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2026 Indonesia Beverage Industry Talent Movement Report

Rubby Lim Posted On 22 May 2026


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The growth story for Indonesia’s beverage sector is easy to tell. The talent story underneath it is more complicated. HRnetRimbun’s 2026 Beverage Industry Talent Movement Report traces eight structural workforce shifts reshaping a USD 33 billion non-alcoholic market, at a moment when a hard regulatory deadline is already on the calendar and the cost of the wrong hire has never been higher.

A Growth Story With a Workforce Problem

Indonesia’s beverage sector doesn’t lack for good news on paper. Non-alcoholic beverages hold USD 33.3 billion in market value, growing at 9.84% CAGR through 2027. RTD Tea and Coffee sits at USD 2.18 billion today and is tracking toward USD 3.55 billion by 2033. Plant-based formats are expanding 14 to 17 percent a year. Functional and nutraceutical beverages have reached approximately USD 8.6 billion, with functional drink imports surging at 33.49% CAGR between 2020 and 2024 because local production simply hasn’t kept pace with what consumers are willing to buy.

The growth trajectory isn’t what’s in question. What’s under real pressure is the workforce required to sustain it. Commercial leaders who can run both traditional trade and digital channels in the same role, R&D specialists navigating a tightening compliance environment, supply chain talent with the range to push operations into eastern Indonesia: these profiles are harder to find, quicker to move on, and more expensive to attract than most workforce plans have accounted for.

Eight Talent Movements Shaping the Sector

This year’s hiring activity and placement data points to eight distinct patterns of talent movement reshaping the Indonesia beverage workforce. Taken together, they describe an industry recalibrating where it looks for people and what it offers when it finds them.

  1. FMCG to Beverage: the dominant commercial pipeline, with sales, marketing, and distribution skills transferring directly
  2. Pharma to Functional Beverage: R&D and Medical Marketing talent moving toward health-positioned products for scientific credibility
  3. Hospitality to Alcohol and Coffee Chains: HoReCa expertise in demand as urban, experience-driven consumption grows
  4. Dairy to Beverage: shared production processes and overlapping product formats driving two-way movement
  5. Traditional FMCG to Digital-First: e-commerce managers and performance marketers being absorbed as online beverage sales grow at 7.7% CAGR
  6. Alcohol to Premium FMCG: senior brand and pricing specialists moving between segments at leadership level
  7. Internal Talent War: active poaching within alcohol and premium segments where the talent pool is small and specialized
  8. Jakarta to Regional: senior commercial leaders taking on expanded P&L ownership in Sumatra, Kalimantan, and East Indonesia

What This Means for Employers

The companies adapting most effectively are not simply paying more. They are making sharper structural choices about where to concentrate headcount and how to position themselves to attract the profiles that matter most.

  1. Prioritise commercial roles
    Brand Managers, Key Account Managers, and Trade Marketing Specialists are the highest-leverage hires in this market. Companies that protect and invest in these functions are better positioned to capture growth across both mass and premium segments.
  2. Build for where distribution is going
    Eastern Indonesia is no longer an afterthought. Operations, logistics, and regional commercial talent are increasingly critical as brands invest beyond Java. Waiting until the expansion is underway to build these teams creates avoidable delays.
  3. Update compensation benchmarks
    The report’s salary data covers more than 15 functions from executive to C-suite, in monthly IDR. Digital and e-commerce roles have been repricing faster than most HR teams have adjusted for, and premium segment roles price consistently at the upper end because the talent pool is constrained.
  4. Treat compliance as a workforce planning issue
    Halal certification, BPOM Nutri-Level enforcement, and the pending sweetened beverage excise are not just regulatory events. They expand existing roles and raise the qualification floor for the people in them. Companies that plan for this early will have a meaningful advantage over those that treat it as an HR afterthought.

What the 2026 Beverage Industry Talent Movement Report Covers

  • Indonesia beverage market landscape and segment-by-segment growth projections to 2030
  • Eight talent movement patterns with cross-sector flow examples and hiring implications
  • Salary benchmarks across 15 or more functions from executive to C-suite, in IDR monthly
  • Regulatory impact: Halal certification deadline, BPOM Nutri-Level enforcement, and sweetened beverage excise
  • How leading beverage companies are restructuring hiring priorities and employer value propositions


Author

Rubby Lim

With 18 years of recruitment experience, Rubby leads HRnetRimbun Indonesia in helping businesses grow through strategic talent solutions. She has successfully placed managerial to C-level roles across industries like Healthcare, FMCG, Banking, and Tech. Known for her market insight and practical advice, Rubby is a trusted advisor to clients navigating talent challenges.
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