The Architecture of Competence

The answer. Five frameworks. Five layers. One finding. In The Architecture of Competence, we integrate the full ecosystem of professional capability — from the initial publication of the Eight Critical Skills, through the federal SCANS workforce framework, to McKinsey’s leadership research to Korn Ferry’s enterprise talent system, and ultimately to the frontier of AI research — and reveal what every layer has in common: a dependence on the same eight foundational skills that four independent research traditions, approaching the question from four different directions, converged upon without knowledge of each other. The capstone of the Critical Skills Series. The architecture is complete.

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A New Value Proposition for MBA Alumni Clubs

MBA alumni clubs across the country are declining— not because their alumni no longer value community, but because the delivery model stopped matching how professionals actually engage. The luncheon, the directory, the annual dues invoice: these served a world that no longer exists. This article makes the case for a five-pillar value proposition that replaces the old model with something built for the professionals MBA graduates actually are in 2026 — a platform for peer trust, career development, AI leadership competence, the advancement of women, and an active entrepreneurial marketplace. The evidence base is strong, the models are proven, and the urgency is real. If you lead an MBA alumni club, serve on its board, or care about the future of professional community, this is the argument worth reading.

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Critical Skills: AI and the Future of Competence

AI does not commoditize judgment. It commoditizes output. For most of the modern professional era, competence and production were tightly coupled — if someone produced sophisticated work, they almost certainly possessed the skills to create it. AI has broken that coupling. Part Five of the Critical Skills Series examines what three decades of research — from the original Eight Critical Skills, to the federal SCANS framework, then to Lominger/Korn Ferry and McKinsey — tells us about the skills that the AI era has made more essential, not less.

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Critical Skills: What Washington Found. What the Market Confirmed.

For the first three articles in this series, every framework came from the same direction: organizations studying themselves. This article is different. In 1990, the U.S. Department of Labor asked what work requires of workers. Before that commission met, a practitioner asked what corporations would pay to find. Neither knew the other existed. Both found the same eight skills.

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Critical Skills: Sixty-Seven Competencies. Eight Skills. One Useful Answer.

The most sophisticated enterprise talent system in the Fortune 500 was not designed for you to use alone. The Korn Ferry Leadership Architect — built from Michael Lombardo and Robert Eichinger’s landmark Lominger research and deployed across nearly half the Fortune 500 — is a genuine contribution to organizational talent management. But it requires certified facilitators, 360-degree platforms, and an HR infrastructure most professionals will never control on their own terms. This article draws the line clearly: what the KFLA was built to do, where its design boundaries are, and how to extract its two most powerful insights — learning agility and the 19 Career Stallers and Stoppers — whether or not your organization has ever heard of Korn Ferry. Learn about the Eight Critical Skills. They’re portable. They travel with you. They’re YOURS.

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