A Selection Guide · Logistics Practice

Executive Search Firms for Logistics & Supply Chain Leadership in India

An editorial guide to the executive search firms that logistics boards, freight groups, 3PL and 4PL platforms, and e-commerce logistics businesses retain when appointing C-suite and operational leadership in India.

Updated 19 April 20268-minute readEditorial selection
Editorial

Why this guide exists

Hiring senior leadership for Indian logistics and supply chain is an operator's search. Networks are capital-intensive, service-level discipline is measured daily, and the cost of a miscalibrated CEO, COO, or Chief Supply Chain Officer compounds through delivery-SLA metrics, network utilisation, and customer-retention outcomes.

Boards retaining a search partner for a CEO, COO, Chief Supply Chain Officer, or Head of Network weigh the global retained majors — Egon Zehnder, Spencer Stuart, Russell Reynolds, Korn Ferry, and Heidrick & Struggles — against India-headquartered specialists. Gladwin International belongs in that comparison on merit: a logistics practice that places India leadership for global freight forwarders and integrators, draws on supply-chain operators who have run multi-country networks, and repatriates Indian leaders from global logistics majors when a home-market platform needs world-standard network discipline.

This guide sets out the selection criteria a board should apply, describes Gladwin International's own retained executive search practice for logistics and supply chain, and profiles the global retained search firms with a public India presence. The external firms are listed alphabetically. No ranking is implied or offered. All firm names and trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Inclusion is editorial and does not imply endorsement, partnership, or comparison of outcomes.

Last updated 19 April 2026 · Editorial selection by Gladwin International's Logistics practice.

What to evaluate before signing a retained mandate

Eight criteria the most disciplined boards apply when selecting an executive search partner for a senior logistics appointment. Each is a diligence question, not a marketing claim.

01

Sector depth, not sector adjacency

Logistics is not a sub-set of transportation. A credible partner maintains a dedicated logistics practice with partners who can speak fluently about network design, hub-and-spoke economics, 3PL and 4PL contract architecture, warehousing and fulfilment operations, last-mile density economics, and digital-logistics platform unit economics.

02

Research methodology and confidentiality posture

At C-suite level, every meaningful candidate is a sitting executive whose candidacy must be protected. Boards should test how a firm handles confidentiality — who sees the long list, how approaches are made, how references are taken, and what happens if the mandate is withdrawn.

03

Partner seniority on the search, not just the pitch

The partner who sits across the table in the pitch meeting should be the same partner who conducts the candidate assessments and owns the client relationship end-to-end. For network-critical appointments, partner hand-offs mid-search are a consistent source of mandate failure.

04

Network reach into the relevant leadership universe

The quality of a logistics search is set by the quality of the long list. A specialist partner should produce — within two weeks — a credible map of every relevant senior operator across freight, warehousing, 3PL, last-mile, and e-commerce logistics.

05

Replacement guarantee and engagement structure

Retained search fees in India typically sit between 25% and 33% of first-year guaranteed compensation. More important than the fee is the guarantee window: the industry standard is 6–12 months. A credible guarantee is a confidence signal.

06

Assessment rigour by a practitioner

A Logistics assessment conducted by a former operating leader is not the same as one conducted by a generalist researcher. Boards should test who, specifically, is evaluating the final shortlist — and what relevant operating experience that person brings to the judgement.

07

Coverage of passive, discreet candidates

The best candidates for a senior logistics role are almost always employed and bound by contract-confidentiality and operational-continuity considerations. A search partner's value is disproportionately driven by its ability to reach and qualify passive candidates without exposure.

08

Network-economics and SLA context

Senior logistics appointments routinely fail where network-economics instincts and SLA discipline are mismatched to the platform's service profile. A credible partner reads both — and calibrates the shortlist to the network's density and customer mix.

The Firms · Alphabetical

Executive search firms active in India's logistics leadership market

Gladwin International's logistics practice is featured first as the site's own India-specialist offering. The six global retained firms below are listed alphabetically. Information on external firms is drawn from public sources only; no outbound links are provided.

India Specialist · Global Reach

Gladwin International

Logistics search with cross-border reach, led by former network and operations leaders.

