top of page
BLOG

All Blog Posts

Here you can view all the available Blog Posts

May 10, 2026
6
min read

The Three Critical Forces Reshaping Your Talent Strategy

Peter Lyall: The first in a four-part series on the forces reshaping work — and the operating models built to survive them. People have become the biggest investment line in most organisations — with their costs often the least rigorously managed. Leaders are debating where work happens, how many days count as “hybrid”, and whether flexibility is a perk or a policy. That debate makes for good theatre. But it’s not the real issue. The real issue is that the employment deal has been repriced...

May 10, 2026
7
min read

The C-Suite’s People Problem Isn’t “Soft” – It’s Financial Negligence

Peter Lyall: Most executive teams treat workforce decisions like weather: complain about the conditions, issue a few policies, then act surprised when the forecast doesn’t improve. Meanwhile, “people” has quietly become the biggest investment line in the enterprise — and often the least rigorously governed. Not because leaders don’t care, but because many still manage workforce the way they did when “the workforce” meant employees on payroll, work was stable, and capability cycles moved at...

May 10, 2026
7
min read

HR & Talent: From Activity to Outcomes (Time for a new HR Operating System)

Malcolm O’Neal, Chief Human Resource Officer: People have become the biggest investment line in most organisations — and the least rigorously managed. HR sits at the center of that contradiction. The function built to steward talent is still running on a program-centric, employee-only architecture, while the workforce it’s meant to manage has expanded into a sprawling ecosystem of employees, contractors, consultants, gig workers, interim specialists, shared services hubs, BPO teams,...

May 10, 2026
4
min read

Internal Comms has a new job: Make the organization behave differently

The following is the second piece in a four part series looking at the interactions between talent strategy and internal communication. The first piece can be found here. For years, internal communication has been treated like the in-house newsroom: executives decide, comms writes, employees receive. That model didn’t work brilliantly even when careers were linear, the office was the center of gravity, and culture could be managed with a decent slide deck and a quarterly town hall. Now it’s...

bottom of page