Shifting People Strategies with Theresa Watts

Episode 16
About This Episode
In this episode of Reimagining Company Culture, we’re chatting with Theresa Watts, Vice President Human Resources at True Religion Brand Jeans. Theresa has years of experience in large Fortune 500 companies designing, developing, and delivering organizational curriculum.
About The Guest
Throughout her career, Theresa has worked as a Human Resources professional enhancing organizational capabilities for large Fortune 500 organizations. She has years of experience designing, developing, and delivering organizational curriculum. In her current role, as the Head of Human Resources, she is responsible for linking HR strategies with organizational and departmental processes and several key organizational development initiatives including: Recruitment and Retention Strategies, DEI, Initiating Action Learning Paradigms, Designing and Implementing Organizational Culture Shift Strategies, Management Change Initiatives, Leadership Development Initiatives, and Organizational Performance Improvement Strategies.
Episode Breakdown

On this episode of Reimagining Company Culture, we sat down with Theresa Watts, Vice President of Human Resources at True Religion Brand Jeans. Theresa has spent her career inside Fortune 500 HR teams designing organizational curriculum, running culture-shift initiatives, and leading change management. At True Religion she connects HR strategy with the operational decisions that shape how the company recruits, develops, and retains its workforce.

Theresa argued that most people strategies are still optimized for the workforce of the previous decade. The recruiting pipelines, the development tracks, the performance management cadences, the leadership programs. All of them assume tenures, ladders, and expectations that the current workforce no longer holds. She pushed back on the assumption that strategy refresh means major rip-and-replace work. The strongest companies refresh continuously by changing one or two operating cycles per year, not by reinventing the whole system every five.

That conversation matters because every people team is now in some version of a strategy refresh, and the ones that move steadily are pulling ahead of the ones that wait for the perfect plan.

Why People Strategy Refresh Often Stalls

The classic stall happens at the planning stage. A people team starts a strategy refresh, surveys the organization, runs a benchmarking exercise, and produces a multi-year roadmap. The roadmap looks impressive in the executive committee. The first year of execution gets crowded out by the operational work the team was already doing. By year two, the roadmap is a slide deck no one references.

The data on what good people strategy delivers is consistent. SHRM research finds that workers in positive cultures are nearly four times more likely to stay. Gallup research finds that companies with engaged employees see 17 percent higher productivity and 21 percent higher profitability. The case for investment is settled.

Companies that move past the planning stall do three things. They refresh one or two operating cycles per year instead of trying to redesign everything at once. They tie the refresh to a single executive owner with budget authority. And they instrument the impact so the next refresh has data, not intuition, behind it.

What Continuous People Strategy Refresh Looks Like

Which operating cycles produce the highest return when refreshed?

The hiring loop, the performance management cycle, and the manager development program. Each one touches every employee, runs on a predictable cadence, and produces measurable outcomes. Refreshing one per year for three years usually produces more impact than a single multi-year overhaul.

How do you keep the refresh from being constant disruption?

By scoping each cycle change carefully. Pick the smallest change that moves the metric you care about. Communicate the change in plain language. Give the organization six months to adapt before evaluating. The companies that produce sustainable change are the ones that respect the cost of change as much as they want the benefits of it.

What Actually Works: A Framework for People Strategy Refresh

Design principle one: pick one operating cycle per year

Trying to refresh everything at once produces change fatigue and missed execution. Pick one cycle, redesign it well, and let the organization absorb the change before starting the next one. Year one might be performance management. Year two might be hiring. Year three might be development.

Design principle two: instrument the impact before and after

Use employee surveys to baseline the experience before the change, then again after. Pair survey data with operational metrics that the cycle is supposed to move. The before-and-after comparison is what builds the case for the next refresh.

Design principle three: build case management infrastructure that catches what surveys miss

People strategy changes always produce winners and losers in the first year. Tools like HR case management let HR teams catch the friction signals early, intervene where the change is producing unintended harm, and refine the program before the next cycle.

Where Employee Relations Fits

Strong human resources programs treat ER as the early-warning system for strategy refresh work. Pattern data from cases shows where the new operating cycle is producing concerns and where it is working. That signal is faster than the engagement survey and more granular than the executive dashboard.

How does ER infrastructure support people strategy work?

