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Jane Firth: Redefining leadership development for the future of work

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The pace of change in today’s workplace is unprecedented. Digital transformation, shifting employee expectations, and new models of work are reshaping how organisations operate. At the same time, leaders are being asked to manage greater complexity, respond to uncertainty, and engage employees across diverse and often distributed teams.

For talent leaders, the challenge is clear: traditional leadership development approaches no longer meet the needs of the modern workplace. The future demands a different kind of leader, and HR is at the centre of making that happen.

The shifting leadership landscape

The conditions that define today’s workplace are unlike those of even a decade ago. Complexity and disruption are now constants. Leaders are expected to navigate global supply chains, technological advances, and fast-moving social trends simultaneously.

The rise of hybrid and remote models has changed how teams interact, requiring leaders to influence without relying solely on presence or authority. Likewise, employees are looking to leaders who can champion equity and create cultures where every voice is valued. In this environment, skills such as resilience, systems thinking, and cultural fluency are no longer optional. They are core to effective leadership.

Where traditional leadership development falls short

Many existing leadership development programmes were built for a different era. They often focus heavily on technical expertise and hierarchical authority, assuming leaders will have clear lines of command and predictable environments.

Too often, these programmes are delivered as one-off interventions rather than ongoing journeys, leaving leaders ill-prepared for sustained growth. What they frequently overlook are the so-called “human skills” that make the greatest difference in modern organisations: empathy, adaptability, and emotional intelligence. In a workplace defined by diversity and rapid change, these capabilities are essential and form the backbone of emerging development approaches.

From programmes to leadership ecosystems

Progressive talent development leaders are moving beyond isolated training and towards creating “leadership factories.” These are structured, multi-year development pathways that begin at the first-line manager level and extend through to senior leadership.

Instead of short courses, they provide sequenced experiences, stretch assignments, coaching, and peer learning that are embedded in the flow of work. This long-term approach ensures leaders are not just trained but continually developed in line with the organisation’s evolving needs.

Making development skills career-led

The integration of leadership development with skills and career mobility is also gaining momentum, with clear benefits. Instead of focusing solely on roles, talent leaders are creating skills taxonomies that define the capabilities leaders need to succeed.

Development then links directly to career pathways, with leaders encouraged to build skills that open new opportunities for them. By tying leadership growth to visible career progression, HR not only strengthens its pipelines but also improves retention and engagement.

Learning in the flow of work

Modern leadership development is no longer confined to the classroom. Talent leaders are embedding learning into the daily work experience, creating short, contextual interventions that help managers apply new skills immediately.

This might include coaching prompts for one-to-one meetings, manager toolkits to guide performance conversations, or peer learning networks where leaders reflect and share insights. By connecting learning directly to real challenges, HR makes leadership development practical, relevant, and sticky.

Building AI fluency into leadership

The rapid rise of AI in the workplace has introduced a new dimension to leadership development. Talent leaders are making AI fluency a core capability, ensuring managers understand how to use AI responsibly and effectively.

Programmes include practical use cases, governance training, and ethical considerations, alongside opportunities to experiment with tools. Leaders who can harness AI for decision-making and communication are better positioned to guide their teams in a rapidly changing digital environment.

Leading hybrid and distributed teams

With hybrid work now a permanent feature, talent leaders are developing managers who can thrive in distributed environments. Best practices include training managers to avoid proximity bias, manage by outcomes rather than visibility, and create inclusive norms for meetings and collaboration.

Development programmes also focus on building trust, psychological safety, and clear communication in environments where teams are not physically together. These capabilities are critical for sustaining performance and engagement in the long term.

Rebuilding bench strength

One of the most urgent priorities for talent leaders is rebuilding bench strength. Research shows that the pipeline of ready-now leaders is at its lowest in years. To address this, talent leaders are taking a more intentional approach to identifying and developing future managers early.

Transparent promotion criteria, structured stretch assignments, and support mechanisms ensure emerging leaders are not only identified but prepared. Success is measured through metrics such as internal fill rates, time-to-ready, and the quality of succession pipelines.

Anchoring development in evidence-based behaviours

Great leadership development is anchored in evidence. Talent leaders are codifying the specific behaviours that matter most for their organisations and aligning development programmes to them.

These behaviours often include effective coaching, setting a clear vision, enabling career growth, and making high-quality decisions. Feedback systems such as 360 reviews and team surveys ensure leaders are measured against the right standards and supported to improve continuously.

The future

The future of work makes this shift even more urgent. As organisations face greater complexity, diversity, and constant change, leadership development must evolve beyond traditional approaches. Talent leaders who take the lead in embedding learning into the flow of work, aligning skills and careers development, building AI fluency, and equipping managers for hybrid environments will prepare leaders for today’s challenges and also ensure their organisations remain resilient and competitive in the years ahead.

Principal within the People & Culture Practice at  | jfirth@odgers.co.uk

Jane Firth specialises in HR leadership and board level appointments on behalf of FTSE, AIM and Fortune 500 clients, as well as private equity backed, family owned, founder led and publicly funded organisations. Jane has over 20 years experience in HR leadership appointments.

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