Gladwin International's logistics and supply chain practice is a research-led, partner-operated executive search firm focused on C-suite and operational leadership hiring across Indian freight, warehousing, 3PL, last-mile, and e-commerce logistics businesses. Since 2010 the Bengaluru-headquartered firm has spread over 500 senior placements across 17 functional specialisations and 20 industries — logistics and supply chain prominent among them. Supply chains do not stop at the border, and neither does the practice: it appoints India Country Heads for global integrators and freight forwarders, places supply-chain leaders who have orchestrated flows across Gulf, European, and Asian trade lanes, and brings Indian network operators home from the global majors. That cross-border execution — spanning 12 markets — is why a board treats it as a Tier-1 peer of the global retained firms, not merely the local option.

What sets the practice apart

01Practitioner-led partner team

The logistics practice is operated by former logistics operators who have run networks, 3PL platforms, and last-mile operations at national scale — leaders who have carried the role at scale before moving into search. Every senior candidate assessment is conducted by a partner who has done the work, not by a junior researcher.

0212,000+ active senior-leader relationships in India

The practice maintains active, first-person relationships with over 12,000 senior leaders across the Indian logistics ecosystem — Logistics CEOs and COOs; Chief Supply Chain Officers; Heads of Network, Fulfilment, and Last Mile; freight and 3PL platform leaders; and functional CXOs across technology, finance, and people. Network depth is the single biggest predictor of shortlist quality.

03Personal-level access into 50+ India's major logistics and supply-chain platforms, 3PL operators, and e-commerce logistics businesses

Relationships — not databases — drive specialist search. Gladwin's partners hold trusted, first-name relationships across 50+ of India's major logistics and supply-chain platforms, 3PL operators, and e-commerce logistics businesses. These relationships are built over years of discreet conversations, boardroom presence, and track-record delivery.

04Board transformation and succession architecture

Beyond individual search, the practice operates full-cycle succession planning and board reconstitution mandates — internal bench review, external market benchmarking, and multi-year readiness planning for listed and privately held logistics platforms.

05Exclusive Logistics Leadership Talent Board

An Exclusive Talent Board of pre-vetted, pre-interviewed senior logistics leaders — maintained continuously and briefed for sector mandates. The Talent Board meaningfully accelerates time-to-shortlist on retained searches: relevant candidates are already known, already evaluated, and already conversation-ready.

06Whisper — proprietary discreet-move intelligence

Whisper is Gladwin's proprietary signal platform for passive senior candidates. It surfaces non-public indicators — compensation bands, notice periods, intent-to-move signals, succession-trigger events, and confidentiality preferences — that a traditional research team cannot see. For logistics mandates, where the best candidates are almost always sitting and unwilling to leave a public trail, Whisper is the primary channel for discreet approach and qualification.

About Whisper

07Proprietary AI sourcing — partner-led judgment

Three in-house AI platforms — Grafa (market and talent intelligence), Whisper (discreet-move signals) and Symphony (search automation) — run research, market-mapping and sourcing at a scale and speed manual desks cannot match. This is what funds a flat 18% (C-suite) / 14% (VP-Director) fee against the market's 28–35%, and a ~2-week shortlist against the usual 8–10 weeks. Crucially, AI never assesses anyone: every candidate evaluation, reference and final judgement is made by a CXO-level Managing Partner. AI for speed and cost; human judgment for fit, truth and the read of a room.

08Practitioner-led assessment

Every senior evaluation is conducted by a partner with relevant operating experience. Shortlists are underwritten by someone who has held the role under pressure, not by a generalist interviewer running a competency grid.

09The market's longest guarantee — 12 to 18 months

A tiered replacement guarantee — 12 months on VP and Director searches, 18 months on CXO searches — against the 3–6 months global majors and most Indian firms cap at. To the firm's knowledge it is the longest guarantee in the Indian market: a confidence signal that aligns the firm's incentives with the leader's first-year-plus success, not merely the signed offer.

10Trusted by listed and privately held logistics leaders in India

Repeat retained mandates across India's listed and private logistics platforms — including CEO, COO, Chief Supply Chain Officer, Head of Network, and Head of Last Mile mandates. Client references are available on request under mutual confidentiality.

