This article explores how in-house strategy and transformation teams are shifting from large, generalist functions to lean, senior cores supported by on-demand interim expertise.

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Over the past 18 months I’ve noticed something interesting inside in-house strategy and transformation teams.
Strategy and transformation teams are being redesigned; not quietly, but structurally. Where once the model was a sizable in-house strategy function with broad generalist capability, the emerging pattern is smaller, more senior teams that draw on external expertise and interim execution support as needed.
It’s not a ‘nice to have’ shift, it’s becoming the operating model of choice for companies that need to move faster than traditional headcount cycles, while keeping fixed costs low and flexing resources up or down as ROI dictates. This approach is especially popular in tougher economic climates.
Corporate headcount processes are slow. Approving a director-level strategic hire can take months, involves multiple stakeholders, and, especially in tighter economic conditions, is increasingly viewed through a cost and risk lens: ‘Do we really need this role full-time and permanently?'
At the same time, the complexity of strategic work is rising. Pricing requires specialist competence. Go-to-market design now spans digital, sales enablement and RevOps. CDD-style market validation is no longer only relevant to private equity, corporates are now using it to justify investment, M&A and new product bets.
Matching that level of sophistication with a full-time team across every dimension is expensive, slow and, in most cases, unnecessary.
Ten years ago, interim talent was seen as a stopgap. Today, that perception has flipped.
There is now a substantial and growing interim talent pool, ex-consultants, former BU leaders, transformation specialists, commercial operators, pricing experts, and industry CxOs who are choosing project-based work over permanent roles. The sheer quantity of high-quality professionals available for projects has fundamentally shifted the market, and their expertise often surpasses what corporate recruitment processes can surface within the same timeframe.
Three key factors driving the rise of interim and project-based work at senior levels:
Movemeon Hiring Index shows that the freelance/interim talent market shows continued over-supply of high-quality professionals relative to roles. This reflects broader shifts we’ve documented in the market: many of the best consultants and operators are choosing project-based work for greater control over their careers, contributing to a deeper pool of available interim talent.

Today, interim talent isn’t simply a cheaper alternative to permanent hires, it’s the faster, more precise, lower-risk way to get specialist work done.
Many clients still underestimate how deep this talent pool is and how accessible it can be. Movemeon’s data shows that interim talent is highly cost-effective, there are no ramp-up periods or lengthy notice periods, just straight delivery, and access is rapid: clients can interview suitable professionals within 1–2 days, with many ready to start as soon as the following week.
There’s a structural point here that often gets missed: most high-value strategic and commercial work is project-based by nature.
Examples from real clients:
You would never build permanent teams to run these cycles continuously, unless you are a private equity fund or a global consulting firm. Corporates don’t, and shouldn’t, operate that way.
A point that CFOs in particular appreciate: interim isn’t cheaper on a day-rate basis, but it is significantly cheaper over a full budget year versus FTEs.
The maths is straightforward. A corporate hiring a strategy director pays not just base salary, but NI, pension, bonus, LTIPs, managerial overhead and future redeployment risk. An interim team, even at premium day rates, disappears the moment the job is done.
Layer in the fact that strategic demand is irregular, and the logic becomes clearer: variable cost for variable work beats permanent cost for intermittent work.
The emerging structure we now see more and more:
1. A small, sharp internal strategy nucleus
- Typically 3–10 people
- Focused on enterprise priorities, capital allocation, annual strategy, board engagement, and mobilisation
- High internal connectivity, high context
2. Modular access to specialist expertise
Brought in for spikes in specific domains such as:
3. Temporary horsepower for execution
When volume matters more than niche expertise (e.g. transformation PMO, market sizing workstreams, integration projects).
This model does three things that corporates increasingly need:
Moves fast, maintains quality, and avoids adding permanent cost.
This is precisely the model we’re helping global corporates build, not just by supplying talent, but by advising on how best-in-class organisations structure strategy and transformation.
We do that in three ways:
1. Access to specialist expertise
Targeted specialists for very specific strategic problems, pricing, CDD, GTM, operating model design, digital & AI strategy, and transformation PMO, drawn from ex-MBB, Big 4 and senior industry operators across sectors and geographies.
Examples:
2. Access to horsepower
On-demand teams of ex-MBB / Big 4 / boutique consultants to execute time-bound strategy and transformation work at pace, from growth strategy builds and PMI execution to market entry sprints and board-level strategy refreshes.
Examples:
3. Advisory on operating model design
Insights on how the best corporate strategy functions are evolving- headcount, structure, and where interim makes sense.
The outcome is not a new buzzword, it’s simply a more modern way to run strategy: leaner, faster, and tuned to how work actually gets done.
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