
As product-led growth becomes central to scaling, many B2C and platform-driven companies are merging product and technology leadership under a Chief Technology & Product Officer (CTPO). The model accelerates decision-making and unifies ownership where experimentation speed and customer experience are tightly linked.
However, it isn’t a universal fit. Enterprise or B2B setups with layered stakeholder structures often retain separate roles for stability and scale. From Purple Quarter’s experience with high-growth firms globally, successful CTPO hiring depends on aligning the role’s scope with the company’s stage, defining clear success metrics, and assessing hybrid leadership capability early in the search.
Early startups need CTPOs who are hands-on in both product and tech, willing to build architecture, ship features rapidly, and adapt to change. Growth or scale-ups demand a leader who can also create governance, own cross-product dependencies, and build platform scalability. For instance, BCCL (The Times of India’s parent) appointed Sanjay Nagpal as Chief Product & Technology Officer in November 2024 to modernize editorial workflows, integrate AI, and unify its tech and product functions across print, digital, and archival systems, [Source] meanwhile, Flipkart recently appointed Balaji Thiagarajan to this hybrid seat to sharpen its technological edge and unify its product strategy. [Source]
At Purple Quarter we always begin a search by diagnosing which growth stage a company is in and what gaps are showing up: is the issue technical debt, slow innovation, or misaligned product launches? The mandate for the CTPO must map directly to those gaps.
Merging product and technology leadership addresses long-standing friction between speed and scalability. In organisations where these functions operate separately, roadmaps often diverge and product teams push for faster experimentation while technology teams prioritise system stability. The CTPO model resolves this by unifying accountability under one leader who can balance both imperatives.
Industry reports increasingly highlight a preference for such unified leadership, especially in sectors where rapid iteration and platform reliability are equally strategic. Compensation structures and role designs are evolving to reflect this hybrid mandate, signalling that the CTPO model is no longer experimental but essential to sustaining growth.
Recent global appointments underline this shift in expectations. Mimecast’s decision to hire Ranjan Singh as CTPO reflected a deliberate focus on leaders who combine product vision with deep engineering scale, a necessity in cybersecurity, where product agility and platform resilience must coexist. [Source] Similarly, foundit’s appointment of Tarun Sharma as CPTO in 2025 demonstrates how companies are prioritising executives capable of bridging product innovation and large-scale technical execution, particularly across AI-enabled platforms and marketplace systems. [Source]. Both examples show how businesses are increasingly valuing integrators over specialists, leaders who can align what gets built with how it gets delivered.
Define the mandate by business stage
Write a two-page mandate that specifies outcomes for 12 and 24 months. Prioritize stage-fit. Early scale companies need a CTPO who can ship features and set engineering tempo. Large public companies need an executive who can run distributed product lines and partner with M&A. Use Egon Zehnder or Gartner frameworks to map the mandate to governance and incentives. [Source]
Calibrate competencies not titles
Recruit for product judgement, systems design, leadership of engineering managers, stakeholder influence and metrics literacy. Avoid hiring for title parity alone. Case-based interviews and architecture walk-throughs reveal capability faster than CVs.[Source]
Source from stage-aligned ecosystems
Target leaders from adjacent verticals who faced similar scale problems, for example enterprise SaaS executives for B2B platforms. Leverage boutique executive search to access passive, high-calibre candidates at this seniority. Industry moves like Vimeo’s appointment were executed with retained search support.[Source]
Use multi-dimensional assessment
Combine a product case, a technical deep dive, structured reference checks and an external stakeholder interview. For platform CTPOs add a migration or reliability plan exercise. Psychometric tools can add signal on influencing style and risk appetite. Practical test prompts include a prioritization exercise and a 90-day platform stabilisation plan.[Source]
Benchmark compensation transparently
CPTO compensation is broad, with reported ranges varying by scale and sector. Publish a realistic salary plus equity band early in the process to avoid wasting candidates’ time. Use market data to structure a mix that rewards measurable outcomes.[Source]
Contractualise early outcomes
Include clear, board-approved milestones for the first year. Milestones reduce ambiguity, align incentives and allow early course correction if the hire is not stage-appropriate.
CTPO candidates are rare, and sourcing must extend beyond conventional CTO or CPO talent pools. Organisations benefit from identifying individuals who have managed similar scale, complexity, and hybrid product-technology challenges in comparable environments. Stage-aligned talent possesses both the strategic perspective and operational experience to deliver measurable impact quickly.
Purple Quarter’s targeted search methodology focuses precisely on this alignment, connecting organisations with leaders who mirror their current growth stage and future trajectory. This approach was pivotal in StanPlus appointing Suhas Kulkarni as CTPO, and in LetsTransport’s successful leadership expansion with Amit Dixit as CTPO, both cases where stage-fit leadership accelerated scalability and operational maturity.
A targeted, intelligence-led search increases access to passive candidates who may not be actively seeking new roles but bring the necessary hybrid expertise. This ensures organisations are not constrained to traditional talent pools and can secure high-calibre leaders suited to their specific growth journey.
Effective CTPO recruitment requires transparent compensation structures and clearly defined success metrics. Ambiguity in expectations or incentives can reduce engagement and impact. Defining performance metrics over 12- and 24-month horizons, such as delivery velocity, platform reliability, and product adoption, ensures alignment between the organisation and the executive.
Purple Quarter integrates compensation intelligence and leadership benchmarking into its hiring process, enabling organisations to structure competitive yet outcome-driven offers. Early clarity on compensation, equity, and performance expectations signals seriousness to high-calibre candidates and strengthens retention. By embedding these frameworks from the start, Purple Quarter ensures every CTPO engagement translates into long-term, measurable success.
Frequent mistakes include hiring leaders strong in only one domain, neglecting stage-fit considerations, and failing to define measurable outcomes. Without a structured approach, organisations risk onboarding CTPOs who cannot deliver the intended strategic impact. Diagnostic assessments, stakeholder alignment sessions, and clearly articulated mandates mitigate these risks and improve the probability of long-term success.
CTPO recruitment is a strategic exercise that goes beyond filling a title. Success depends on defining the role according to business stage, assessing hybrid competencies rigorously, sourcing stage-aligned talent, and setting transparent outcomes and incentives. Organisations that adopt this approach strengthen product execution, ensure technical scalability, and accelerate growth. Purple Quarter’s strategic CTPO hiring solutions combine market mapping, competency assessment, and stakeholder alignment to deliver executives capable of leading both product and technology functions. By leveraging a structured, insight-driven approach, companies can secure CTPO talent that drives measurable impact from day one and supports long-term organisational objectives.
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