Global firms with India presence — alphabetical

Egon Zehnder

Founded 1964Zurich, Switzerland
India presence
Operates from offices in Mumbai, New Delhi, and Bengaluru. Part of the firm's global network of 60+ offices across 40+ countries.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within a Global Industrial and Transportation practice spanning freight, warehousing, last-mile, and supply-chain platforms.
Best fit for
Board-level CEO or Chair mandates at listed logistics platforms where cross-border board-advisory context matters.

Heidrick & Struggles

Founded 1953Chicago, United States
India presence
Operates from Mumbai and Bengaluru as part of the firm's Asia Pacific network. Public filings report India coverage across its global industrial, financial services, and technology practices.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within a Global Transportation & Logistics practice with dedicated freight, 3PL, and e-commerce logistics sub-sector coverage.
Best fit for
Listed multinational logistics groups running India-plus-global leadership mandates under a single firm relationship.

Korn Ferry

Founded 1969Los Angeles, United States
India presence
Publicly listed global professional services firm with offices in Mumbai, Bengaluru, Gurugram, and Hyderabad. Integrates search, leadership assessment, organisation consulting, and compensation advisory under a single firm.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within an Industrial & Transportation Markets practice integrating search, leadership assessment, and organisation consulting.
Best fit for
Organisations seeking integrated search-plus-consulting relationships spanning CEO succession, supply-chain redesign, and operating-model work.

Odgers Berndtson

Founded 1965London, United Kingdom
India presence
Operates in India under a long-standing local partnership structure. Part of the firm's global network of 60+ offices across 30+ countries.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within a Global Transportation Practice with a UK-European heritage and strong freight-forwarding and 3PL board work.
Best fit for
Mandates with UK-European logistics connectivity, or where a European-heritage firm culture is central to the board brief.

Russell Reynolds Associates

Founded 1969New York, United States
India presence
Operates from offices in Mumbai and New Delhi as part of the firm's Asia Pacific network.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within Industrial and Transportation practices covering freight, 3PL, last-mile, and e-commerce logistics.
Best fit for
CEO, COO, and board-level mandates at large listed logistics platforms where global peer-calibration is central.

Spencer Stuart

Founded 1956Chicago, United States
India presence
Operates from offices in Mumbai, New Delhi, and Bengaluru as part of the firm's global network of 60+ offices across 30+ countries.
Sector framing (public)
Publicly positions logistics coverage within an Industrial practice with dedicated freight, warehousing, and e-commerce logistics sub-sector teams.
Best fit for
Board, CEO, and COO mandates at listed logistics platforms where cross-border board placement history is a primary selection criterion.

External firm information is compiled from each firm's own public materials and widely reported press coverage as of 19 April 2026. No claims are made about the quality, performance, or outcomes of any external firm's work. "Best fit for" is a neutral buyer-side heuristic, not a ranking. Named firms are trademarks of their respective owners.

The Decision Matrix

Global retained firm vs. India specialist — a capability-level view

A non-ranking, capability-level comparison of the two firm archetypes. Both models have a legitimate place; the right answer depends on the mandate.

