Maximizing Your Return On People with Cynthia Bentzen-Mercer | #10
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What if the biggest risk to your career isn't AI—but waiting for someone else to decide your future?
In this episode of What If?, Leslie Grandy sits down with Dr. Cynthia Benson Mercer, human capital strategist, executive coach, and author of Human Capital Investment Strategy, to explore a fundamental shift happening inside organizations:
Agency is no longer optional. It's required.
As AI reshapes work—automating execution, accelerating analysis, and leveling access to information—the rules of value creation are changing. Effort alone is no longer enough. Titles are less stable. And the idea that "if I work hard, someone will notice" is quickly becoming outdated.
Instead, both individuals and organizations are being forced to rethink what human contribution actually means.
Together, Leslie and Cynthia explore:
- Why human capital should be treated as a compounding investment, not a cost center
- The critical difference between having value and articulating value
- Why employees must take ownership of their careers—rather than outsourcing it to managers or companies
- How to define your "aspirational next" and actively build toward it
- The danger of reducing people to roles, titles, or "boxes"—instead of seeing them as adaptable "puzzle pieces"
- What leaders get wrong about layoffs, talent mobility, and long-term workforce strategy
- Why transparency, communication, and intentionality matter most during disruption
- How AI is shifting value toward creativity, judgment, empathy, and complex problem-solving
Cynthia also offers a powerful reframe: every individual carries their own human capital—their skills, knowledge, and potential—and they have the agency to deploy it wherever it can create the most value. Organizations don't own that value. They invest in it—and must continuously earn the right to keep it.
This creates a new kind of tension.
Companies say people are their greatest asset.
But how they hire, develop, move, and sometimes let go of those people reveals what they actually believe.
Because in a world where technology is advancing rapidly, the advantage doesn't go to those who simply adapt.
It goes to those who take ownership.