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MAKING SUCCESS STORIES HAPPEN

Recruitment experts dedicated to the Financial Services Industry

Permanent Recruitment - Freelance / Interim Management

The Belgian Financial Services sector is characterized by an ongoing quest for efficiency, digitalization and adaptation to global economic shifts. Amid these evolutions, Financial Institutions face significant recruitment challenges.

High demand for skilled professionals leads to tough competition for top talent. Recruitment in the Financial Services sector in Belgium requires a deep understanding of local and international markets & regulations, as well as anticipation of emerging trends.

Our expertise

We go beyond traditional recruitment in Financial Services. Leveraging cutting-edge digital tools and an extensive industry network, we identify and secure top-tier talent with the expertise and mindset to drive your company’s success.

We understand the unique context, goals, and responsibilities of each position. Our commitment is to present you with a carefully selected shortlist of professionals who not only possess the technical skills but also align with your company culture and the key success factors of the role to be filled.

OUR EXPERTS

A team dedicated to the Financial sector

Our experts specialise in recruiting talent in the Financial Services sector in Belgium and internationally. They have a proven expertise and track record in identifying top talent for various positions within financial institutions.

Your benefits

Our expertise in recruitment

We recruit on behalf of:

  • Banks (Retail, Private, Corporate, Investment)
  • Asset Managers
  • Insurance (Life & Non-Life) & Reinsurance companies
  • Payment Institutions
  • Leasing companies (B2C & B2B)
  • Fintech (including Regtech & Insurtech)
  • Private Equity & Venture Capital
  • Real Estate Investment companies
  • Family & Multi-Family Offices
  • M&A Boutiques
  • Trusts & Asset Service providers
  • Industry Associations

Our references

Roles for which we recruit:

Leadership

CEO, CFO, CRO, CCO, CMO, CIO, CHRO, COO,...

Strategy

PMO, Program & Project Management, Transformation & Change,...

MarCom

Marketing, Communications, Branding, Campaign Management, ...

Front Office

Private Banker, Portfolio Management, Relationship Management, …

Operations

Middle & Back Office operations , …

Control Functions

Compliance, Risk, Audit, ...

Finance & Reporting

Regulatory Reporting, Actuary, Finance Operations, …

  • What are the latest market trends in the Belgian banking sector?
    Salary survey for banking professions in Belgium in 2025

    • Our Banking Salary Survey has been written under the supervision of our recruitment experts and is based on extensive research, including interviews with our candidates and an analysis of our clients' assignments over the last 18 months.
    Salary survey for banking professions in Belgium in 2025
  • What are the latest market trends in the Belgian insurance sector?
    Salary survey for Insurance professions in Belgium in 2025

    • Our Insurance Salary Survey has been written under the supervision of our recruitment experts and is based on extensive research, including interviews with our candidates and an analysis of our clients' assignments over the last 18 months.
    Salary survey for Insurance professions in Belgium in 2025

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Reflections on the talent market in 2025
MPG UK
/ Categories: en

Reflections on the talent market in 2025

Talent, confidence and capability: reflections on a shifting market

In late 2025, I was assessing the state of the market across organisations. Although there was a warming sentiment as the year progressed, a sense of hesitation remained: a constant desire for more clarity before committing to significant talent or leadership investments.

As we moved into 2026, though, that caution began to shift. What started as tentative conversations about ‘waiting to see’ gradually turned into more proactive discussions about capability, leadership and future readiness.

Looking back now, that change in tone feels like a genuine turning point.

Across the sectors we work with, there has been a steady move away from reactive decision-making towards more deliberate, strategic thinking about people. Leaders are asking not just how to manage the present, but how to prepare their organisations for what comes next.

I recall numerous conversations with CEOs and HR executives towards the end of last year who were understandably cautious. Six weeks into the new year, and those same leaders are asking a different question: how do we get ahead rather than simply keep up?

More leaders are now recognising that to ensure the long-term health of their organisations, they need to build depth and resilience in their teams. Indeed, they are coming to the realisation that selecting and, perhaps more importantly, developing the right talent is fundamental to performance and not something that can be constantly deferred, or worse, ignored.

Budgets remain under pressure, but investment continues

While there are positive signs of recovery in parts of the economy, cost pressures have by no means disappeared. Rising operating costs and ongoing global uncertainty mean that budgets for people and talent-related programmes remain under close scrutiny.

Recent ONS data showed that in the three months leading up to November 2025, 35% of UK businesses reported increased staffing costs. That reality is still being felt across sectors and is sharpening the focus on demonstrating the value of any talent-related investment.

What we are seeing in response is not a withdrawal from investment, but a more disciplined approach to it.

Organisations that are moving forward with confidence are those able to clearly articulate:

Why they are investing in talent and leadership

What outcomes they expect to see

How those outcomes will support performance and growth

Talent decisions are increasingly being supported by data, evidence and clearly defined success measures. The conversation has moved beyond instinct alone and towards more structured, outcome-focused decision-making.

Preparing leaders for what comes next

Alongside this more disciplined investment approach, demand for initiatives with medium- and long-term impact has grown. Succession planning, leadership development, coaching and capability assessment are returning to the agenda.

Such action is a must for organisations that want to commit to future success rather than simply manage within the short-term uncertainty of the wider economy, which is set for modest UK GDP growth of 0.9% for 2026, according to the EY ITEM Club.

At the centre of this sits leadership.

Organisations recognise that performance and growth are ultimately delivered through their leaders, and that leadership capability cannot be left to chance. The focus now is on building depth: ensuring there are strong pipelines, clear succession options and leaders who are prepared to step into more complex roles as businesses evolve.

Leading in an environment of constant change

It has become commonplace to describe change as the ‘new normal’, but for many organisations, the reality is more nuanced. Leaders are operating in environments where ambiguity is high, conditions shift quickly, and decisions often need to be made with imperfect information.

Recent data suggests that concern about the broader economic outlook remains significant, with over half of business leaders citing global slowdown as a key risk. Against that backdrop, the emphasis on adaptability, judgement and resilience is understandable.

What has been encouraging is the tone of many of the conversations we are now having with clients. There is a sense of cautious optimism, grounded in realism, but forward-looking nonetheless.

The most effective organisations are not attempting to eliminate uncertainty entirely. Instead, they are investing in leaders who are capable of operating within it: people who can adapt, make considered decisions and maintain momentum even when the environment is unpredictable.

Looking ahead

As we move further into 2026, I expect this more proactive mindset to continue. Organisations are increasingly shifting away from reactive approaches to talent and towards building leadership capability with intention.

The focus is no longer solely on filling roles or responding to immediate challenges. It is on building resilient, future-ready leadership teams that can sustain performance over time.

For me, that has been one of the most positive market developments of the past year. Despite ongoing uncertainty, many organisations are choosing to invest in their people, not only to navigate the present, but also to build something stronger for the future.

To discuss the talent market in more detail, please contact Andrew Achilleos

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  • HR & market trends
  • Leadership & management

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