The World Economic Forum predicts that 44% of workers’ skills will be disrupted within the next five years. Six in ten employees will require upskilling or reskilling by 2027. The half-life of a professional skill has shrunk to roughly five years, making traditional hire-for-skills models increasingly obsolete.
Former BlackRock HR head and Time Warner senior executive Jeff Smith, a veteran with over 25 years of HR experience leading human resources at major firms, has watched companies succeed or fail based on how they approach this challenge. His warning to organizations chasing talent through recruitment alone is direct: “There needs to be training and cultural support to make sure you don’t just hire talent into a static and non-evolving organization.”
The Economic Case for Building From Within
Upskilling existing employees rather than recruiting replacements can yield cost savings between 70% and 92%. Factor in turnover expenses, which average roughly one-third of an employee’s base salary, and the math becomes stark. Companies spending heavily on external recruitment while underinvesting in development are often solving expensive problems they created themselves.
LinkedIn’s 2024 Workplace Learning Report found that nine out of ten global executives plan to maintain or increase their investment in learning and development. Yet intention and execution diverge. The Harvard Business Review has observed that among companies embracing large-scale reskilling initiatives, only a handful have done so effectively.
Why External Hiring Alone Falls Short
Recruiting for skills gaps carries hidden costs beyond salary and signing bonuses. Cultural integration takes months. Onboarding delays productivity. And newly acquired skills face the same obsolescence pressures that created the original gap.
More critically, external hiring does nothing to build organizational learning capacity. Each new skills gap triggers another recruitment cycle, creating dependency on labor markets rather than internal capability.
Jeff Smith argues for a structural shift: “The evolving theme here is the phasing out of traditional linear career paths, static job descriptions, and inflexible structures and moving toward more flexible and iterative career journeys that allow people to use their skills and build.”
Workforce expectations reinforce this direction. Seventy-four percent of Millennial and Gen Z workers would leave a job lacking upskilling opportunities. Meanwhile, 94% of employees say they would stay longer at companies investing in their development.
Creating the Conditions for Continuous Learning
Most corporate learning initiatives fail for a predictable reason: they treat training as an event rather than an environment. Employees complete courses, check boxes, and return to systems that reward short-term output over capability building.
Executive Jeff Smith emphasizes that cultural scaffolding matters as much as curriculum. “Part of this is skill development, but part of it is creating the right job for leaders and managers and the right incentives to do it,” he notes. “They need both compensation and recognition.”
Organizations often measure training completion rates while ignoring whether managers actually support employee development time. When performance reviews emphasize immediate deliverables and promotion criteria overlook growth contributions, formal learning programs become hollow.
Technology as Enabler, Not Replacement
An industry consortium led by Cisco, including Accenture, Google, IBM, Microsoft, and SAP, recently reported that 92% of technology roles will undergo transformation due to AI. Technical skills acquired today may be partially obsolete within two to three years.
Smith takes a pragmatic view. “AI should augment human abilities,” he observes.
Routine analysis, pattern recognition, and process execution increasingly shift to algorithms. Judgment under ambiguity, relationship building, and creative problem-solving remain human domains. Organizations focusing exclusively on technical reskilling may find themselves perpetually behind. Those developing adaptive capabilities build more durable workforce value.
BlackRock and Time Warner Alum Jeff Smith on the Manager’s Role in Development Culture
Jeff Smith’s people-first approach to leadership places significant weight on frontline leadership quality. “Having exceptional leaders and managers is huge for the day-to-day experience and people staying in a company,” he states.
Managers control the practical conditions that determine whether development happens:
- Time approval: They decide whether employees can step away from deliverables to learn.
- Stretch assignments: They choose who gets growth opportunities and who stays in routine work.
- Feedback quality: They provide input that either accelerates or stunts growth.
A company can invest millions in learning platforms while managers inadvertently sabotage utilization through competing priorities.
Research indicates that nearly 60% of first-time managers never receive formal management training. Companies promote technical contributors based on individual performance, then express surprise when those new managers fail to develop their teams. Smith’s approach addressed this gap directly, treating manager development as foundational rather than remedial.
Building Foundations Before Innovating
The temptation to pursue cutting-edge learning technologies often backfires. Smith counsels patience with fundamentals: “I think getting the basics right and executing them is far more important before you are innovating. Pay people right, have great hiring practices, develop your leaders, have a culture of feedback, ensure leaders know their expectations. Have good solid processes, then innovate on top of that.”
Organizations layer sophisticated tools onto broken foundations. They purchase AI-powered learning platforms while lacking clear competency models. They launch mentorship programs without addressing why previous informal mentoring disappeared.
Companies that extract value from learning investments share a common trait: they’ve already established functioning basics.
- Performance expectations are clear.
- Feedback flows regularly.
- Development pathways are visible.
New tools amplify existing capability rather than attempting to create it from scratch.
The Competitive Advantage
Organizations committing to continuous learning create compounding advantages. Their workforce adapts more quickly to market shifts. Their employer brand attracts candidates who value growth. Institutional knowledge deepens rather than departing with employees.
As former BlackRock and Time Warner exec Jeff Smith explains, “Culture is everything. It is what you stand for, how you do work, what you are held accountable for and how it feels to be somewhere.” When learning is woven into that cultural fabric, development becomes self-sustaining.
Organizations that win are not those with the deepest recruitment budgets. They are the ones recognizing talent development as an ongoing discipline, companies that never stop teaching.

