Why treating roles “fairly” may be the most expensive mistake your company is making
There’s an uncomfortable truth most CHROs and CFOs understand - but rarely get the support to operationalize: Not all roles matter equally. Therefore, most talent strategies are built as if they do - and we see this in our consulting practice across a wide range of industries and size companies.
The result? Resources are spread evenly across roles, often based on level, when in reality they contribute very differently to performance. It's how it's been done for a long time . . . it feels fair . . . and i’s easy to explain. But in the twenty-first century, it’s disconnected from what drives business results.
The Problem: Not Being Able to Connect HR Investments to Business Outcomes
For years, HR has been asked to “be more strategic" and has responded with new org structures, investments in AI and other technologies, and upskilling employees. But most of these efforts don’t (can't) answer the most essential question: How do we prove the value of investments in HR?
In today’s economy and this talent marketplace, the answer is increasingly clear: intellectual capital - not physical assets - drives enterprise value. And intellectual capital has only one source: people. But not all people and not all roles.
20% of Roles Drives 80% of Enterprise Value
In our research and work, we consistently see that:
This is where the real “war for talent” exists. Not across the entire organization - and not evenly distributed across levels. Rather, these are typically clustered in a few key verticals and the ability of a company to hire and retain top performing talent in these roles will determine if they can deliver on its strategy.
Why Companies Still Get This Wrong
If this is so clear, why don’t more organizations act on it? Because it requires a unique blend of financial acumen and talent expertise, the ability to explain and persuade senior leaders, and the know-how to operationalize the work across the entire talent continuum. It's very different from the way employees have been managed, and HR investments made, in the past. And it's hard because it requires leaders across the business to:
Most organizations default to a model of parity because it is:
But in an intellectual capital-driven economy, this approach is increasingly risky.
What a Value-Based Talent Strategy Looks Like
A different model starts with one critical shift:
Treat talent as a capital allocation decision - not a service function.
That means:
An NFL team might pay their Director of Finance $150,000 but their starting quarterback $15,000,000. The way they hire, compensate and retain their employees is completely different based on the value they create for the franchise. Corporations need to think about applying the same approach.
This is not about neglecting the rest of the organization. It’s about recognizing where investment and results matter most.
A Reality Most Companies Aren’t Facing
At the same time, the external talent market has shifted. In many sectors, hiring has slowed.
Applicant volume for many roles has surged. But more applicants does not mean better talent. In fact, many companies are overwhelmed with high volumes of candidates driven by necessity, not fit.
And yet, few have adapted their approach by doing the following:
The Conversation That Needs to Happen
This is where the CHRO–CFO partnership becomes essential, because ultimately, this is not an HR question. It’s a business one.
The organizations that answer these questions clearly - and act on them - will outperform. The ones that don’t will continue to optimize processes around a fundamentally flawed assumption: that the level of investment is defined in a traditional way, primarily by level.
A Simple Test
If you were to double your investment in the hiring and retention of only 10% of roles in your organization tomorrow:
If the answer is unclear, you’re not alone. The good news? We're here to help. Contact us for an immediate response and free thought partnership on this topic.
But it’s a question worth answering - before the market answers it for you.