Home BreakingGrowth Is the Currency of Relevance

Growth Is the Currency of Relevance

by Joseph Wilson
3 minutes read

Walk into any workplace today and you’ll feel it, an undercurrent of unease. The questions are everywhere: Will my job exist in five years? Will AI replace me? Am I still relevant?

These fears are real. A recent SHRM study revealed that while automation and AI are reshaping work, the vast majority of jobs won’t disappear, they’ll transform. Only 6% of U.S. jobs are at high risk of displacement. For the other 94%, the issue isn’t elimination, it’s evolution.

That’s good news. But here’s the problem: most organizations aren’t preparing their people for that evolution.

PerformancePoint recently conducted a study that cut to the heart of this issue. Over half of professionals, 52%, say their greatest career challenge is a lack of growth and feeling undervalued. Think about that. It’s not job insecurity, not conflict, not fear. It’s stagnation. People won’t leave companies because of robots or algorithms. They will leave because they stop growing.  What will be worse is if they stay.  Why?

Because when employees stop growing, organizations stop growing.

According to another study by PerformancePoint employees with growth-focused managers are 100 times more likely to recommend their company as a great place to work.  They are also 3x more likely to stay and be engaged.

Great leaders understand something simple yet profound: leadership is not about telling people what to do. It’s about helping them become more than they thought possible. It’s about cultivating growth.

Unfortunately, too many companies confuse activity with development. They pile on more tasks but fail to invest in the kind of learning, coaching, and opportunities that stretch people. The result? Employees feel stuck, unseen, and undervalued. Productivity suffers. Innovation stalls. Talent walks out the door or goes stale.

Here’s the urgent truth: growth is not a perk. It’s a necessity.

If automation and AI are changing the nature of work, then human skills such as creativity, problem-solving, empathy, and relationship-building are more valuable than ever. But those skills don’t just appear. They must be nurtured. They require intentional investment. They require leaders who design individualized growth plans for their people, not just job descriptions.

Because the greatest shield against irrelevance isn’t a new piece of software. It’s human potential.

When we equip employees to adapt, we don’t just protect their jobs, we elevate them. Instead of fearing what AI will replace, we unlock what it cannot: connection, insight, innovation, and care.  Help employees adjust to technologies and utilize them well. 

The real question leaders should be asking isn’t “Will our technology keep us relevant?” It’s “Will our people?”

And that depends on one thing: whether we create a culture where growth is not optional but expected.

Because here’s what the data tells us: employees who feel they are growing are more engaged, more loyal, more productive, and more likely to advocate for their organization. Growth fuels performance. Growth fuels trust. Growth fuels relevance.

So, leaders, it’s time to make a choice. We can continue to treat growth as a line item that gets cut when budgets tighten or we can see it for what it is: the most powerful investment we can make in our people and our future.

AI may reshape work, but it will never replace what makes us human. Relevance in the future of work won’t be determined by technology. It will be determined by whether our people are still becoming more.

The future is waiting. The question is: will your people be ready for it?

Brad Federman
PerformancePoint, LLC
+ 19012911545
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