CEO & Executive Counsel
CEO and C-suite strategic counsel provides confidential advisory to chief executives and senior leaders on the decisions that define organisational trajectory. The role is distinct from management consulting: we serve as a trusted sounding board for leaders who cannot discuss certain decisions with their own boards (until the decision is sufficiently formed), cannot share certain concerns with their management teams (for morale or confidentiality reasons), and need external perspective from advisers who understand their specific context, industry, and governance environment.
The demand for CEO counsel in the Gulf is driven by the specific pressures that Gulf business leaders face: executing national transformation mandates (where sovereign expectations create unique performance pressure), managing multi-stakeholder environments (government shareholders, family shareholders, international investors, and regulators simultaneously), navigating cultural complexity (multi-national management teams, generational leadership transitions, and the formality norms that vary across Gulf nationalities), and the personal dimensions of institutional leadership (time management, decision fatigue, legacy considerations, succession planning).
Strategic Sounding Board
The strategic sounding board function — providing a confidential forum for CEOs to test ideas, challenge assumptions, explore scenarios, and refine their thinking before committing to decisions — is the core of executive counsel. The value is not in providing answers but in asking the questions that leaders are too close to their own situations to ask themselves: What assumption would need to be wrong for this strategy to fail? What are you not seeing because of your position? What would a hostile observer make of this decision? Who benefits from the status quo and will resist this change?
Board Relationship Management
Managing the relationship between CEO and board is one of the most consequential and least discussed dimensions of institutional leadership. The advisory mandate covers: board communication strategy (how to present information, what to share proactively, how to manage difficult conversations), chairman-CEO relationship dynamics, board effectiveness from the CEO’s perspective, and the succession conversations that every CEO must eventually navigate. In Gulf contexts — where board composition may include government appointees, family representatives, and independent directors with different expectations — the relationship management complexity is particularly acute.
Crisis Response
Crisis situations — operational incidents, regulatory investigations, public controversies, market disruptions, competitive threats, leadership departures — test CEOs in ways that routine business does not. Executive counsel during crisis spans: situation assessment (what actually happened, what are the facts, what don’t we know), response strategy (immediate actions, stakeholder communication, regulatory engagement), decision framework (prioritising when everything feels urgent), and the personal resilience counsel that leaders need when operating under extreme pressure. Our crisis management capability complements executive counsel during adverse events.
Succession Planning
CEO succession — whether planned retirement, unexpected departure, or founder-to-professional leadership transition — is the most consequential personnel decision an organisation makes. Executive counsel for succession covers: timeline management (when to begin planning, how to manage the transition period), internal candidate development (assessment, coaching, stretch assignments), external search (if required), and the board governance of the succession process (nomination committee, independence requirements, disclosure obligations). In Gulf family enterprises, succession often involves family dynamics alongside institutional governance. Our human capital practice supports executive succession with structured assessment and coaching programmes.
Investment Thesis
CEO counsel is the most personal, most confidential, and most impactful advisory relationship. It generates revenue through retained engagement models (monthly or quarterly advisory fees) rather than transaction fees — providing stable, relationship-based revenue. In the Gulf’s CEO community — where a relatively small number of leaders manage the region’s most consequential institutions — reputation, trust, and discretion are the only differentiators that matter.
CEO counsel is not about knowing more than the leader — it is about providing the perspective, challenge, and confidential thinking space that enables leaders to make better decisions in the moments that define their organisations.