What Transfer Windows Reveal About Organizational Quality

Transfer windows represent one of the clearest stress tests of organizational quality in football. Drawing on FIFA and CIES data, this article examines how leadership alignment, squad stability, recruitment processes, and decision-making structures influence transfer outcomes and reveal the health of the system behind them.
Transfer windows are stress tests of organizational quality, revealing the effectiveness of leadership and decision-making.

Transfer windows are commonly evaluated through the lens of player acquisition. The dominant narratives focus on individual signings, transfer fees, market opportunities, and negotiation outcomes. While these elements are visible, they represent the final stage of a much deeper organizational process.

From an executive perspective, transfer windows function as one of the clearest stress tests of organizational quality in professional football.

Unlike strategy documents, organizational charts, or public statements, transfer windows force clubs to make a sequence of high-stakes decisions under conditions of uncertainty, time pressure, information asymmetry, and public scrutiny. They expose the quality of leadership alignment, decision-making architecture, planning processes, and cross-functional coordination.

For this reason, transfer windows often reveal more about a football organization than the players eventually signed.

Transfer Activity as an Organizational Output

Many clubs continue to view transfer activity as a recruitment function. The evidence suggests a broader interpretation.

Recruitment departments identify and evaluate players, but the transfer window itself is the output of a wider organizational system. It reflects ownership ambition, sporting strategy, squad planning, financial control, coaching alignment, legal execution, and negotiation discipline.

According to FIFA, international transfer activity reached record levels in 2024. Men’s professional football recorded 22,779 international transfers and USD 8.59 billion in transfer spending. Across all categories, FIFA registered 78,742 international transfers, the highest figure ever recorded.

Exhibit 1 — The Transfer Market as a High-Pressure Operating Environment
Indicator2024 FigureInterpretation
Men’s international transfers22,779Record volume of player movement
Men’s transfer spendingUSD 8.59bnSecond-highest annual spending level
Total international transfers78,742Highest level recorded
Women’s international transfers2,284Rapid market growth
Women’s transfer spendingUSD 15.6mMore than double the previous year

The transfer market therefore provides a high-density operating environment characterized by compressed timelines, multiple stakeholders, and limited tolerance for strategic ambiguity.

Why Transfer Windows Expose Structural Weaknesses

Most organizational weaknesses remain hidden during routine operations. Transfer windows create conditions under which these weaknesses become visible.

Three characteristics explain why.

Compressed Decision Cycles

Transfer windows require clubs to move rapidly from identification to evaluation, approval, negotiation, and registration.

This process demands alignment between:

  • Ownership
  • Sporting Director
  • Head Coach
  • Recruitment Department
  • Analytics
  • Finance
  • Legal

Where governance structures are unclear, decision cycles lengthen and opportunities disappear. The resulting recruitment failures are often interpreted as market failures when they are, in reality, governance failures.

Cross-Functional Dependence

Few processes in football require greater coordination than player recruitment.

Successful acquisitions depend simultaneously on:

  • Sporting fit
  • Tactical fit
  • Financial feasibility
  • Contractual structure
  • Long-term squad planning

Transfer windows therefore reveal the organization’s ability to coordinate expertise across functions.

Strategic Consistency Under Pressure

Periods of pressure tend to amplify existing organizational characteristics.

When deadlines approach and expectations rise, clubs face a fundamental choice between maintaining their recruitment philosophy and reacting opportunistically to market events.

The ability to preserve strategic consistency under these conditions represents a strong indicator of organizational maturity.

Stability and Performance

Research from the CIES Football Observatory consistently highlights the relationship between squad stability and sustained competitive success.

Their analysis of European football demonstrated that championship-winning teams maintained relatively low proportions of newly recruited players. Excessive turnover frequently reflects deficiencies in planning and continuity rather than ambition.

Exhibit 2 — Squad Stability and Performance Logic
Squad ProfileOrganizational MeaningLikely Performance Implication
Low turnoverContinuity and planningGreater stability
Moderate renewalControlled evolutionHealthy adaptation
High turnoverCorrective recruitmentIntegration risk
Repeated high turnoverStructural instabilityReduced continuity

Renewal is necessary. The organizational question concerns the reason behind transfer activity. Planned renewal reflects strategic control. Repeated corrective activity often indicates deeper weaknesses.

Spending Power and Organizational Capability

Transfer expenditure is a weak standalone indicator of transfer quality.

