Succession Planning in Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure: Building a Leadership Pipeline Before You Need It

As Global Head of Research & Leadership Advisory at JRG Partners, I wrote this guide on succession planning in Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure because the sector’s leadership transition is colliding with a demographic and capability one. The sector’s explosive AI-driven growth has vastly outpaced its leadership pipeline, and the development-plus-mission-critical-operations skill set is so scarce that competition for proven leaders is the most intense in any infrastructure sector. Building the pipeline before you need it is no longer optional.

Key Takeaways: Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure Succession Planning in 2026

  • The sector’s explosive AI-driven growth has vastly outpaced its leadership pipeline, and the development-plus-mission-critical-operations skill set is so scarce that competition for proven leaders is the most intense in any infrastructure sector.
  • Succession is a multi-year discipline, not an emergency response to a departure.
  • The capabilities the sector now needs may not exist in the traditional internal bench.
  • Boards should map critical-seat succession coverage annually and honestly.
  • External benchmarking of internal candidates prevents the complacency that sinks internal successions.

Why Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure Faces a Succession Challenge

The sector’s explosive AI-driven growth has vastly outpaced its leadership pipeline, and the development-plus-mission-critical-operations skill set is so scarce that competition for proven leaders is the most intense in any infrastructure sector. This is compounded by the sector’s transformation: AI-driven compute demand is fueling a historic construction and capital cycle straining the leadership supply. Power access, cooling innovation, and energy strategy have become the binding constraints and top leadership priorities. The leaders retiring were built for a different industry than the one their successors will run.

Mapping Critical-Seat Exposure

Begin with a candid coverage map: every critical role scored as ready-now, ready-soon, or exposed. Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure boards most often find Chief Development Officer and VP of Energy / Power, plus the sector’s newer technology and transition seats, sitting in the exposed column. The value of the map is exactly the discomfort it creates.

Building the Pipeline

Effective succession combines internal development with external benchmarking. Develop high-potentials against the capabilities the sector will demand, not the ones it rewarded historically. Benchmark internal candidates against the external market honestly, both to calibrate readiness and to avoid the complacency that produces unready internal successions. And maintain relationships with external candidates for the seats where the internal bench cannot realistically close the gap.

Emergency Succession: The Plan You Hope Not to Use

Every critical seat needs an interim plan: who steps in, with what authority, for how long, if the incumbent departs suddenly. Boards that have not designated interim successors discover the cost during the worst possible week. The interim plan is separate from, and no substitute for, the permanent pipeline.

Succession planning and external search are two halves of one leadership strategy. The seats where internal succession is unrealistic become tomorrow’s external searches, and starting those relationships early, before the vacancy, is what separates prepared boards from scrambling ones. Our guide to executive search in Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure covers the external side, and our Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure talent trends analysis tracks the demographic and capability shifts driving the challenge.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Why is succession planning urgent in Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure?
A: The sector’s explosive AI-driven growth has vastly outpaced its leadership pipeline, and the development-plus-mission-critical-operations skill set is so scarce that competition for proven leaders is the most intense in any infrastructure sector.
Q: How far ahead should Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure succession planning start?
A: For C-suite seats, nine to twelve months minimum before a planned transition, and continuously for the development pipeline; emergency interim plans should always be current.
Q: Should Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure successors come from inside or outside?
A: Both: develop internal candidates against future-facing capabilities while benchmarking honestly against the external market, since the sector’s new demands may exceed the internal bench.
Q: What is the biggest succession mistake in Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure?
A: Treating succession as an emergency response rather than a multi-year discipline, and failing to benchmark internal candidates against the external market.

See also Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure executive search guide, Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure top 10 in-demand roles, Data Centers & Digital Infrastructure executive compensation report.

Tanya Gallardo

Managing Director, Executive Search & AI Talent Strategy

Tanya Gallardo is the Managing Director of Executive Search & AI Talent Strategy at JRG Partners, leading C-suite and Board engagements across key growth sectors including Technology, Financial Services, and Manufacturing.

With over 18 years of experience specializing in disruptive technology leadership, Tanya is recognized as a leading authority on talent architecture for future-focused executive roles, such as the Chief AI Officer (CAIO) and Chief Digital Officer (CDO). Her expertise lies in accurately assessing the cultural fit and technical depth required to ensure a high return on investment (ROI) for critical leadership appointments.

Prior to her role at JRG Partners, Tanya held senior roles directing global talent acquisition strategies at a major publicly-traded technology firm, advising on organizational design and succession planning for emerging executive functions. She is a recognized speaker and contributor to industry events, sharing data-driven insights on executive compensation, leadership development, and the measurable business impact of C-suite talent.

Connect with Tanya to discuss your executive search needs.

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