As an executive in the technology, media and telecommunications (TMT) sector, you’re under pressure — from shifting customer expectations to tighter regulations and overall disruption. AI is accelerating change, reshaping competition and forcing a rethink of pricing, delivery and data practices. At the same time, internal challenges like growing cloud costs, limited AI skills and legacy systems are making transformation harder to execute at pace.
In our recent survey of TMT executives, 80% of CEOs cite macroeconomic volatility, cyber threats or inflation as key risks shaping near-term strategy.
Addressing these challenges calls for enterprise-defining decisions like replacing core systems, pursuing transformative M&A, overhauling operating models and making bold investments in AI and automation. But our data indicates that many TMT organizations are slow to respond, with a lot of them inhibiting their ability to change the way they create, deliver and capture value. What are those blockers?
And the biggest blockers for navigating challenges while capturing value in a dynamic business environment?
Together these factors suggest an industry-wide pattern of risk aversion and decision paralysis.
And when TMT leaders do act, many struggle to follow through. In our survey, 68% of TMT leaders say underperforming initiatives lead to consequences, yet on average respondents say their companies make the criteria for determining strategic decisions transparent only about four times out of 10. This accountability–transparency gap helps explain why TMT executives often move slowly — they know what they want to achieve, but inconsistent visibility into decision guardrails makes it harder to align capital and teams to get there. They may also have trouble pivoting when new data or conditions emerge. Decisions often lack ownership and follow-through, leaving organizations slow to respond.
Execution gaps are showing up in results. Most survey respondents cite misaligned stakeholders and unclear post-deal ownership as barriers to effective M&A evaluation. Only 53% are confident that their tech investments are meeting ROI targets. And half say even measuring the ROI of technology investments is a significant challenge for their organization.
AI is raising the stakes. As competitors move fast to embed AI across the business, 70% of respondents say they risk losing market share due to competitors using AI. Yet only 23% have a detailed, numbers-based AI outlook on how they think AI will impact margins, growth or efficiency.
The takeaway: Ambition isn’t the problem. But without sharper decision-making, clearer ownership and faster follow-through, many companies will likely find it hard to keep pace.
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Public companies often focus on meeting quarterly targets, even if that means delaying larger moves like AI deployment or platform modernization. The leaders of these companies also have to deal with constant operational noise — cyber threats, economic volatility, regulatory demands. Being reactive puts them in a kind of permanent response mode that stalls reinvention and future value creation. Recent headlines highlight this tension. Several large tech firms have announced significant stock buybacks to reward shareholders even as market leaders call for prioritizing long-term investments.
But these trade-offs can stall progress. Holding off on bold moves today may limit your organization’s ability to lead tomorrow.
“If you’re in a tough quarter, everything — even long-term strategic bets — starts to get filtered through the lens of immediate cost pressure. It’s a massive bias, and it halts real transformation.”
As technology and regulations evolve fast, many leaders are holding back — not from lack of ambition but from a lack of alignment and clarity.
The impact? Slower choices, extended debates and missed opportunities to act with confidence in uncertain conditions.
“Most strategy failures I’ve seen were emotionally driven decisions dressed up in data. Once someone falls in love with an idea, it’s almost impossible to change course."
Even with clear strategies, many companies face roadblocks when it’s time to act. Structural issues like siloed teams and talent gaps can limit progress and stall impact.
Once initiatives launch, they often lose momentum — missing clear ownership, accountability and follow-through.
“Everyone’s worried about their turf. Product wants engineers, sales wants headcount, marketing wants budget –– and no one owns the full P&L.”
Even when a decision is made and a strategy is launched, follow-through is often weak. Many organizations suffer from soft accountability (think RACI), vague ownership and real-time performance management.
Despite having clear goals, they fall short on the execution. Without a step-change in how organizations make, execute and revisit their most important decisions, many will remain stuck as they watch more agile competitors pull ahead.
“Execution is still the weakest link. Most of [our] past acquisitions … have failed not because they weren’t good ideas but because no one followed through on implementation."
