Facing pressure to reignite growth, Nestlé's new CEO Philipp Navratil is planning a significant strategic overhaul. The food giant will be restructured around four main 'pillars': coffee, petcare, nutrition/health, and food/snacking. This move follows the recent announcement of 16,000 job cuts.

"The focus will increasingly align with the four [product] pillars, but execution in [geographic] markets will remain essential."
"Historically the group has been firmly rooted in a regional set-up."
NestlĂ© is no longer tweaking the edges; it is dismantling the core. In a decisive move that signals the end of business as usual in Vevey, new CEO Philipp Navratil is orchestrating a seismic strategic overhaul designed to jolt the sleeping giant back to life. Following a staggering announcement to slash 16,000 jobs over the next 18 months, Navratil is now fundamentally rewiring the companyâs DNA. The food behemoth, long criticized for its sluggish response to market trends, is pivoting aggressively away from its traditional structure to a streamlined operation focused on speed and agility.
This is not merely a reorganization; it is a rescue mission. Navratil, who took the helm in September 2025 amidst a storm of leadership failures, is under immense pressure to reverse a slump from post-Covid highs. The directive is clear: slim down, speed up, or risk irrelevance. By stripping away layers of bureaucracy, the CEO aims to empower teams to innovate faster, responding to consumer demands with a urgency that has been notably absent in recent years. The era of the slow-moving multinational is over; Navratil is building a war machine.
The sprawling matrix of NestlĂ©âs operations is being condensed into four critical power centers: coffee, petcare, nutrition/health, and food/snacking. This radical simplification replaces the labyrinthine "strategic business units" and regional fiefdoms that have historically slowed decision-making. By consolidating power into these four "pillars," Navratil is betting the companyâs future on its strongest performers. This strategy is designed to smash the silos that have hindered cooperation across the group's CHF 196 billion market capitalization empire.
Sources close to the matter indicate that this product-led focus is intended to drive rapid innovation. In a world where consumer trends shift overnight, NestlĂ©âs previous structureâdivided by geography and fragmented categoriesâwas a relic of a bygone era. The new model promises a direct line of sight from product conception to consumer hands. However, the transition poses a logistical nightmare. Integrating global management for massive brands like Nespresso and KitKat under these new headers requires dismantling decades of entrenched regional power structures. It is a high-stakes gamble: if the pillars hold, NestlĂ© rises; if they crumble, the chaos could deepen.
While Navratil looks to the future, he is grappling with a toxic legacy. The company is currently suffocating under a debt load of CHF 60 billion as of June 2025âa figure that has nearly doubled since 2020. This financial strain is compounded by the scandalous exit of former boss Laurent Freixe, who was unceremoniously fired following an undisclosed romantic relationship with a direct subordinate. The revelation, brought to light by the company's own "Speak Up" whistleblowing platform, shattered investor confidence and left a leadership vacuum that Navratil must now fill with ironclad authority.
Investors are losing patience. The pressure to divest is mounting, with calls to sell off non-core assets growing louder by the day. Navratil has already pressed ahead with divesting NestlĂ©âs water and mainstream vitamin businesses, but the market is demanding more blood. Suggestions to offload the confectionery arm or the US frozen food business are no longer whispers but shouted demands. With debt spiraling and margins squeezed, the restructuring is not just about growthâit is about financial survival. The new CEO must prove he can stop the bleeding before he can hope to grow the muscle.
As if financial and structural turmoil were not enough, NestlĂ© is confronting a severe operational crisis that strikes at the heart of its reputation: safety. In late November 2025, the company detected cereulideâa toxin produced by Bacillus cereusâin its infant formula, triggering a major recall. For a company built on the promise of nutrition and health, this is a catastrophic breach of trust. The recall has not only damaged the brand's image but has also diverted critical management attention at the precise moment the company is attempting a complex reorganization.
This operational failure underscores the risks inherent in such a massive global footprint. Critics argue that the previous regional fragmentation led to oversight gaps, a flaw Navratil hopes the new centralized pillars will correct. However, in the short term, the scandal serves as a grim reminder of the stakes involved. A strategic overhaul is meaningless if the fundamental product safety protocols fail. Navratil is now fighting a war on two fronts: restructuring the corporate hierarchy while simultaneously extinguishing a fire that threatens the company's most sensitive consumer baseâparents.
The shift to global product pillars marks a profound cultural departure for the Swiss giant. "Historically the group has been firmly rooted in a regional set-up," notes Vontobel analyst Jean-Philippe Bertschy, highlighting the magnitude of this pivot. For decades, NestlĂ©'s power lay in its local adaptabilityâbrands positioned at the country level rather than as global monoliths. Navratil's plan threatens to upend this model, prioritizing global efficiency over local nuance. While the goal is to create "global megabrands," the risk is alienating the local markets that have been the company's bedrock.
This centralization of power raises critical questions for Switzerland. As decision-making authority moves away from regional heads and into the hands of global pillar leaders, the "Swissness" of NestlĂ©âs operations may be further diluted. The executive board is being reshuffled, and the balance of power is shifting. Navratil is betting that a leaner, more centralized NestlĂ© can outmaneuver its competitors, but he walks a razor's edge. If he cuts too deep, he risks severing the local roots that have kept the company grounded for over a century.