Developments at Busy Bees Australia are highlighting a broader leadership recalibration underway across the early childhood education and care (ECEC) sector.
The departure of Chief Operating Officer Kerin McMahon, a senior executive responsible for operational performance, quality and occupancy, is notable given the scale and strategic importance of the role.
In January 2025, Nido Education Limited announced that its Centre Management Agreement with Busy Bees, covering 34 Busy Bees-owned centres operating under the Nido brand, had been extended until 30 June 2026.
The agreement, executed through Nest Management Pty Ltd, continues a management arrangement that has been in place since October 2021, when Nido began managing the centres on behalf of Busy Bees.
In its ASX announcement, Nido stated the extension was intended to “ensure continuity of operations” and support a “smoother transition for families and Educators”.
Across the ECEC sector, senior leadership teams are increasingly being reshaped as boards respond to a more complex operating environment and noted in The year in review: 2025’s most impactful ECEC news stories and shifts
While individual departures may appear isolated, the pattern emerging between 2025 and 2026 suggests a broader recalibration of executive capability across large providers.
Several structural pressures are contributing to this shift.
Regulators across Australia have adopted a more assertive posture in recent years.
Audit activity has increased, enforcement action has become more visible, and scrutiny of supervision, safe sleep practices and governance has intensified.
For providers operating large networks, even a small number of services facing regulatory action can create significant organisational and reputational risk.
Boards are therefore prioritising executives with strong governance, compliance and operational risk management experience.
Rising wages, insurance costs, rent and compliance overheads continue to affect the financial performance of many providers.
At the same time, political sensitivity around childcare affordability limits the sector’s ability to increase fees in line with cost growth.
These pressures have prompted operating model reviews, restructures and leadership redesigns aimed at strengthening oversight and improving efficiency.
While workforce shortages continue to strain centre‑level operations, the remuneration of senior executives has become a growing point of discussion across the sector and during the NSW parliamentary enquiry. C‑suite salary packages can reflect corporate‑scale governance expectations, often including performance incentives tied to occupancy, quality, and financial outcomes.
As staffing pressures intensify, boards are increasingly aware of the optics and accountability associated with executive pay. This has sharpened expectations that senior leaders demonstrate clear, measurable impact in workforce strategy, retention, and organisational stability. In this environment, C‑suite roles are not only more demanding, they are also more exposed.
Recent consolidation activity is also influencing leadership expectations.
Transactions such as Embark Early Education’s acquisition of a significant stake in Mayfield Childcare demonstrate the growing role of capital markets in the ECEC sector.
Investor expectations around governance, reporting and operational discipline are becoming more prominent.
These developments require executive capabilities that extend beyond growth and expansion into areas such as integration, risk management and organisational transformation.
Another emerging question across the sector is whether deep early childhood education and care (ECEC) experience within executive teams and boards is being gradually displaced by more commercially focused leadership profiles.
As providers scale and regulatory expectations increase, boards are increasingly appointing executives with strong backgrounds in corporate governance, finance and large-scale operational management. While these capabilities can strengthen financial oversight and organisational discipline, they can also shift the balance of expertise within leadership teams.
Operational knowledge of ECEC environments, including supervision systems, safeguarding practices, educator workforce dynamics and regulatory compliance, remains critical to managing complex service networks.
For many organisations, the challenge lies in integrating commercial leadership capability with deep sector experience. Providers that successfully combine both perspectives may be better positioned to navigate regulatory risk, workforce pressures and operational complexity.
Across the past two years, a number of large providers have experienced turnover across chief executive, chief operating, chief financial and chief people officer roles. Several themes are emerging:
executive roles are being redesigned to strengthen governance and operational oversightnew appointments increasingly come from compliance, risk or transformation backgroundsleaders associated with expansion‑focused growth phases are stepping asideboards are exercising stronger oversight of quality, workforce and crisis management
Layered onto these shifts is a significant regulatory development: the strengthening of safeguarding obligations and mandatory training requirements for Approved Providers and Persons with Management or Control (PMCs).
Regulators are now placing far greater emphasis on:
personal accountability for governance failuresmandatory training in child safety, risk management and regulatory obligationsdemonstrated competence in supervision, safe sleep, incident response and quality systemsfit and proper person assessments that consider governance history, compliance performance and organisational culture
This shift has contributed to the redesign of executive roles and, in some cases, to leadership turnover. Boards are increasingly seeking leaders who can demonstrate:
a deep understanding of regulatory frameworksexperience in high‑risk, highly regulated sectorsthe ability to build safeguarding‑centred organisational culturesstrong crisis‑management capabilitya track record of improving compliance outcomes
Taken together, these developments suggest the sector is moving from a growth‑driven era toward one defined by governance, safeguarding and operational discipline. The bar for executive competence has risen, and the sector’s leadership landscape is recalibrating in response.
The major developments shaping the ECEC sector, including consolidation, regulatory scrutiny and workforce instability, point to a broader structural transition.
Large providers are reassessing how they organise operations, manage risk and structure executive leadership capability.
Leadership turnover in this context does not necessarily signal organisational instability.
Instead, it reflects the sector adapting to a more complex and demanding operating environment.
Several themes are likely to define the next phase of leadership across the ECEC sector:
stronger governance frameworkstighter operational oversightmore sophisticated risk management capabilitygreater focus on workforce resilienceclearer executive accountability to boards
Boards are also intervening earlier when operational or governance risks emerge.
Providers that align executive capability with these expectations are more likely to stabilise and grow.
Those that do not may experience continued leadership turnover and organisational disruption.
The quiet reshaping of executive teams across Australia’s ECEC sector reflects a deeper shift in what the industry now demands from leadership.
As regulatory scrutiny, financial pressure and workforce challenges intensify, boards are recalibrating expectations and redesigning their C-suites accordingly.
The sector is entering a phase where governance, operational discipline and crisis readiness are becoming defining capabilities of successful executive leadership.