
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, immigration, or financial advice.
decades of executive recruitment has taught us one thing: Turkey to the US is one of the highest-yield talent corridors most companies ignore entirely.
Not because of numbers—the US-Turkey trade relationship is substantial, worth roughly $36.8 billion annually. But because American companies systematically underestimate Turkish executives.
Turkish talent enters US markets with operational rigor forged in a high-complexity business environment. They’ve managed across currency regimes, navigated multi-stakeholder governance, and built operations in regulatory frameworks that don’t tolerate sloppiness. When they land in New York or Chicago, they bring judgment and execution discipline. The friction isn’t incompatibility. It’s unfamiliarity on both sides.
Turkey–U.S. Economic Snapshot
Metric | Value |
Turkey GDP (2024) | $1.11 trillion (17th globally) |
Bilateral trade volume (2024) | $32 billion |
Turkish companies with U.S. operations | 700+ |
Top Turkish sectors in U.S. | Textiles, food, construction, defense, electronics |
Turkish diaspora in U.S. | 500,000+ |
Turkey FDI into U.S. (stock) | $6+ billion |
Sources: World Bank, DEIK, BEA (2024–2025 data)
Turkey’s economy is manufacturing-heavy. According to the Observatory of Economic Complexity, petroleum products, carpets, vehicles, and machinery dominate trade flows. US imports from Turkey totaled approximately $16.4 billion in 2024. Notably, Turkish textile and apparel exports to the US grew to $780 million in 2024, and Turkey holds the position of 4th largest clothing exporter globally.
What matters for executive search: Turkey’s largest companies are undergoing structural change.
Nearly 95% of Turkish firms are family-owned. Succession planning, when it happens, has historically been determined by family structure rather than meritocratic process. But this is shifting fast.
Conglomerates like Koç Holding—Turkey’s largest industrial group, now on the Fortune Global 500—are professionalizing their leadership. Koç comprises 113 companies across banking, energy, automotive, and defense, with 124,000 employees. That transition created a need for professional managers at scale. Many of those managers are now available for American opportunities.
Sabancı Holding—diversified across 17 countries—recently appointed its first non-family CEO, signaling a fundamental shift toward professional management. These transitions mean experienced Turkish executives are entering competitive talent markets for the first time.
Arçelik, the multinational appliance manufacturer present in over 100 countries including the US, employs professional executives across finance, operations, and supply chain. Many have considered or will consider American moves.
US exports to Turkey reached $20.4 billion in 2024, up 32.7% from 2023. Turkish exports to the US fell 2%, landing at $16.4 billion. That imbalance is forcing Turkish manufacturers and exporters deeper into American supply chains, which requires American-based leadership.
Manufacturing comprises 16.8% of Turkey’s GDP. Key industries driving US trade:
The US Trade Representative maintains active engagement on these sectors. Tariff policy—particularly recent tariff structures—is pushing Turkish companies to invest in US-based manufacturing and operations, requiring both American executives and Turkish leaders who understand their parent companies.
We’re not interested in cultural generalizations. Here are five specific operational gaps where Turkish and American executives clash, and how to prepare for them.
1. Hierarchy vs. Egalitarianism
Turkish business typically centralizes decision-making. A managing director makes calls; subordinates execute. American business distributes authority. Decisions incorporate input from multiple levels. When a Turkish executive joins a company where an engineer questions a VP’s strategy in a meeting, it reads as insubordination. It isn’t—it’s standard.
The solution: direct conversation about authority structures before day one. “Here’s how we make decisions. Here’s who influences what. Here’s when we expect pushback.” Clarity dissolves most friction.
2. Relationship-First Business
Turkish business prioritizes relationship-building before transaction. Initial meetings establish trust, not just agenda items. American business is task-focused. Meetings have objectives; relationship builds alongside.
A Turkish director arriving for a product strategy meeting expects 20 minutes of personal context before business discussion. An American counterpart sees that as inefficient. This isn’t a values difference—it’s a process difference. Acknowledge it upfront.
3. Documentation vs. Implicit Understanding
Turkish organizations operate with less written documentation. Authority is often implicit. American business documents everything—procedures, expectations, decision rationale. This exists for legal and operational clarity.
When a Turkish executive finds a 50-page expense report procedure, they’ll question it. When they propose informal agreements, legal teams say no. Both responses are rational for their contexts.
4. Authority and Questioning
In Turkish organizations, questioning authority carries risk. If your boss states something, disagreement is risky. American culture frames challenge-asking as healthy engagement. When a Turkish executive stays silent in meetings—a sign of respect—Americans read it as disengagement.
5. Long-Term vs. Quarterly Orientation
Turkish family businesses operate on multi-decade horizons. Quarterly earnings pressure is different when you’re planning for 30-year succession. American public companies live on quarterly cycles. That creates different decision speed and risk tolerance.
The mismatch is solvable through explicit expectations, but it’s worth naming.
Turkish executives typically need H-1B visas for specialty occupation employment:
For C-level roles or specialized technical positions, L-1 visas (intracompany transfer) are often superior. If the Turkish company maintains operations and the executive has worked there for one year, the US subsidiary can transfer them. Timeline: 30-60 days.
Entity structuring: If a Turkish conglomerate is establishing US operations, they need a US tax ID, state compliance, and often local legal counsel. Standard procedure, but adds cost and timeline.
A managing director or operations executive in Istanbul earning $150,000-$180,000 annually (salary plus benefits) will expect $200,000-$240,000 in a US role. The gap reflects cost of living, visa costs, relocation, and loss of social benefits subsidy.
In Turkey, employers provide quasi-pension schemes and health benefits subsidized by the state. In the US, these costs shift to employee or employer. Additionally, a Turkish executive paying ~20% in taxes faces ~35-40% in the US (federal, state, FICA, Medicare).
For directors and VPs in manufacturing, supply chain, and sales, expect compensation of $220,000-$320,000 base, plus standard US benefits (401k, health insurance, equity where applicable). Bonus structures tend to be more aggressive in the US, which is attractive to Turkish executives accustomed to smaller annual bonuses.
Turkish executives are most available in:
Manufacturing and Operations: Turkey’s construction industry and heavy manufacturing base produce experienced operations executives. They understand lean manufacturing, multi-site coordination, and cost optimization.
Textiles and Supply Chain: With $13 billion in annual textile exports, Turkey’s sector produces supply chain leaders with deep international experience.
Food and Agriculture Processing: Turkish food executives understand complex import/export compliance and agricultural supply chains. These transition well to US food companies and importers.
Automotive and Components: Turkish automotive suppliers place executives in US roles across parts manufacturing and logistics.
Construction and Real Estate: Turkish real estate executives are increasingly active in US mixed-use development and commercial projects.
We’ve placed Turkish talent across all these sectors. The pattern is consistent: they’re operationally sophisticated and adaptable.
The family-to-corporate governance shift in Turkish conglomerates is creating unprecedented talent availability. It’s happening simultaneously across multiple major companies, flooding the market with trained executives who’ve never had to compete openly.
These are 35-55 year-old executives with P&L responsibility, cross-border experience, and proven track records. They’re disciplined because family business culture rewards reliability, execution, and relationship maintenance. Put them in a system that rewards those qualities explicitly, and you get strong performance.
Turkish talent is underutilized in the American market. The trade relationship is real. The talent pool is real. The friction points are manageable.
If you’re hiring for C-level operations, supply chain, or regional leadership roles with complex cross-border requirements, Turkish executives offer depth.
Let’s discuss your specific hire.