Competencies are everywhere. But do they translate to capability?
For decades, organizations have invested heavily in competency modeling and frameworks, embedding them into hiring, performance management, leadership development, talent management, and corporate culture initiatives. Competencies have become one of the most widely adopted tools in human resources management and organizational development.
Yet despite their widespread use, competency systems often fail to explain or improve actual performance.
Competency Curse or Cure? confronts a difficult but necessary have competency modeling and competency frameworks become the answer to the wrong problem?
Drawing on organization science, human performance theory, and real-world research practice, this book challenges how competencies are defined, modeled, assessed, and governed. It reveals why many competency frameworks drift into symbolic language, cultural enforcement, and performative compliance, while doing little to strengthen organizational capability, workforce performance, or enterprise effectiveness.
But this is not an anti-competency book.
Instead, it offers a capability-first approach to competency development, showing when competencies genuinely matter, when they do not, and how they must be positioned within a disciplined understanding of how organizations actually produce results.
Inside the book you will learn how
Distinguish organizational capability from individual competency modelsUnderstand why many competency frameworks fail to improve performanceDesign competency systems that support strategy execution and workforce capabilityAvoid symbolic HR practices and focus on evidence-based organizational developmentGovern competency frameworks so they remain useful rather than becoming institutional “zombies” Through clear frameworks and practical analysis, the book introduces a domain architecture for competency modeling, explains the structural limitations of most assessment methods, and demonstrates how competency systems can be aligned with organizational design, capability architecture, and enterprise performance.
Written for HR leaders, organizational psychologists, executives, consultants, and advanced practitioners, this book replaces management enthusiasm with analytical discipline and replaces fashionable frameworks with evidence-based thinking about organizational capability.
If you care less about having competency frameworks and more about building real organizational capability, this book will change how you think about HR practice, workforce development, and performance management.
Part of the Vita Viri Organization & People series exploring organizational capability, leadership, work systems, HR strategy, and institutional design.