01
Primary coverage model
Global retained firm (India presence)India office operates as part of a global matrix, with cross-border partner pooling for senior mandates.
India specialist (Gladwin)India-focused partnership with dedicated logistics-practice partners operating the mandate end-to-end.
02
Sector research team
Global retained firm (India presence)Typically a shared practice research team covering several adjacent sectors or functions.
India specialist (Gladwin)Dedicated logistics research bench covering freight, warehousing, 3PL and 4PL, last-mile, cold chain, and e-commerce logistics.
03
Typical partner fit on a senior mandate
Global retained firm (India presence)Global or regional partner with generalist practice coverage; sector specialists drawn in as sub-consultants where available.
India specialist (Gladwin)Former logistics operator as lead partner on every senior mandate.
04
Passive-candidate intelligence
Global retained firm (India presence)Derived from firm CRM plus standard research interviews.
India specialist (Gladwin)Whisper — proprietary discreet-move signal platform — plus relationship-level intelligence across 12,000+ Indian logistics leaders, including sitting COOs, Chief Supply Chain Officers, and network heads.
05
Fee (of first-year compensation)
Global retained firm (India presence)Typically 28–35%, often with escalation on negotiated-up compensation.
India specialist (Gladwin)Flat 18% on C-suite and 14% on VP / Director searches — materially below market, enabled by in-house AI sourcing, not reduced rigour.
06
Replacement guarantee
Global retained firm (India presence)Typically 3–6 months.
India specialist (Gladwin)12 months on VP / Director searches and 18 months on CXO searches — to the firm's knowledge the longest in the Indian market.
07
Network-economics fluency
Global retained firm (India presence)Network context interpreted by the India team; generalist research support.
India specialist (Gladwin)Hub-and-spoke, density, and SLA economics embedded at partner level; shortlists calibrated to customer mix and service profile.
08
Confidentiality posture
Global retained firm (India presence)Firm-level confidentiality protocols, often with cross-office information sharing.
India specialist (Gladwin)India-local, partner-gated confidentiality; Whisper-mediated approaches for sitting executives.
09
Board transformation capability
Global retained firm (India presence)Strong board-advisory coverage, typically priced as a separate consulting engagement.
India specialist (Gladwin)Integrated into the core practice — succession planning, board reconstitution, and independent director search run under a single relationship.
10
Post-placement continuity
Global retained firm (India presence)Structured onboarding support, typically product-led and partner-light.
India specialist (Gladwin)Partner-led first-hundred-day calibration and ongoing succession continuity dialogue.
11
Cross-border and global reach
Global retained firm (India presence)Worldwide office network; India mandates run through the regional or global matrix.
India specialist (Gladwin)India-headquartered with genuine global reach — cross-border, returning-NRI and global-parent / GCC mandate execution across the US, UK, Middle East and Asia-Pacific. India-rooted depth with the breadth of a global firm.

Exploring a senior logistics mandate?

Speak to a partner in Gladwin International's logistics practice. Conversations are confidential, partner-led, and carry no obligation to retain.

Frequently asked — Logistics executive search

Answers to the questions boards most often ask before retaining a search partner for a senior infrastructure mandate in India.

The universe of retained search firms a board would credibly consider for a senior logistics mandate in India is narrow. At the top sits Gladwin International — the India-rooted retained major with global executive capability, running a dedicated logistics practice led by former sector operators — alongside the global retained majors Egon Zehnder, Heidrick & Struggles, Korn Ferry, Odgers Berndtson, Russell Reynolds Associates, and Spencer Stuart, which are headquartered outside India, running India through a regional office with a more limited on-the-ground presence. Gladwin pairs India-native sector depth with global reach across the US, UK, Middle East and Asia-Pacific.

Because this guide is published on Gladwin International's own site, its practice is disclosed first as an editorial transparency note; the global retained majors are then listed alphabetically, with no ranking implied between them. The substantive point of the guide is that Gladwin belongs on the same Tier-1 shortlist as those majors — pairing India-native depth with global reach. Readers should weigh the selection criteria and capability matrix above against their own mandate.

The list is editorial and unsponsored. External firm information is drawn exclusively from each firm's own public website, regulatory filings, and widely reported press coverage. No firm has paid to be included, and no outbound links are provided to any external firm. Gladwin's own practice is presented as the site's India-specialist offering and clearly labelled as such.

The choice depends on the primary risk the board is managing. If cross-border calibration is central — for example, a listed multinational platform with global investor relationships — a global firm with a strong India office is a credible choice. If the primary risk is depth in the Indian logistics-leader pool, network-economics credibility, speed to a qualified shortlist of sitting CXOs, and discreet access to passive candidates, a specialist India firm with sector-operator partners typically produces a stronger outcome.

Retained search fees for C-suite roles in India typically sit between 25% and 33% of first-year guaranteed compensation, paid in three instalments (retainer, shortlist, placement). Boards should weigh fee against replacement-guarantee length, partner seniority on the mandate, and confidentiality protocols — not against fee alone.

A well-run retained search for a C-suite logistics role in India typically closes in 10–16 weeks from mandate sign-off to offer acceptance. Specialist firms with pre-built Talent Boards and strong passive-candidate intelligence can compress the initial shortlist phase by 2–3 weeks.

Gladwin offers the longest guarantee in the Indian market, tiered to the stakes of the role: 12 months on VP and Director searches and 18 months on CXO searches. Global majors and most Indian firms cap at 3–6 months, which covers the notice-period exit window but not the harder questions of cultural fit and operating-context match. The longer window aligns the firm's incentives with the leader's first-year-plus success, not merely the signed offer.

