← Back to Podcasts
Maura Stevenson headshot

Maura Stevenson

Chief HR Officer

MedVet

Episode 133

Why your HR strategy needs an adaptable point of view for real business impact.

0:0016:17

Current chapter: Built by People podcast features insights from world's top HR leaders

Built By PeopleBuilt By People
Podcast

June 24, 2025 · 16:17

Organizational PsychologyPeople AnalyticsTalent TransformationLeadership Development

Thesis

Effective HR leadership requires a strong, adaptable point of view, grounded in data and tailored to the specific organizational context, to build a cohesive talent agenda that drives culture, capability, and business growth. Progress is often nonlinear, necessitating strategic sequencing and transparent communication to achieve buy-in and measurable impact.

Show notes

Title: Maura Stevenson, Chief HR Officer at MedVet Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2025 09:00:00 GMT Duration: 00:16:17 Link: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/previ/episodes/Maura-Stevenson--Chief-HR-Officer-at-MedVet-e33jfmn GUID: cc9c1f27-b55e-43aa-8e54-0df423246ce7 ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Transforming Talent and Culture at Wendy’s with Maura Stevenson

In this episode of the Built by People Podcast, the host warmly welcomes Maura, who shares her unique career journey from organizational psychology to HR leadership. She delves into her pivotal role in implementing a talent transformation strategy at Wendy’s, which led to an 87% increase in EBITDA per director.

Maura discusses the context of Wendy’s refranchising process and the brand’s cultural evolution, outlining the importance of talent segmentation, executive assessments, and development frameworks.

She highlights the critical adaptations required for effective communication and gaining alignment within different organizational cultures.

Maura also shares results such as improved talent development and common language around talent, concluding with advice on being adaptable while maintaining a strategic point of view in HR transformations.

00:00 Welcome and Introduction

00:41 Career Journey and Early Roles

01:16 Challenges and Strategies at Wendy's

02:48 Talent Transformation Approach

04:30 Implementing Leadership Development

07:56 Adapting Strategies for Different Organizations

11:07 Measuring Success and Key Results

14:36 Parting Advice and Conclusion


Previ is a private pricing network that is free for companies to launch and maintain. It saves employees $2,200/year on essential services like their cell phone and auto insurance bill. ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Visit here to learn more⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.

What you'll take away

  1. 1HR initiatives must start by addressing immediate business needs and adapting to the specific organizational context to ensure alignment and effective implementation.
  2. 2Implement talent transformation strategies iteratively, beginning with foundational elements like succession planning and talent mapping, then introducing assessments, leadership development, and finally 360-degree feedback.
  3. 3Transparency, especially when delivering assessment feedback and development plans, is crucial for gaining buy-in and overcoming intimidation, particularly in organizations not accustomed to data-driven HR.
  4. 4Cultivate a common language and framework for talent management across the organization to ensure consistent understanding and a unified approach to development and growth.
  5. 5Senior leaders should role model participation in development initiatives, such as 360-degree feedback, to drive cultural adoption and accountability throughout the organization.

What most organizations get wrong

  • Maura challenges the conventional wisdom that top producers are often poor listeners, noting that in Wendy's collaborative culture, top talent was empirically rated as better listeners, a trait she hadn't seen in her Wall Street experience.

In Maura's words

I think I like to joke that I did people analytics before it was cool. So I really leverage that data component along with an understanding of people to build a career that has wound up in HR over time.

This quote highlights her unique, data-driven foundation in HR, predating the mainstream adoption of people analytics.

You have to start by meeting the business where they're at.

This emphasizes the critical importance of contextualizing HR strategies to address immediate organizational needs and gain buy-in.

I often say that none of us, including me, are nearly as good at identifying talent as we would like to think, that science could help us.

This statement powerfully advocates for the use of objective, scientific assessments over subjective intuition in talent identification and hiring.

Our top talent was rated as better at listening me, which is not always the case. I started my career on Wall Street, and I'm not sure back in the day some of your best producers would have been the best listeners, right?

This offers a counter-intuitive insight, suggesting that strong listening skills can be a significant differentiator for top talent in collaborative environments.

I think HR is hard, but HR is fun. And I think the key is to have a point of view coming into an organization, but not to be calcified in that point of view.

This provides core advice for HR leaders, balancing strategic direction with necessary flexibility and adaptability.

The trick is to get that progress and to have a game plan for how you're going to build that broader talent agenda, that common language, those set of connected initiatives that when you look at them holistically are gonna help the organization meet its business and growth goals.

This concisely summarizes the holistic and strategic approach required to integrate various HR initiatives for organizational impact.

The problems this episode addresses

  • Organizations struggle with insufficient bench strength and lack effective frameworks for segmenting talent based on potential, leading to underdeveloped leadership pipelines.
  • Hiring for growth potential is challenging, with reliance on intuition often hindering the acquisition of talent capable of evolving with business needs.
  • Cultural resistance and fear surrounding new HR initiatives, particularly psychological assessments, can impede adoption and necessitate careful change management and transparent communication.
  • Inconsistent language and understanding of talent concepts across leadership create misalignment and hinder a unified approach to talent management.
  • Demonstrating the direct ROI of people-centric HR initiatives is complex due to multiple variables, requiring robust data and thoughtful analysis.
  • Traditional organizational cultures may need to develop an 'execution and innovation mindset' among leaders to achieve brand transformation and business growth goals.

In this episode

Built by People podcast features insights from world's top HR leaders

Built by People

During your time at Wendy's, you implemented a talent transformation strategy

The Talent Transformation Strategy at Wendy's

Wendy's introduced 9-Block concept to segment talent based on potential

How Wendy's Transformed Talent

Wendy's developed a 360 to help leaders develop their leaders

How Wendy's Led a Brand Transformation and Development

Wendy's approach to talent development differs from that of MedVet

How To Approach Talent Development With Science

Wendy's did a talent transformation strategy to increase EBITDA

Wendy's Talent Transformation: Significant Results

Maura, what parting advice would you like to share with our community

A Lesson from The Built by People

Topics covered

Organizations and entities mentioned

Full transcript

Expand transcript (0 words)

Transcript is not available yet.