None have managed to establish the club among the Premier League elite. And while failure at Goodison has proved hard to shake off for some, for others their time at the Toffees has not prevented them from going on to achieve some impressive results elsewhere.
With Everton on the brink of the Championship, Planet Sport looks back on the last seven managers to leave the Merseyside club and charts their careers thereafter.
David Moyes
Moyes led Everton between 2002 and 2013 and any man who can manage to stay in the hot seat that long without suffering the sack must be applauded.
However, when the chance of managing Manchester United came along – and with it a glowing reference from Sir Alex Ferguson himself – Moyes was out the door.
Ultimately, his time at Man United was a huge failure and he was sacked four games before the end of the season, with the team languishing in seventh place, 13 points adrift of fourth-placed Arsenal.
Moyes then went on to manage Spanish side Real Sociedad for a year, the highlight of which was not anything on the pitch but his attempt to speak Spanish (or not).
Moyes then returned to the Premier League with Sunderland, but his time up north did not go to plan. The Black Cats were condemned to relegation to the Championship in his only season with the club.
A couple of months later, Moyes was appointed as West Ham manager on a contract until the end of the season. When he…