Leading private equity investors are known for acting decisively — making bold, organization-shaping decisions at a pace that matches their investment horizon. Operating under typical 3- to 5-year ownership windows, they should drive rapid transformation to align with valuation expectations outlined in their investment theses. That decisiveness is more than a leadership trait. It’s a repeatable performance lever.
A meta-analysis of multiple academic studies showed that investor-led buyouts deliver significant real gains in operational performance even when excluding financial engineering. Further, during the pandemic, companies backed by investors sustained revenue and margin performance more effectively than many publicly traded or family-owned counterparts.
What sets investor-backed firms apart is what we refer to as a “deals mindset.” It’s an approach built on acting with urgency and confidence, even when information is imperfect. And it enables leaders to reshape operations, reposition strategies and pursue value creation at speed.
In contrast, many corporates face friction points that slow progress. Following deals, integration efforts often stall — frequently due to misaligned stakeholders (55%) and unclear ownership of critical decisions (33%). The difference isn’t access to data or capital. It’s how decisions are made, who’s empowered to act and how quickly actions translate into outcomes.
To see disciplined decision-making in action, consider how PE firms manage investments across both the pre-deal and post-deal phases.
When considering an acquisition or major investment, PE firms move quickly but thoughtfully through a few critical steps.
Once the call is made, investors move fast, relentlessly managing execution to deliver on their investment thesis.
Their approach is shaped by a few essential practices.
TMT companies can take a page from high-performing investors — especially in how they evaluate, prioritize and act on bold decisions. Adopting a deals mindset means treating internal initiatives like investments in a portfolio, applying the same rigor, speed and accountability seen in private equity. This shift touches every stage: pre-launch, by sharpening how opportunities are vetted; post-launch, by managing execution with discipline; and throughout, by building a culture that enables decisive action.
A true investor mindset also invites new voices to the table — people willing to challenge assumptions, ask tough questions and drive transformation at every level of the organization to rapidly create value.
Here are our top five recommendations for cultivating a focused mindset that prioritizes execution discipline and strategic clarity.
Accelerating decision velocity: Streamline decision-making by eliminating bureaucratic hurdles and implementing clear decision-rights frameworks with outcome and data-driven impacts.
Improving data-driven visibility: Data-driven decisions require good data. Invest in confirming real-time, transparent performance data to enable swift strategic pivots and proactive management.
Strengthening execution discipline: Clarify ownership and enforce accountability through rigorous KPI tracking and clear alignment to strategic goals.
Deploying strategic capital: Rapidly reallocate resources from underperforming initiatives to areas demonstrating clear ROI –– including M&A decisions and tech investments.
Integrating AI proactively: Embed AI-driven insights and automation throughout operations and product strategies.
With these performance factors in place, the next step is sector-specific: identifying the right investments and execution strategies tailored to each business context.
TMT includes a wide variety of sectors with different business models requiring targeted strategies. So, which next moves should your sector consider? Here are some of our top recommendations that align with the investor’s mindset.
In an environment of rapid technological change and rising stakeholder expectations, TMT companies can no longer rely on incremental tweaks. They should make bold moves to build new capabilities and value streams. Adopting a deals mindset can be the catalyst that shifts a company from indecision and inertia to proactive value creation. By acting as an investor in your own business –– speeding up decisions, focusing on material outcomes, leveraging data and embracing long-term value plays –– you can overcome internal hurdles and unlock your company’s full potential. The success of private equity in driving faster growth and efficiency isn’t magic. It comes from discipline and perspective that any management team can cultivate.
Public TMT executives can blend the strengths of their environment — deep industry knowledge, stability and multi-stakeholder relationships — with proven PE practices — clear value creation plans, urgency and execution rigor. Those who do will be better positioned for the next wave of disruption, creating sustainable value for shareholders and customers.
Alex Baker
Technology, Media and Telecommunications Deals Partner, Consulting Solutions, PwC US
Lori Driscoll
Technology, Media and Telecommunications US and Global Consulting Leader, PwC US