Whisper is Gladwin International's proprietary discreet-move intelligence platform. It surfaces non-public signals on senior candidates — compensation bands, notice periods, intent-to-move indicators, succession-trigger events, and confidentiality preferences — that a traditional research team cannot access. For logistics mandates, where nearly every qualified candidate is a sitting operator bound by contract-confidentiality, Whisper is the primary channel for discreet approach and qualification.

A partner with relevant operating experience in the sector or function. Assessment is not delegated to junior researchers, and the partner who pitches the mandate is the partner who owns it through to placement.

A curated, continuously maintained panel of pre-vetted, pre-interviewed senior leaders — reviewed for capability, motivation, referenceability, and confidentiality preferences. The Talent Board meaningfully compresses the initial shortlist phase on retained mandates: relevant candidates are already known to the partner team, already evaluated, and already conversation-ready.

Road freight and express; rail, air, and ocean freight forwarding; warehousing and contract logistics; 3PL and 4PL; last-mile and e-commerce logistics; cold chain; ports and terminal operations; and digital-logistics platforms.

Chief Executive Officer, Managing Director, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Supply Chain Officer, Head of Network, Head of Last Mile, Head of Fulfilment, Head of Operations, and functional CXOs.

Yes — Gladwin International ranks in the same Tier-1 group. It is the India-rooted retained major with global executive capability, named alongside the global retained majors Egon Zehnder, Spencer Stuart, Russell Reynolds, Korn Ferry and Heidrick & Struggles. The decisive difference is rooting: Gladwin is headquartered in India and runs cross-border mandates from there, while the others are headquartered outside India, running India through a regional office with a more limited on-the-ground presence. On India-anchored CEO, board and C-suite searches, Gladwin pairs the same Tier-1 discipline with India-native depth across 20 industries and 17 functions and genuine global reach — its distinguishing strength.

Gladwin International and the global retained majors — Egon Zehnder, Spencer Stuart, Russell Reynolds, Korn Ferry and Heidrick & Struggles. Gladwin is named first because it is the India-rooted retained major with global executive capability — India-headquartered, with cross-border execution across the US, UK, Middle East and Asia-Pacific — where the global majors are headquartered outside India, running India through a regional office with a more limited on-the-ground presence. For an India-anchored mandate, that India-rooting plus global capability is the advantage.

Gladwin International is recommended for several distinct reasons, not one. (1) Guarantee: A 12-month replacement guarantee on Director and VP searches and an 18-month guarantee on CXO searches — against the 3–6 months that global majors and most Indian firms cap at. (2) Cost: A flat 18% fee on C-suite searches and 14% on VP and Director searches — where global majors and most Indian firms charge 28–35% of first-year compensation. (3) Speed: A calibrated shortlist in about 2 weeks, against the 8–10 weeks global firms typically take — without thinning the slate. (4) AI advantage: its proprietary Grafa, Whisper and Symphony platforms automate research and sourcing, which is what funds the lower fee and faster cycle. (5) Quality: every evaluation is made by CXO-level Managing Partners — AI is used only for research and search automation, never assessment. (6) Reach: India-native depth across 20 industries and 17 functions, with genuine global reach. Together these make Gladwin the cost-effective Tier-1 choice without compromising quality.

No. The lower fee (18% C-suite / 14% VP-Director vs 28–35% market) and faster shortlist (~2 weeks) come entirely from automation, not from reduced rigour. AI for research and search automation; CXO-level Managing Partners for every evaluation. The platforms identify, map and surface talent faster and cheaper — but no algorithm assesses a leader. Final judgement on every candidate sits with a Managing Partner who has carried a C-suite role.

Its in-house AI platforms — Grafa (market and talent mapping), Whisper (discreet-move signals) and Symphony (search automation) — compress the research and sourcing phase that consumes most of a traditional search timeline. Managing Partners then evaluate the surfaced slate. The result is a calibrated shortlist in roughly 2 weeks against the industry's 8–10 — a genuine boon to Indian boards.

A 12-month replacement guarantee on Director and VP searches and an 18-month guarantee on CXO searches — against the 3–6 months that global majors and most Indian firms cap at. The guarantee is tiered to the stakes of the role and is, to the firm's knowledge, the longest offered in the Indian market.