An industrial director for transition management runs the performance of multiple sites or a full industrial operation: industrial strategy, capital investment, standardization, make-or-buy decisions. He steps in when performance is slipping, a transformation is required, or the role is vacant — and starts in days, not months.
Call back within 2 business hours · 3 shortlisted profiles within 72h · 100% industrial
He owns the industrial P&L: site performance (OEE, quality, costs), the industrial master plan, capacity trade-offs, capital investment, relationships with site management. Within the first 100 days: a factual diagnostic of each site, prioritization of the initiatives with the highest cash and margin impact, and alignment of the site leadership team.
Bringing in an industrial director for transition management applies in several typical situations. Industrial performance that's slipping — falling OEE, recurring non-quality, drifting production costs — without the existing management able to reverse the trend calls for an outside perspective able to diagnose fast and act without political caution. A group launching an industrial transformation plan (relocation, site merger, industrializing a new product) needs an industrial director for transition management to run the initiative without destabilizing the sites' day-to-day management. A sudden vacancy in the role — departure, dismissal, illness — leaves a dangerous gap in an organization where capacity trade-offs and investments can't be put on hold. Finally, an acquisition or divestment of an industrial site often calls for an industrial director for transition management to prepare the operational integration or separation, and secure production continuity during the transition period.
The typical industrial director for transition management has 15 to 25 years of experience in multi-site industrial management, usually with an engineering background (general, mechanical, process) complemented by experience in lean manufacturing or operational excellence. He has personally run several plants before specializing in transition assignments, which gives him an immediate read on shop-floor indicators — OEE, service rate, cost of non-quality — with no months-long ramp-up needed. Behaviorally, he combines analytical rigor with shop-floor presence: he spends as much time in leadership meetings as walking the floor, which lets him spot the gaps between the management narrative and production reality. His ability to make fast calls on capacity trade-offs or investment choices, without waiting for multiple committees to sign off, is the quality most valued by the shareholders who bring him in.
An executive bringing in an industrial director for transition management should expect a factual, no-punches-pulled diagnostic within the first few weeks: an audit of each site against key indicators, a mapping of capacity risks, and a ranking of the initiatives with the highest cash and margin impact. The executive must grant direct authority over site directors for the duration of the assignment — an industrial director for transition management whose authority is diluted by an ambiguous chain of command loses the ability to move organizations fast. In return, the executive gets factual, regular reporting on the progress of priority initiatives, with quantified milestones set at the assignment's kickoff. The assignment concludes with a documented industrial master plan and a site leadership team aligned on priorities, handed over to the permanent successor or to the executive if they take back direct control. The executive must accept that some unpopular decisions (reorganization, shutting down an unprofitable line) will be made during the assignment — that is precisely one of the roles expected of an external, temporary profile.
Context: a mid-sized industrial group, owner of three production sites in France, has seen a continuous decline in its operating margin over the past 18 months despite stable commercial demand, without the existing industrial management being able to pinpoint the precise cause. Stakes: restore industrial profitability before shareholders consider closing a site, without breaking commercial momentum or team confidence. Assignment: an industrial director for transition management is brought in to audit the three sites, identify the root causes of the decline, and implement an operational turnaround plan. Timeline: the first three weeks are devoted to a factual, site-by-site audit — OEE, cost of non-quality, work organization, inventory levels — to objectively measure the performance gaps between sites. The following months build a cash-impact-prioritized action plan, with initiatives run hands-on at the most struggling site. The assignment typically lasts 6 to 9 months, long enough to stabilize the margin trajectory and train the site directors to sustain it. Expected outcome: restored operating margin, a documented industrial master plan, and a site leadership team autonomous in carrying forward the initiatives underway.
Industrial performance behind budget, a multi-site transformation to run (specialization, transfers, automation), a role left vacant after a departure, or an acquisition context requiring fast industrial integration.
In every case, the process is the same: an expert calls you back within 2 business hours, you receive 3 shortlisted profiles within 72h, and the manager starts with a quantified assignment letter, followed by the firm's founder through to handover.
The site director manages one site; the industrial director owns performance across multiple sites or the entire operation. In case of doubt, our expert will help you decide on the first call.
Yes: site specialization, make-or-buy decisions, investment planning, automation — with execution, not just the roadmap.
Call back within 2 business hours, 3 shortlisted profiles within 72h, start generally within one to two weeks — sometimes sooner in a crisis situation.
Cost is defined by the assignment — criticality, duration, scope — and is scoped from the very first conversation, with no surprises. It compares favorably to the cost of a prolonged vacancy or underperformance.
A permanent hire takes 4 to 6 months and is a long-term commitment. Transition management brings in, within days, a manager whose seniority matches the situation, for a defined period, with a quantified objective.
Call back within 2 business hours · 3 shortlisted profiles within 72h · 100% industrial
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