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Elaine Page

Chief People Officer

TaxJar

Episode 256

From Cost Center to Profit Driver: HR's Path to Strategic Business Impact

0:0015:15

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

Built By PeopleBuilt By People
Podcast

March 26, 2025 · 15:15

HR LeadershipBusiness AcumenPerformance ManagementOrganizational Transformation

Thesis

HR leaders must deeply integrate people strategy with business outcomes, especially financial performance, by developing strong business acumen and fostering proactive, solution-oriented HR partnerships that drive measurable value.

Show notes

Title: TRANSFORM EPISODE: Elaine Page, Chief People Officer at TaxJar Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 09:00:00 GMT Duration: 00:15:15 Link: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/previ/episodes/TRANSFORM-EPISODE-Elaine-Page--Chief-People-Officer-at-TaxJar-e307epb GUID: 8075cb74-d50b-4823-b2b9-48a2731abd18 ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Elaine Page once ran a multimillion-dollar P&L. It fundamentally changed how she does HR — and she thinks every serious HR leader should do the same, or something close to it.

With a career spanning DaVita, PepsiCo, Dun & Bradstreet, Northwell Health, Stripe, and TaxJar, Elaine has developed a precise thesis about what separates good HR from transformative HR: financial fluency. Not familiarity — fluency. Understanding how the company makes money, what drives cost, where margin lives, and how every people decision ripples through the P&L. When HR leaders speak that language, people strategy stops being a "nice-to-have" and becomes a "must." Her experience as a GM — owning revenue and operations, not just supporting the people who do — gave her a vantage point that reshaped everything from how she thinks about performance management to how she evaluates HR business partner effectiveness.

Her standard for HR business partners is high and specific: not advisors, not policy consultants, but true collaborators who bring solutions aligned with business outcomes. The difference between effective and ineffective HRBPs, she argues, is the ability to add measurable value — not just to be present in the room. Her performance management philosophy is equally direct: clarity is everything, and once-a-year evaluations are an artifact of a different era. Continuous conversations, quarterly calibrations, and real-time feedback are the infrastructure of high-performing teams.

What you'll learn:

  • Why running a P&L transformed Elaine's view of HR — and what she'd recommend for HR leaders who haven't done it
  • How to align people strategy with financial performance to move HR from optional to essential
  • The step-by-step approach to developing genuine business acumen as an HR professional
  • What separates a truly effective HR business partner from a transactional one
  • Why annual performance reviews are insufficient — and what continuous performance management actually looks like
  • How proactively investing in difficult workplace relationships becomes a long-term career advantage

This episode is in partnership with Transform. Check out their community here.

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What you'll take away

  1. 1HR leaders must understand the financial impact of every people decision, aligning people strategy with financial performance to move HR from a 'nice-to-have' to a 'must-have'.
  2. 2Performance management should be continuous and real-time, involving ongoing conversations and quarterly leadership calibrations, rather than relying solely on annual evaluations.
  3. 3HR professionals need to proactively develop business acumen by immersing themselves in company financials, revenue drivers, cost structures, and engaging in cross-functional collaboration, even by taking on operational projects.
  4. 4Great HR business partners are true collaborators who bring solutions aligned with business outcomes, understanding the business strategy and proactively contributing to company goals, moving beyond transactional support.
  5. 5Building strong, trusting relationships across the organization is paramount for collaboration, influence, and driving success; proactively addressing challenging relationships can be a career game-changer.

What most organizations get wrong

  • Business success is not just about profits and margins; it is fundamentally about people, and the misconception that the two are separate disconnects HR from crucial business drivers.

In Elaine's words

everything is figureoutable.

This quote encapsulates a resilient and problem-solving mindset essential for effective leadership in any role.

you never should say you have a problem, and that you should always reframe things to say you have a challenge to be solved.

It highlights a powerful psychological shift in approaching obstacles, fostering a proactive and solution-oriented culture.

When you align people strategy with financial performance, it moves beyond this nice-to-have thing to say and into something that's just a must.

This statement articulates the core argument for HR's strategic importance and its direct link to business success.

Clarity is everything to the team, and it's not enough to simply evaluate performance once a year.

It emphasizes the critical need for continuous, transparent communication and feedback in performance management for sustained engagement and accountability.

HR pros, you have to understand how your company makes money. I mean, really understand it.

This is a direct and actionable call for HR professionals to develop deep business acumen, crucial for strategic partnership.

A great HR business partner is a true collaborator. Right? They don't just provide advice and support. They bring solutions that are aligned with business outcomes.

This defines the critical differentiator of an effective HR business partner, focusing on measurable value and strategic alignment.

The problems this episode addresses

  • HR leaders often focus solely on the 'people side' (talent, culture, retention) without fully grasping the financial implications of their decisions, hindering strategic impact.
  • A lack of deep integration between HR initiatives and overall business objectives can make HR appear transactional or a 'nice-to-have' rather than a critical business driver.
  • Outdated annual performance review cycles fail to provide timely, actionable feedback, leading to disengaged employees and missed opportunities for course correction.
  • HR professionals sometimes operate in isolation, lacking a comprehensive understanding of business operations, revenue drivers, and financial metrics.
  • Ineffective HR business partnerships can become bottlenecks for the business when they are not proactive, solution-oriented, or deeply aligned with business needs.

In this episode

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

Built by People

Dave Zirin shares a little bit about his career journey

The Secret to Your Career Journey

Elena transitioned from HR leadership to running a P&L

Having Run a P&L

Being a GM has transformed your view of HR practices, business partnerships

GM on HR and Business Partners

Elaine says HR professionals need to develop business acumen

Six Steps to Develop Business Acumen

What do you think makes a great HR business partner and an ineffective one

What Makes a Great HR Business Partner?

Most common misconceptions HR professionals have about running a business are misconceptions

What are the most common misconceptions HR professionals have about running a business

Building strong, trusting relationships across your organization will pay off in the long run

The Power of Relationships

Elaine, thanks so much for joining us on Built by People podcast

Elaine on Being Built by People

Topics covered

Organizations and entities mentioned

Full transcript

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