultaneous capital, energy, and regulatory constraints, boards may increasingly need elements of both approaches: the breadth of oversight characteristic of public companies and the sector-specific depth often found in private settings. They will also need a deliberate focus on keeping collective capabilities aligned with the pace of industry change.
Despite visible progress, both public and private boards converge around the same critical blind spots — precisely in the areas most material to future performance.
Key Functional Gaps Across Talent, QTE, Supply Chain and In-House Hyperscale
Source: Proprietary RRA Analysis November 2025 n=208
In short, boards are refreshing composition, but not re-architecting capability. The prevailing approach improves representation and compliance readiness — but does not yet equip boards to govern enterprise-scale complexity.
Data center boards are evolving, but evolution alone is no longer sufficient. As digital infrastructure becomes systemically critical, governance must move from representation to readiness. The boards that succeed will be those that treat composition not as a compliance exercise and a short term method for insights, but as a deliberately designed strategic asset for volatility.
Dan Cullen leads Russell Reynolds Associates’ Digital Infrastructure capability. He is based in Singapore.
Sean Roberts is a senior member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Digital Infrastructure capability. He is based in London.
Sam Smith is a senior member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Digital Infrastructure capability. He is based in San Francisco and Chicago.
JP Cantos is a senior member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Digital Infrastructure capability. He is based in Atlanta.
Georgia Mackay is a member of Russell Reynolds Associates’ Commercial Strategy & Insights technology team. She is based in London.