Person

Robert Satterwhite

Partner & Head, Leadership Advisory PracticeOdgers

Published content

How to Turn CEO Credibility Into a Scalable Talent Advantage

expert panel

Leadership visibility has become a powerful signal in the modern talent market. Prospective employees increasingly evaluate organizations not just by their products or compensation packages but by the credibility, transparency and values demonstrated by senior leaders. The rise of professional platforms and executive thought leadership has amplified this dynamic, making the CEO’s personal brand an influential part of the employer value proposition. Members of the Senior Executive HR Think Tank, a curated group of experienced HR leaders and people strategists, say this shift presents both an opportunity and a risk. A strong executive voice can attract high-performing candidates and reinforce cultural clarity—but when the brand becomes too closely tied to one individual, organizations risk fragility during leadership transitions. As the importance of leadership credibility grows, employees are more likely to trust and remain committed to organizations whose leaders communicate transparently and align their actions with stated values. At the same time, culture experts caution that charisma alone cannot sustain engagement. For organizations seeking to harness leadership visibility while building a durable culture, members of the HR Think Tank offer a consistent message: the CEO’s brand should amplify the organization’s values—not replace them.

Employee Monitoring vs. Trust: Where’s the Ethical Line?

expert panel

Employee monitoring software is no longer a niche tool. According to a 2024 report highlighted by Forbes, 43% of employees have had their online activity monitored by an employer. From keystroke logging to webcam snapshots, digital oversight has become normalized—often justified in the name of productivity and accountability. Yet the data tells a more complicated story. Research from the American Psychological Association shows that electronic monitoring is associated with higher stress levels and lower job satisfaction. As organizations attempt to balance flexibility with performance expectations, leaders must ask: At what point does insight become intrusion? Members of the Senior Executive HR Think Tank—a curated group of seasoned HR leaders and workforce experts—have confronted this question firsthand. Drawing on decades of executive leadership, research and advisory experience, they offer a consistent message: Trust is the cornerstone of performance, and once compromised, it is difficult to rebuild.

Skills-Based Hiring vs. Degrees: What Should Employers Require Now?

expert panel

Skills-based hiring is rapidly becoming a core talent strategy as employers seek agility, speed and access to broader candidate pools in an era defined by AI, automation and constant reskilling. Yet despite this shift, formal degree requirements remain embedded in many job descriptions, often by default rather than design. A Harvard Business School study on degree requirements and middle-skill jobs found that employers frequently require degrees for roles that previously did not need them, limiting access to capable workers without improving performance outcomes. Meanwhile, LinkedIn research reports that skills-based hiring can expand candidate pools by as much as 10 times while improving diversity and retention when implemented thoughtfully. The question facing leaders is not whether skills matter—they do—but whether degrees still serve a meaningful screening purpose, and what happens when organizations overcorrect in either direction. Members of the Senior Executive HR Think Tank—a curated group of senior HR leaders and practitioners—are grappling with this tension firsthand. Their collective experience spans talent acquisition, employee experience, DEI, workforce transformation and the application of AI in HR, giving them a front-row view into how hiring practices shape organizational performance and opportunity. Below, they weigh in on this debate and provide actionable tips for leaders working to find the best talent.

Quiet Cracking: A New Leadership KPI for Predicting Burnout

expert panel

In today’s workplace, burnout and disengagement have quietly become strategic business risks rather than isolated wellness concerns. The term quiet cracking—a state of gradual disengagement, mounting pressure and declining performance—has gained traction among HR and organizational leaders as a metric that precedes burnout and attrition. According to recent research, nearly half of employees globally report feeling burned out at work, highlighting the urgency of proactive measures for leaders and HR teams alike. The Senior Executive HR Think Tank—a curated group of experts in employee experience, talent acquisition, DEI, performance management and the evolving role of data and analytics in HR—note that tracking quiet cracking requires metrics and feedback loops that bridge sentiment, behavior and organizational performance. Below, they share how they are operationalizing well-being indicators, turning early signals into strategic interventions and equipping leaders to act before cracks widen into burnout or loss of talent.

Company details

Odgers