Critical Skills – Two Studies. One Question.

Sixty-five combined years of thinking about professional competence. Two landmark research frameworks. Eight competencies each — and a convergence that tells you more about what it actually takes to succeed than either document does alone. In Part Two of the Critical Skills Series, Charles Jett examines the 2011 Egon Zehnder and McKinsey joint study — Return on Leadership — alongside the Eight Critical Skills framework, and draws a clear, practical line between them. One was built to tell organizations which leaders correlate with revenue growth. The other was built to tell every individual professional what the market has consistently paid to find — across industries, across decades, and regardless of where you are in your career. The three McKinsey findings every professional should carry forward. The foundational skills every career must be built on first. And the synthesis that makes both more powerful than either used alone. If you are managing your own development — and you should be — this is the framework conversation worth having.

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The Competence Mirage — How Artificial Intelligence Has Made It Easier Than Ever to Appear Competent — and Harder Than Ever to Actually Be It

For fifty years, organizations measured competence by measuring production. That system worked — until artificial intelligence made it possible to produce sophisticated, high-quality work without the underlying skills to evaluate a single word of it. In The Competence Mirage, we examine what AI has actually done to the workforce: not replaced professionals, but created a generation whose apparent competence now outpaces their actual competence by a margin no one is measuring. The Eight Critical Skills haven’t changed. What’s changed is the cost of not having them.

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Competence vs. Incompetence — The Divide That Defines Every Career

Most organizations have a problem they refuse to name. It lives inside their performance reviews, their promotion decisions, and their tolerance for mediocrity dressed up as seniority. In Competence vs. Incompetence: The Divide That Defines Every Career, we draw on research spanning more than 900 completed executive searches to expose the structural gap running through every workplace in America — and name exactly what is on each side of it. Grounded in the Dunning-Kruger Effect, the Four Stages of Competence, and the Eight Critical Skills framework, this is not another leadership think-piece. It is a precise, unflinching examination of why incompetence survives, how organizations protect it, and what genuinely competent professionals do differently — and why it is always worth building the real thing.

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The Continuous Education Skill – The Mismatch Is the Gift: Why the Career You Planned May Not Be the One You’re Built For

Most people think continuous education means taking courses and earning certifications. That version is real — but it is the least interesting part. The more important version asks a harder question: not what new skills do I need, but who am I, and have I been telling myself the truth about that? In this article, I map the full architecture of lifelong learning across three distinct layers — the root system built in K–12, the structural trunk of college and early career, and the ever-changing canopy of professional reinvention. Drawing on my own Naval Academy reckoning, his wife’s transformation from art historian to robotic surgeon, and the final correspondence of Jefferson and Adams, I try to make the case that reinvention is not a crisis — it is a discipline.

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The Exchange Rate – – What Military Hardware Costs in Schools and Hospitals

One Tomahawk cruise missile costs roughly the same as running a 300-student middle school for five months. One F-16 fighter jet equals a decade of keeping an elementary school open. One submarine equals 136 years of a rural hospital — the kind that has been quietly disappearing from American communities at a rate of more than one per month for over a decade. In “The Exchange Rate,” there are no opinions, no partisan arguments, and no policy prescriptions. There is only arithmetic: the cost of military hardware translated into the schools and hospitals that communities actually live and die by. The numbers are the argument. You supply the conclusion.

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