According to CIES, Chelsea invested approximately €2.78 billion in transfer fees over the last decade, while Manchester United recorded one of the largest negative net transfer balances in world football.

Meanwhile, clubs such as Benfica, Ajax, and RB Salzburg generated substantial positive balances through systematic talent identification and player trading strategies.

Exhibit 3 — Spending, Net Position, and Organizational Model
Club / CategoryTransfer IndicatorStrategic Interpretation
Chelsea€2.78bn invested over 10 yearsExtreme purchasing intensity
Manchester United-€1.396bn net balanceHigh-cost squad construction
Benfica+€816m net balancePlayer development and trading capability
Ajax+€473m net balanceTalent production model
RB Salzburg+€401m net balanceDevelopment-led recruitment
Club BruggeSustained positive trading modelIntegrated recruitment and value creation

Club Brugge represents a particularly instructive example. Over the last decade, the Belgian club has developed one of Europe’s most sustainable player trading models, combining recruitment discipline, squad planning, and long-term value creation.

Rather than relying on transfer activity to correct previous mistakes, the organization has built a repeatable system capable of producing both sporting and financial performance.

This approach is explored in depth by Devy Rigaux, ex Football Director of Club Brugge and module lead of Recruitment & Squad Building within MBA in Football Strategy and Leadership and Executive Diploma in Sporting Directorship programs. Drawing on his experience at Club Brugge, the module examines how leading clubs design recruitment structures, establish decision rights, and maintain consistency in squad-building processes.

Transfer Windows as Organizational Audits

Transfer windows expose organizational quality because they combine four forms of pressure simultaneously:

  • Compressed decision-making
  • Cross-functional dependence
  • Strategic consistency under pressure
  • Public accountability
Exhibit 4 — The Transfer Window Operating Model
CapabilityWeak-Club SymptomStrong-Club Behavior
Ownership alignmentLate changes in prioritiesClear mandate before the window
Recruitment strategyShifting player profilesStable criteria linked to game model
Decision rightsRepeated delaysClear recommend-approve-decide structure
Squad planningReactive gapsPosition-specific succession plans
Financial disciplineOpportunistic spendingDefined valuation limits
ExecutionSlow negotiation cyclesPrepared target lists
CommunicationInternal misalignmentConsistent stakeholder alignment

Transfer windows should therefore be interpreted as organizational audits. They reveal the extent to which clubs are capable of converting information into coordinated action.

The Decision-Making Problem Behind Recruitment Failure

Many transfer failures are attributed to poor scouting. In practice, the more frequent source of failure sits upstream.

Clubs may possess strong player intelligence and still produce weak outcomes if:

  • Ownership changes direction late.
  • Coaching staff and recruitment departments operate with different criteria.
  • Financial approval is disconnected from sporting priorities.
  • Decision rights are unclear.
  • Succession planning is absent.

The failure becomes visible through the player signed. The underlying causes are typically found in the decision architecture.

Exhibit 5 — Recruitment Failure Chain
StageFailure ModeOrganizational Root Cause
Need definitionWrong prioritiesWeak squad planning
Profile designConflicting criteriaLack of game-model clarity
EvaluationInternal disagreementWeak integration
ApprovalDelaysUnclear authority
NegotiationOverpaymentWeak valuation discipline
IntegrationSlow adaptationInsufficient cross-functional coordination

The most advanced clubs treat recruitment as an integrated organizational process rather than a departmental activity.

A More Useful Question

At the end of most transfer windows, the industry asks:

Did the club sign the right players?

A more revealing question concerns the quality of the organization behind those decisions.

Transfer windows rarely fail because of player availability. They fail when organizations struggle to align information, authority, priorities, and execution.

The market merely exposes the quality of the system behind it.

Implications for Football Leadership

For Sporting Directors, Technical Directors, and club executives, transfer windows should be viewed as organizational examinations.

They provide an opportunity to evaluate:

  • Leadership alignment
  • Decision-making quality
  • Recruitment effectiveness
  • Cross-functional coordination
  • Strategic consistency

Viewed through this lens, transfer activity becomes more than a market exercise.

It becomes a measure of organizational health.

The strongest transfer windows are usually produced by clubs whose structures, processes, and leadership dynamics were functioning effectively long before the market opened.

MBA in Football Strategy and Leadership
MBA in Football Strategy and Leadership

This article reflects the type of applied frameworks and executive-level discussions explored within the MBA in Football Strategy and Leadership and Executive Diploma in Sporting Directorship at FOCUS Sports Business School.

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