For $400K – $2M Executives
At the $400k–$2M+ compensation level in the United States, executive hiring operates through a narrow, relationship-driven market. Roles are rarely advertised. Mandates are confidential. Access is controlled. The firms that operate in this environment are commonly referred to as executive headhunting firms, but that label covers several structurally different models with different incentives, constraints, and verification requirements.
This page explains the realities of how those firms actually operate, how candidates gain visibility (and how they do not), and what to verify when evaluating providers or intermediaries. The purpose is descriptive, not promotional: to make the market legible to executives assessing access pathways and to boards evaluating search options.
Executive headhunting is not recruitment, placement, coaching, marketing, or mass outreach. It is the practice of confidential, retained search conducted on behalf of a client (employer) organization with an unadvertised mandate. The firm is paid by the client to map a market, approach a tightly defined peer set, and manage a controlled introduction process.
Key characteristics at senior compensation bands:
While branding varies, most U.S. executive headhunting firms fall into four structural categories. Understanding the differences matters more than reputation alone.
These are large, multi-practice firms with board-level coverage and multinational reach, including organizations such as Korn Ferry, Spencer Stuart, Egon Zehnder, Heidrick & Struggles, and Russell Reynolds Associates.
How they operate
Constraints
Smaller firms focused on a specific industry (e.g., fintech, healthcare services, PE-backed platforms) or function (e.g., CFO, CHRO).
How they operate
Constraints
Some firms blend retained search with leadership advisory, succession planning, or board services.
How they operate
Constraints
These are not headhunting firms themselves. They provide controlled introductions or visibility pathways into retained search networks.
How they operate
Constraints
Across all retained models, selection logic is conservative and repeatable. Firms are optimizing for risk reduction for the hiring organization.
Common filters include:
Filter | What Is Being Assessed |
Scope parity | Has the executive already operated at comparable revenue, headcount, and complexity? |
Industry continuity | Is the executive from the same or an adjacent industry the client recognizes? |
Compensation plausibility | Is current or recent compensation within range of the mandate? |
Board confidence | Will the candidate’s background withstand investor and board scrutiny? |
Market credibility | Is the executive already known, or easily referenceable, within the sector? |
Aspiration, potential, and narrative matter after these filters—not before.
Understanding exclusions prevents category errors:
Executives seeking exposure without a mandate must pursue access through network effects, not applications.
Before engaging with any firm or intermediary, verification should focus on structure and incentives rather than testimonials or branding.
Access boundaries: What is explicitly not promised?
Jackson Stevens Global operates outside the retained search category. It does not conduct searches, recruit for clients, or market executives to roles.
Its role is limited and explicit: confidential executive headhunting access via controlled introductions to retained search firms with unadvertised mandates, for executives who already meet market eligibility thresholds.
The service exists to solve a single constraint: access asymmetry in a closed market.
Trust signals relevant to risk assessment include a public 5.0 rating on Trustpilot, enterprise clients such as Google Cloud, and founder leadership by Dean Trimble. These signals indicate operational maturity, not search outcomes.
These constraints are structural, not service failures.
Executive headhunting firms at the $400k–$2M+ level operate in a closed, conservative market optimized for client risk reduction. Understanding firm categories, selection logic, and access constraints allows executives to engage the system as it exists—not as it is often marketed.
The critical distinction is between search execution (client-retained, mandate-bound) and access facilitation (eligibility-based, outcome-agnostic). Verifying where a firm sits in that structure is the most reliable way to reduce misunderstanding and align expectations.