The Talent Sherpa Podcast
Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2546522/fan_mail/new] The most expensive thing an economy can do is leave capability on the table. America has been learning that lesson for 250 years — and the HR strategy that drives today's boardrooms was built one expansion at a time. In this episode, Jackson Lynch traces the full arc: from Adam Smith to Ford's $5 day to the GI Bill to AI. The pattern is unmistakable: every time this country expanded who gets to contribute, it got stronger. What You'll Learn * Why the Declaration of Independence and Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations — both published in 1776 — set the dual foundation of the human capital argument. * What Ford's $5-a-day wage proved in 1914: pay people well enough that they show up, stay, and care, and the productivity gains cover the cost. * How WWII's industrial mobilization of women exposed the truth about capability and access that defines the AI era right now. * Why the GI Bill is the single clearest lens for understanding what happens when you invest in people at scale without apology. * Three moves every leader in this community should make right now to carry the 250-year arc forward. Key Quotes * "The most expensive thing an economy can do is leave capability on the table." * "The capability was there all along. Access is what was missing." * "Pay people well enough that they show up, stay, and care, and the productivity gains will more than cover the wage cost." Sources for Statistics Cited * 9 in 10 Americans worked in agriculture in 1790 — Gilder Lehrman Institute [https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/teacher-resources/statistics-trends-american-farming] * 40% of U.S. workforce in agriculture by 1900 — EH.net [https://eh.net/database/u-s-agricultural-workforce1800-1900/] * ~3 in 100 Americans in agriculture today — USDA ERS [https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/farm-economy/farm-labor] (direct farm employment is ~1.2%; broader farm-related is ~3%) * Ford doubled wages to $5/day in 1914; turnover fell from ~400% to under 20% — The Henry Ford [https://www.thehenryford.org/explore/blog/fords-five-dollar-day] * Women made up nearly 40% of the industrial workforce at WWII peak — Wikipedia: Women in World War II [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_World_War_II] * 2.3 million veterans attended college under the GI Bill — National Archives [https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/servicemens-readjustment-act] SEO Summary A. Meta Description (137 chars) Jackson Lynch traces 250 years of American HR strategy — from Ford's $5 day to the GI Bill to AI — and what it demands of leaders today. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/talentsherpa/support] If this episode landed, the next move is yours. Coaching is where it closes fastest — Jackson has developed CHROs from both sides of the table, as their leader and as their coach. The CHRO Ascent Academy, Private Coaching, Mandate Protocol, CHRO Chronicles, and the best-selling Substack are there too. All at mytalentsherpa.com. _______________________________ In private equity: Propulsion AI surfaces workforce risk before the close and translates strategy into individual accountability after it. Before AI automation - drive outcome clarity with digital teammates to do the work fast and at scale. All at getpropulsion.ai. _______________________________ CHRO podcast, CEO Podcast, Business, Management CHRO strategy, HR strategy, talent management, leadership development, talent management podcast, human capital strategy, mandate clarity, peacetime wartime leadership, talent hat framework, leadership pipeline, senior leadership, people strategy
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