HR Isn’t Just Support Anymore. It’s Running the Show Behind the Scenes
Think HR is just admin? Try scaling your company without it.
Featuring insights from Cierra Olson, Head of People Operations at DOOR
Most leadership teams view HR as a necessary support function—a mix of policy-making, compliance, hiring, and employee experience. But in high-growth organizations, that definition is dangerously outdated.
In a recent conversation with Cierra Olson, Head of People Operations at DOOR, a different reality emerged: HR is the enablement layer of the organization. When HR fails to operate with this mindset, business strategy doesn’t just fail in theory—it fails in execution.
1. Execution, Not Ideas, Determines Success
Most executive teams assume that designing a strategy is the hardest part of scaling a company. It isn't. Execution is.
According to McKinsey, companies that tightly align their people strategy with their business strategy significantly outperform their peers in both productivity and profitability. Yet, alignment alone guarantees nothing. Without rigorous operational discipline, even the most brilliant people strategies collapse during implementation.
HR is either the structural system that holds a scaling company together, or the invisible bottleneck that quietly slows it down.
2. HR Must Behave Like an Operational Efficiency Function
Olson’s approach to human resources is deeply operational. Before leading people teams in high-growth startups, she transitioned from education into building HR departments from scratch—ultimately helping scale an organization from 25 employees to over 1,000.
That experience solidified a core belief: HR only works when it operates as an execution function, not an administrative one.
In practice, this means HR must stop acting like a service desk and start operating like an embedded project management system. This requires HR to actively:
Own the Timelines: Driving the schedule for organizational change.
Coordinate Cross-Functionally: Synchronizing execution across the entire leadership team.
Track Accountability: Measuring commitments and ensuring rigorous follow-through.
Translate Decisions into Action: Turning high-level executive ideas into ground-level reality.
In fast-scaling companies, ambiguity is a constant threat. Without structured execution, great strategies quickly buckle under the weight of their own complexity.
3. The Most Underestimated HR Skill: Organizational Negotiation
One of the most overlooked capabilities in HR leadership isn’t managing salary negotiations—it’s navigating organizational negotiation.
Olson emphasizes that modern HR leaders must possess the business acumen to influence executives, challenge deep-seated assumptions, and align competing priorities across departments in real time. Without this skill, HR remains purely reactive.
Research from the Harvard Business Review confirms that influence and negotiation are the most critical skills for leaders in complex, fast-moving organizations. HR doesn’t just implement decisions; it actively shapes them to ensure they are clear, aligned, and executable.
4. Trust Is Built in Execution, Not Meetings
While "trust" is often discussed as a soft, cultural value, in high-performing companies, it functions as an operational output.
Olson notes that trust with the C-suite isn't built through polite agreement or conceptual alignment. It is forged through consistency. When HR commits to a deliverable, it must execute on time, at a high standard, and without exception.
[Consistent, High-Quality Delivery] ➔ [Executive Trust] ➔ [Early Strategic Inclusion]
This reliability determines whether HR is invited to the table to shape future strategy, or brought in after the damage is done. The impact is measurable: Gallup data shows that organizations with high trust in leadership see vastly superior employee engagement and performance outcomes. Trust isn't emotional; it's structural.
5. The Two-Way Translation Layer
Unlike almost any other department, HR is required to communicate and translate in two directions simultaneously:
| Direction | Role |
| Upward Translation | Converting high-level business strategy into actionable people execution. |
| Downward Translation | Channeling the reality of the employee experience back into executive decisions. |
When this translation layer works perfectly, strategy becomes actionable. When it breaks down, misalignment spreads like wildfire—especially in volatile, high-growth environments where change is the only constant.
6. Change Management Is the Ultimate Test
At the heart of HR’s modern mandate is change management—handling restructuring, hyper-scaling, leadership transitions, and cultural evolution.
Too many organizations treat change as a communication challenge rather than an execution challenge. Olson stresses that sustainable change requires structure, clear ownership, and strict accountability, not just a well-worded email announcement. Without operational discipline, even the most inspiring corporate transformations stall out.
HR is rarely failing because it lacks good ideas; it fails when it lacks execution discipline.
The most effective HR leaders today view themselves as internal project managers. They are the ones turning strategy into action, driving accountability across teams, and building trust through reliable delivery rather than good intentions.
In the modern business landscape, strategy is rarely scarce. Execution is. And HR is precisely where execution either holds the company together or quietly lets it break.

