With over 25 years in human resources – 20 at the C-suite level- I’ve navigated the evolving landscape of talent management across five distinct industries and two continents. From leading HR strategy at tech startups with 250 employees to orchestrating comprehensive workforce solutions for organizations of 15,000+, my experience spans the full spectrum of organizational complexity. The biggest lesson I’ve learned? If it feels comfortable…you’re behind!
Technology Creates Opportunity, Not Obsolescence
In 1967, the calculator introduced by Texas Instruments sparked fears that bookkeepers would become obsolete. In 1983, Lotus 1-2-3 raised similar concerns for finance professionals. Today, we hear the same about AI in HR.
History has proven these fears to be unfounded. Technologies don’t eliminate jobs—they transform how work gets done. Finance professionals who embraced spreadsheets shifted from delivering value through calculations to doing so through strategic analysis.
The same transformation is happening in HR. AI isn’t replacing recruiters—it’s elevating our impact. But capturing the value requires a fundamental shift in our mindset.
Adopting an Investment Mindset
If I asked you to invest $50,000 in my company, you’d ask: How will you create value? What return can I expect? Over what timeframe?
Why do these questions seem to come naturally for financial investments but are often missing from org design and hiring conversations? Salary is fundamentally an investment requiring the same disciplined thought process and analysis.
We hire because we need outcomes achieved, not just tasks performed. We should consider the value of these outcomes compared to the salary we’re investing to obtain them.
Role Design as the Foundation of Talent Strategy
The investment mindset begins to transform how we approach hiring, but alone it isn’t enough. We need to reframe why we hire in the first place.
Most of us instinctively think about tasks first. Consider hiring an accountant: “Follow up on delinquent accounts” traditionally appears in the job description. Yet this task is merely a means to an end. The real focus should be the outcome (the end itself), in this case, reducing “days outstanding” from 90 to 30 days. This outcome directly impacts organizational cash flow and financial health. So why focus on the tactic, when the outcome drives business value?
Effective role design answers four critical questions:
- How does this role support broader strategy?
- What specific outcomes constitute strategic contribution?
- How will success be measured?
- What growth paths exist for the individual?
We hire to achieve outcomes, not just to perform activities. Effort without results delivers little value.
When we establish these elements upfront, we improve the entire lifecycle. Sourcing becomes easier, interviewing more targeted, selection more accurate, and turnover lower. Strategic role design doesn’t just improve hiring; it transforms the entire talent lifecycle, and raises engagement, as employees work with greater purpose and autonomy.
According to a study by Towers Watson, engaged employees tend to produce about 16% more than we pay them, while disengaged employees deliver just 60% of their payroll value.
The New Value Proposition
By adopting an outcomes-focused mindset and helping managers do the same, talent professionals transform their roles. Rather than merely executing processes, they become strategic thought partners who shape how organizations design, acquire, and develop talent.
When managers gain clarity about roles and their intended outcomes, this clarity naturally flows through the entire talent acquisition process. They talk with candidates and manage employee performance differently.
Once there’s been a mindset shift, technology becomes the enabler. It creates bandwidth for consultative activities, deeper strategic conversations, and more thorough candidate assessment.
It takes courage to share what managers need to hear, not just what they want to hear. So, a new set of advanced skills will also be required:
Strategic Business Acumen: Understand business operations, financial models, market dynamics, and customer needs to connect role design to strategy.
Consulting Skills: Challenge assumptions, ask probing questions, and guide better talent decisions as a trusted advisor.
Systems Thinking: Recognize how talent decisions interconnect; how role changes affect hiring, development, engagement, and retention.
Relationship Building: Cultivate trust and influence as technology handles transactions, making human connections the differentiator.
Proactively Driving Technology Selection
Armed with a new mindset, TA pros can become more proactive and strategic about technology adoption. Clear role design transforms technology selection from a features comparison to an outcome-driven discussion:
More Reactive: “We need an AI screening tool (because our competitors have one).”
More Proactive: “Each role in our company has a connection to our business strategy, and objective measures of success. Now we need a technology that identifies candidates with Y capabilities and Z experiences.”
This approach positions talent professionals to lead technology conversations. By grounding technology selection in role design, talent professionals become strategic advisors who articulate exactly why certain tools create value. That’s the ROI part of the conversation.
Executive Alignment: Creating the Foundation
This shift requires alignment from the Chief People Officer and CEO as well. Organizations must prepare for fewer but higher-level talent acquisition professionals. As AI handles transactional work, remaining team members must deliver higher-value contributions. Organizations need to be ready to invest – not just in technology – but in advanced level skill development for talent professionals. This combination of elevated strategic value plus technology-created bandwidth produces the ROI.
Conclusion: Adapt Thinking, Don’t Just Adopt Tools
Technology is important. It creates bandwidth. But we create value. Proactively staying relevant during periods of rapid change is about mindset. Start by rethinking role design: How can you help managers align hires with business outcomes? Tomorrow’s talent leaders won’t just be divided by who adopts AI, but by who fundamentally rethinks their value proposition. By helping managers design roles that connect directly to business results, we transform how we select candidates, engage employees, and ultimately, how we choose the technologies that we need to help us.