Why your next CHRO might come from Asia
In an era defined by disruption, transformation, and a rapidly evolving workforce, the Chief Human Resources Officer (CHRO) has become one of the most mission-critical roles in the C-suite. No longer a back-office function, HR now sits at the centre of business strategy—shaping culture, enabling digital change, managing geopolitical risk, and helping organisations adapt to new ways of working.
As companies rethink what leadership looks like, it’s worth asking an important question… Where should we be looking for the next generation of CHROs?
For an increasing number of organisations, the answer is: Asia.
Whether it’s the ability to lead at scale, navigate complexity, or bring cross-cultural sensitivity to the boardroom, Asia’s top HR leaders are stepping onto the global stage—not just as regional operators, but as global CHROs. In many cases, they’re outperforming expectations, redefining leadership models, and setting the benchmark for agility and inclusion.
Here’s why your next CHRO might (and perhaps should) come from Asia.
Asia: A pressure cooker for scalable, strategic HR leadership
Asia is one of the most complex operating environments in the world—both demographically and economically. Multinationals and homegrown giants alike are competing for talent across dozens of markets, each with its own culture, legal framework, and generational dynamics.
To succeed in this environment, HR leaders must operate at a higher level of sophistication. They juggle expansion and restructuring in parallel. They manage workforce transformation in countries with radically different maturity levels. They lead talent strategies for markets like Singapore—known for tech talent shortages and cost pressures—while also building leadership pipelines in Indonesia, Vietnam, and India.
In short, CHROs from Asia are built in complexity. They are rarely siloed. They are generalists and specialists. They deal with ambiguity daily. And that makes them incredibly valuable at the global level.
A generation of globally fluent, culturally intelligent HR leaders
Asia’s top HR leaders are, by necessity, global citizens. Many manage portfolios that span more than a dozen countries, with workforces that are multilingual, multi-ethnic, and multi-generational. They have to adapt HR strategies to suit both global headquarters and local market needs—often with very little room for error.
This builds more than just flexibility—it cultivates cultural intelligence.
Cultural intelligence is increasingly being recognised as one of the most critical leadership traits of the 21st century. As companies expand into new geographies, build distributed teams, and navigate increasingly polarised social climates, HR leaders who can operate across cultural boundaries are essential.
In Asia, these leaders already exist. And many of them are already driving transformation in global organisations.
Proof points: Asia-born CHROs leading on the global stage
Leena Nair – CEO, Chanel (Former CHRO, Unilever)
Leena Nair’s story is a defining example of how Asian HR talent can rise to the top of global business. She began her career as a management trainee at Hindustan Unilever in India, taking on early HR roles in factories and unionised environments—where she learned to navigate operational and cultural complexity from the ground up.
Over the next two decades, Leena rose through the ranks, becoming the first woman, the first Asian, and the youngest-ever CHRO in Unilever’s history. In this global role, she was instrumental in shaping the company’s talent and culture agenda, driving bold moves around diversity and inclusion, and pioneering future-of-work strategies long before they became mainstream.
In 2022, she was appointed Global CEO of Chanel—a move that reinforced a growing truth in global leadership: the best HR leaders are not only organisational stewards; they are business leaders in their own right.
Tanuj Kapilashrami – Chief Strategy & Talent Officer, Standard Chartered Bank
Tanuj’s journey is another powerful illustration of how Asia-based HR talent is reshaping the global conversation. She began her career in India, then moved into regional and global roles at HSBC and Standard Chartered. Her time in Asia equipped her with deep insight into the needs and aspirations of diverse, fast-moving workforces.
In 2018, she was appointed CHRO of Standard Chartered globally and now sits on the Group Management Team. From her base in London, she leads HR for a business that spans more than 50 markets. Under her leadership, the bank has driven a strong focus on culture, future skills, and building inclusive, hybrid-ready teams.
What makes Tanuj stand out is her ability to bridge the global and the local, combining her roots in Asia with a strategic mindset honed across international markets. She exemplifies what a modern, globally fluent CHRO looks like.
Asia is already shaping the future of work
Asia is not just catching up with global trends—it’s often ahead of the curve. Whether it’s the adoption of digital technologies, large-scale reskilling programmes, or the reimagining of office and work models, many of these transformations are playing out in Asia first.
In markets like Singapore and China, HR leaders are experimenting with AI-enabled hiring, predictive workforce analytics, and skills-based talent frameworks. In India and Indonesia, they’re leading inclusive growth initiatives that bring frontline workers into digital economies. In Japan and Korea, they’re tackling issues of ageing workforces and automation with urgency and creativity.
For global companies, this matters. HR leaders who have already navigated such inflection points bring invaluable experience to global discussions about the future of work.
The leadership bench in Asia is deepening fast
Over the past decade, the leadership development infrastructure in Asia has matured significantly. Top CHROs in the region are now alumni of the world’s best business schools, speak the language of the boardroom fluently, and bring a mix of operational depth and strategic vision.
Many Asian CHROs now have global experience—not just regional. They’ve led integrations, run global COEs, and partnered with CEOs to transform culture and organisational design. They are not “regional HR heads.” They are global operators, ready to take the top seat.
The world is finally beginning to notice.
Final thought: Don’t just hire for experience – hire for exposure.
If your organisation is searching for a transformative CHRO—someone who can lead at scale, navigate ambiguity, and bring humanity back to business—don’t just limit your search to the usual markets.
Asia is producing some of the most adaptable, future-ready HR leaders in the world. They’ve worked across geographies, built cultures from scratch, and shaped talent strategies under immense pressure.
They’ve already proven they can lead—and not just in Asia.
The next great CHRO might not be in your headquarters. They might be in Shanghai, Jakarta, Mumbai, or Singapore. It’s time to look East.
Sean Tong is a leadership advisor and HR executive search consultant based in Singapore. He partners with multinational organisations to identify and hire transformative HR leaders across Asia Pacific.
Jobs
Submit an executive vacancy
If you’re currently hiring for an executive-level HR role and would like support from a specialist search partner, submit your vacancy below and one of our consultants will be in touch.