By David Kesmodel And Ilan Brat 

In tapping Steve Easterbrook as its new chief executive, McDonald's Corp.'s board has opted for a company insider with an unusual attribute: an outsider's perspective.

British-born Mr. Easterbrook, who will become CEO of the U.S. corporate giant on March 1, spent most of his career overseas--including two years outside of McDonald's, in successive CEO jobs for a pair of smaller restaurant companies in the U.K.

Investors are hoping his breadth of experience will help solve a riddle that bedeviled current Chief Executive Don Thompson: how to revive a fast-food behemoth beset with fierce competition from a host of upstarts and shifting tastes of American consumers.

People who have worked with Mr. Easterbrook say the 48-year-old--the second non-American CEO of McDonald's after Australian-born Charlie Bell's brief stint in 2004--brings a high tolerance for risk and new ideas that could make him well-suited for the challenge. Many credit him with reviving McDonald's British business when he ran it in the last decade--and Mr. Easterbrook himself has trumpeted his affinity for change.

"My motivation at the moment is around knowing how it feels to turn a business around," he said in recorded remarks to an industry consultant last month, ahead of his promotion on Wednesday. "I can't wait to have that feeling again."

Mr. Easterbook faces skepticism that a company veteran who has served in Mr. Thompson's management team will be able to make the radical changes that some observers think are necessary.

Larry Light, a consultant and former chief marketing officer for McDonald's, said Mr. Easterbrook will need to move more quickly than Mr. Thompson in addressing the company's bloated menu, slowing customer service and other shortcomings. "I don't blame Don for the problems [at McDonald's], but he didn't act fast enough, dramatic enough and decisively enough," Mr. Light said.

In his December remarks, Mr. Easterbrook indicated he thought the company needed to act more urgently. "We are a risk-averse company, very methodic and thoughtful and thorough in what we do, but time doesn't allow you to do that when you're in a turnaround," he added. "You can't incrementalize your way out of it."

McDonald's declined to make Mr. Easterbrook available for an interview on Thursday.

Currently chief global brand officer, Mr. Easterbrook won praise within the company for successful advertising campaigns and efforts to engage in Europe with the burger chain's critics. And his stints running the two British restaurants chains from 2011 to 2013--PizzaExpress Ltd., a chain that today has 500 casual-dining restaurants, and Wagamama Ltd., which operates more than 100 Japanese-style noodle bars--may help provide the fresh eyes needed to tackle McDonald's many challenges, analysts said.

"He is almost as much of an outsider as you can expect to come from McDonald's," which long has promoted managers from within, said Sara Senatore, an analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein.

Mr. Easterbrook grew up on the outskirts of London and studied natural sciences at Durham University in the north of England--where he played cricket alongside future England national team captain Nasser Hussain. He flirted with a career in accounting before starting as a financial reporting manager at McDonald's in 1993, where he quickly ascended the ranks.

In the 2000s, McDonald's faced a sales funk in the U.K., driven in part by concerns about the quality of its food and its treatment of employees. Mr. Easterbrook, promoted to head that business in 2006, boosted sales by modernizing restaurants with a cleaner look, revamping the menu and working to portray McDonald's as environmentally friendly.

He also was a fierce defender of the brand, challenging campaigners who called McDonald's food unhealthy and publicly decrying the term "McJobs, " used to deride staff conditions. He told a British newspaper in 2006 that he ate a McDonald's meal every day, and that a Quarter Pounder with Cheese was his favorite. He went on British television that year to debate Eric Schlosser, an industry critic and author of "Fast Food Nation."

"Everyone likes a burger every now and then," he said in the debate. "If you don't want fries with your Happy Meal, you can switch it for a fruit bag."

He wasn't afraid to take on critics, and "it helped turn that particular market around," said a former senior McDonald's executive.

At the same time, Mr. Easterbrook showed an interest in adding healthier-menu options and an appreciation for the importance of marketing to moms as well as its core male consumers, said Cheryl Berman, former chief creative officer at advertising agency Leo Burnett USA, who oversaw its McDonald's account.

Mr. Easterbrook, who spearheaded McDonald's participation in Apple Inc.'s Apple Pay initiative, also has emphasized trying to recapture customers in their 20s and 30s who are defecting from McDonald's. In the December presentation, to Chicago-based digital consultancy ÄKTA, he said he wanted McDonald's to expand the ways customers can buy its products, and discussed the need for greater customization and possibly even a delivery service. "People's desires are changing. They want to be treated as individuals, not as numbers," he said.

His career choices also suggest willingness to shake things up. Mr. Easterbrook became president of McDonald's Europe operations in 2010, but he left the company less than a year later for the first of the British CEO stints.

He then returned to the Golden Arches in June 2013 to head its global brand operations.

Mr. Easterbrook's new role is by far the most daunting. McDonald's is in the throes of its worst slump in more than a decade. The retirement of Mr. Thompson, 51, followed two years of worsening sales declines in its core U.S. market. Net income last year fell nearly 15% to $4.76 billion.

McDonald's shares--basically flat over Mr. Thompson's tenure through Wednesday--rose 5.1% on Thursday to $93.27 in composite trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

Mr. Light, the former McDonald's marketing executive, said the company needs to focus on its direct competitors, including Burger King and fast-growing burger chains like Five Guys and Shake Shack, and not worry so much about restaurant chains like Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. and Panera Bread Co. that appeal to health-focused consumers. "In a turnaround, you have to focus on your direct competitive sets," he said. "You don't have the luxury of focusing on the indirect set."

Simon Zekaria and Alex MacDonald contributed to this article.

Write to David Kesmodel at david.kesmodel@wsj.com and Ilan Brat at ilan.brat@wsj.com

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