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Economic Uncertainty Must Force Businesses To Rethink Structures, Talent, Capital – Kreston Pedabo

Bode Gbadebo by Bode Gbadebo
2 hours ago
in News
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Businesses hoping to remain competitive in an increasingly volatile global economy must fundamentally rethink how they are structured, deploy talent and allocate capital, according to leading accounting and business advisory firm Kreston Pedabo.

The firm made the call in its June 2026 Newsletter in a report titled “Strategic Restructuring: Aligning Structure, Talent, and Capital for Future Growth,” authored by Zainab Akorede, Senior Associate, Management Consulting; Tyna Adediran, Lead, Management Consulting; Killian Khanoba, Senior Partner, Tax Compliance & Advisory; and Albert Folorunsho, Managing Consultant.

The report argued that economic uncertainty, technological disruption, geopolitical tensions, changing workforce expectations and evolving investor priorities have fundamentally altered the operating environment, making traditional organisational structures increasingly ineffective.

According to Kreston Pedabo, organisations can no longer rely on periodic cost-cutting exercises to remain competitive but must instead adopt strategic restructuring that aligns organisational design, workforce capabilities and financial resources with long-term business objectives.

“Forward-looking organisations are no longer restructuring simply to survive downturns; they are restructuring to reposition themselves for future growth, improve operational efficiency, optimise capital allocation and strengthen organisational resilience,” the report stated.

It noted that many restructuring initiatives fail because they concentrate almost exclusively on financial adjustments while paying insufficient attention to organisational design, talent alignment, governance and execution capability.

The report warned that organisations delaying strategic realignment often experience declining productivity, inefficient cost structures, slower decision-making and reduced organisational agility, making it increasingly difficult to respond to changing market conditions.

It identified growing pressure to improve operational efficiency, rapid technological advancement, automation, talent shortages, changing customer expectations, heightened investor scrutiny, evolving governance standards and the need for faster decision-making as the major drivers of strategic restructuring.

Rather than viewing restructuring as synonymous with downsising, Kreston Pedabo said organisations should regard it as a comprehensive transformation process aimed at ensuring that organisational structures, workforce capabilities and capital allocation remain aligned with future growth ambitions.

According to the report, many organisations continue to operate with outdated structures characterised by excessive bureaucracy, fragmented reporting lines, duplicated responsibilities and siloed functions that undermine accountability, innovation and operational effectiveness.

To improve agility, the report recommended governance redesign, business unit consolidation, shared services implementation, functional realignment, process optimisation and digital operating model transformation.

However, it stressed that structural reforms alone are insufficient.

“Without corresponding changes in leadership capability, workforce alignment and organisational culture, structural reforms often fail to generate meaningful long-term outcomes,” the authors stated.

The report also described talent as one of the most critical drivers of organisational performance, urging businesses to move beyond treating workforce management as merely a cost-control function.

Instead, organisations should evaluate leadership capability, succession planning, workforce productivity, critical skills gaps and organisational culture while investing in continuous learning and capability development.

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Kreston Pedabo observed that digital transformation has significantly increased demand for expertise in artificial intelligence, digital operations, sustainability, data analytics and strategic planning, making workforce development an essential element of any restructuring programme.

The report further stressed that transparent communication, employee engagement and effective change management are critical to securing workforce support during periods of organisational transformation.

On capital allocation, the firm advised organisations to direct financial resources towards long-term strategic priorities rather than short-term operational pressures.

Recommended measures include portfolio rationalisation, debt restructuring, working capital optimisation, divestment of non-core assets, strategic investment prioritisation and reallocating capital towards innovation and growth opportunities.

The report cautioned that organisations focusing exclusively on reducing costs risk weakening innovation, workforce capability and long-term competitiveness.

Instead, it recommended balancing operational efficiency with sustained investment in future growth.

Kreston Pedabo also underscored the importance of effective governance, saying boards and executive management must provide strategic direction, maintain accountability, monitor implementation risks and sustain stakeholder confidence throughout restructuring programmes.

According to the report, leadership visibility becomes particularly important during periods of uncertainty because employees, investors and regulators often judge transformation efforts by the consistency of leadership communication and execution.

To help organisations manage complex transformation programmes, the firm introduced its proprietary GROWTH Framework, a six-stage restructuring model covering organisational assessment, structural redesign, workforce optimisation, strategic capital allocation, cultural transformation and continuous performance improvement.

The report said the framework provides organisations with an integrated approach to restructuring, ensuring transformation initiatives remain measurable, dynamic and aligned with long-term strategic goals.

Technology, it added, has become a critical enabler of restructuring, with enterprise resource planning systems, workforce analytics, artificial intelligence, automation tools and business intelligence platforms improving operational visibility and decision-making.

However, it cautioned that technology cannot replace sound leadership, governance or workforce readiness.

Concluding the report, Kreston Pedabo said strategic restructuring has become an essential business strategy for organisations seeking long-term resilience rather than an emergency response reserved for companies in distress.

“Strategic restructuring is not simply about changing how organisations operate; it is about redefining how organisations create, sustain and deliver value in the future,” the report concluded.

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Bode Gbadebo

Bode Gbadebo

Bode Gbadebo is a Development Journalist of over 15 years, who has reported anti-corruption agencies, legislature, human interest issues and broader politics, including the 2014 National Conference. He is now employing digital tools to enhance his work.

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