By providing structured visibility into the experiences the strategy is creating. The complaint about the new performance review template. The cluster of concerns about hiring committee changes. The pattern of feedback about leadership development cohort experience. ER signals refine organizational culture work, inform talent management decisions, and protect employee engagement through transitions that always carry friction.

Frequently Asked Questions About People Strategy

How often should we refresh our people strategy?

Continuously, with one major operating cycle per year. The continuous-refresh model produces less disruption than the periodic-overhaul model and produces better outcomes because each cycle change has data behind it.

Who should own the strategy refresh?

The CHRO, with executive sponsorship from the CEO. Strategy refresh that lives below the CHRO struggles to compete for resourcing. Strategy refresh without CEO sponsorship gets cut when the next quarterly priority lands.

How do you balance refresh with operational stability?

By scoping changes tightly and protecting the cycles that are not being refreshed. The risk of strategy refresh is collateral damage to cycles that are working. Tight scoping limits the damage and keeps the refresh focused on the cycle that needs it most. For more on building leadership capacity for these transitions, see our piece on leadership skills.

What is the role of AI in modern people strategy?

It is the unlock for personalization at scale. AI cannot replace human judgment in HR, but it can extend the reach of a small people team across thousands of employees, surface patterns the team cannot see manually, and reduce the cost of running new programs. Used well, AI is the multiplier on every other strategy investment.

What is the single biggest mistake people teams make in strategy refresh?

Trying to do too much at once. The teams that produce sustained change refresh narrowly and execute well. The teams that produce slide decks try to refresh everything and execute none of it.

The Bottom Line for HR Leaders

Theresa's framing is the most useful corrective for any people team that has watched a strategy refresh stall. The fix is not a better roadmap. The fix is a tighter scope, a single owner, and the operational discipline to execute one cycle change well before starting the next one.

The companies that build that discipline produce people strategies that compound year over year. The companies that wait for the perfect plan produce slide decks that age and a workforce that notices the gap between what the team announced and what actually changed.

Steady refresh wins.

See how AllVoices helps HR teams build the listening and case management infrastructure that people strategy refresh depends on.

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See the power of AllVoices today
Thank you! We look forward to meeting you soon
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Shifting People Strategies with Theresa Watts
Episode 16
About This Episode
In this episode of Reimagining Company Culture, we’re chatting with Theresa Watts, Vice President Human Resources at True Religion Brand Jeans. Theresa has years of experience in large Fortune 500 companies designing, developing, and delivering organizational curriculum.
About The Guest
Throughout her career, Theresa has worked as a Human Resources professional enhancing organizational capabilities for large Fortune 500 organizations. She has years of experience designing, developing, and delivering organizational curriculum. In her current role, as the Head of Human Resources, she is responsible for linking HR strategies with organizational and departmental processes and several key organizational development initiatives including: Recruitment and Retention Strategies, DEI, Initiating Action Learning Paradigms, Designing and Implementing Organizational Culture Shift Strategies, Management Change Initiatives, Leadership Development Initiatives, and Organizational Performance Improvement Strategies.
Episode Transcription

On this episode of Reimagining Company Culture, we sat down with Theresa Watts, Vice President of Human Resources at True Religion Brand Jeans. Theresa has spent her career inside Fortune 500 HR teams designing organizational curriculum, running culture-shift initiatives, and leading change management. At True Religion she connects HR strategy with the operational decisions that shape how the company recruits, develops, and retains its workforce.

Theresa argued that most people strategies are still optimized for the workforce of the previous decade. The recruiting pipelines, the development tracks, the performance management cadences, the leadership programs. All of them assume tenures, ladders, and expectations that the current workforce no longer holds. She pushed back on the assumption that strategy refresh means major rip-and-replace work. The strongest companies refresh continuously by changing one or two operating cycles per year, not by reinventing the whole system every five.

That conversation matters because every people team is now in some version of a strategy refresh, and the ones that move steadily are pulling ahead of the ones that wait for the perfect plan.

Why People Strategy Refresh Often Stalls

The classic stall happens at the planning stage. A people team starts a strategy refresh, surveys the organization, runs a benchmarking exercise, and produces a multi-year roadmap. The roadmap looks impressive in the executive committee. The first year of execution gets crowded out by the operational work the team was already doing. By year two, the roadmap is a slide deck no one references.

The data on what good people strategy delivers is consistent. SHRM research finds that workers in positive cultures are nearly four times more likely to stay. Gallup research finds that companies with engaged employees see 17 percent higher productivity and 21 percent higher profitability. The case for investment is settled.

