People are not costs: Why the boardroom still manages them as such
“People are our greatest asset.”
Almost every board says it. And most mean it. Yet when you examine what organisations are actually steered on, a different picture emerges. In many boardrooms, people appear primarily as a cost line: headcount, absence rates, efficiency targets, workforce planning. Something to optimise. Something to control. Something to justify. As long as that remains the dominant frame, human capital will rarely be treated as a true source of value. Not because boards lack good intentions. But because they lack clear visibility.
This is not a problem of intent. It is a problem of insight.

The Boardroom Paradox
Across sectors — including housing associations and other public or semi-public organisations — we see the same tension. On the one hand, there is broad agreement that people determine performance, continuity and the capacity to change. On the other, board discussions about people tend to revolve around:- sickness absence
- staff turnover
- formation and structure
- budgetary impact
- A strategy calls for greater entrepreneurship, yet risk-taking is implicitly penalised.
- Decision-making authority is formally decentralised, yet senior leaders continue to intervene at critical moments.
- Accountability is assigned on paper, yet key decisions are repeatedly escalated upwards.
Value is created in daily decisions, not in programmes
Organisational value does not originate in policy documents or transformation programmes. It is created every day in concrete choices:- Who actually makes decisions, and who avoids them?
- What information is used to decide, and what is ignored?
- Which behaviours are rewarded, tolerated or subtly discouraged?
- Where does ownership genuinely sit, and where does withdrawal occur under pressure?
- How do decision-making patterns affect performance outcomes?
- Where does leadership behaviour enable strategic execution — and where does it slow it down?
- How does organisational context shape accountability in practice?
- decisions are actually made in practice
- responsibility is genuinely taken — or quietly avoided
- leadership behaviour shapes speed, alignment and performance under pressure
From abstract belief to governable reality
Treating people as a source of value requires more than belief. It requires insight into how behaviour, structure and leadership choices interact. Boards that succeed in this do three things consistently:- They connect strategic ambitions to observable behavioural patterns.
- They examine how their own decisions influence behaviour throughout the organisation.
- They treat human capital not as a soft theme, but as a governance issue.