Companies that move past the planning stall do three things. They refresh one or two operating cycles per year instead of trying to redesign everything at once. They tie the refresh to a single executive owner with budget authority. And they instrument the impact so the next refresh has data, not intuition, behind it.

What Continuous People Strategy Refresh Looks Like

Which operating cycles produce the highest return when refreshed?

The hiring loop, the performance management cycle, and the manager development program. Each one touches every employee, runs on a predictable cadence, and produces measurable outcomes. Refreshing one per year for three years usually produces more impact than a single multi-year overhaul.

How do you keep the refresh from being constant disruption?

By scoping each cycle change carefully. Pick the smallest change that moves the metric you care about. Communicate the change in plain language. Give the organization six months to adapt before evaluating. The companies that produce sustainable change are the ones that respect the cost of change as much as they want the benefits of it.

What Actually Works: A Framework for People Strategy Refresh

Design principle one: pick one operating cycle per year

Trying to refresh everything at once produces change fatigue and missed execution. Pick one cycle, redesign it well, and let the organization absorb the change before starting the next one. Year one might be performance management. Year two might be hiring. Year three might be development.

Design principle two: instrument the impact before and after

Use employee surveys to baseline the experience before the change, then again after. Pair survey data with operational metrics that the cycle is supposed to move. The before-and-after comparison is what builds the case for the next refresh.

Design principle three: build case management infrastructure that catches what surveys miss

People strategy changes always produce winners and losers in the first year. Tools like HR case management let HR teams catch the friction signals early, intervene where the change is producing unintended harm, and refine the program before the next cycle.

Where Employee Relations Fits

Strong human resources programs treat ER as the early-warning system for strategy refresh work. Pattern data from cases shows where the new operating cycle is producing concerns and where it is working. That signal is faster than the engagement survey and more granular than the executive dashboard.

How does ER infrastructure support people strategy work?

By providing structured visibility into the experiences the strategy is creating. The complaint about the new performance review template. The cluster of concerns about hiring committee changes. The pattern of feedback about leadership development cohort experience. ER signals refine organizational culture work, inform talent management decisions, and protect employee engagement through transitions that always carry friction.

Frequently Asked Questions About People Strategy

How often should we refresh our people strategy?

Continuously, with one major operating cycle per year. The continuous-refresh model produces less disruption than the periodic-overhaul model and produces better outcomes because each cycle change has data behind it.

Who should own the strategy refresh?

The CHRO, with executive sponsorship from the CEO. Strategy refresh that lives below the CHRO struggles to compete for resourcing. Strategy refresh without CEO sponsorship gets cut when the next quarterly priority lands.

How do you balance refresh with operational stability?

By scoping changes tightly and protecting the cycles that are not being refreshed. The risk of strategy refresh is collateral damage to cycles that are working. Tight scoping limits the damage and keeps the refresh focused on the cycle that needs it most. For more on building leadership capacity for these transitions, see our piece on leadership skills.

What is the role of AI in modern people strategy?

It is the unlock for personalization at scale. AI cannot replace human judgment in HR, but it can extend the reach of a small people team across thousands of employees, surface patterns the team cannot see manually, and reduce the cost of running new programs. Used well, AI is the multiplier on every other strategy investment.

What is the single biggest mistake people teams make in strategy refresh?

Trying to do too much at once. The teams that produce sustained change refresh narrowly and execute well. The teams that produce slide decks try to refresh everything and execute none of it.

The Bottom Line for HR Leaders

Theresa's framing is the most useful corrective for any people team that has watched a strategy refresh stall. The fix is not a better roadmap. The fix is a tighter scope, a single owner, and the operational discipline to execute one cycle change well before starting the next one.

The companies that build that discipline produce people strategies that compound year over year. The companies that wait for the perfect plan produce slide decks that age and a workforce that notices the gap between what the team announced and what actually changed.

Steady refresh wins.

See how AllVoices helps HR teams build the listening and case management infrastructure that people strategy refresh depends on.

Want to learn more?
See the power of AllVoices today
Thank you! We look forward to meeting you soon
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Frequently asked questions

Got more questions? Email us at support@allvoices.co and we'll respond ASAP.

No items found.
Frequently asked questions

Got more questions? Email us at support@allvoices.co and we'll respond ASAP.

No items found.