The Corporate Polo Shirt: A Uniform Built for No One

corporate branded apparel

At some point in the evolution of the workplace, someone decided that the polo shirt was the ideal canvas for a company logo. That decision has never really been questioned since.

The “company polo” became a mainstay of corporate life; as immutable as mandatory fun and the phrase “circling back.” If your organization has ever launched an employee recognition program, onboarded a new team member, had employees attend a conference together, or celebrated a milestone of any kind, there’s a near-certainty that polo shirts were involved. Piled into boxes and handed out by enthusiastic Marketing and HR staffers with genuine enthusiasm, they were accepted by employees with the kind of polite smile that doesn’t quite reach the eyes.

The polo shirt is, in theory, business casual. In practice, it is neither business nor casual, but rather a garment suspended in an uncomfortable liminal zone where formality and leisure cancel each other out and produce something that flatters essentially no one. Not the tall person whose torso it skims in all the wrong places, not the shorter person swimming in a size that was probably the only one left, and, let’s be honest, not even the tennis player or golfer, for whom the polo was ostensibly designed.

And yet, here we are. Every fiscal year, organizations spend real money – budget that could theoretically fund professional development, or better coffee, or at minimum a modestly improved onboarding experience – on polo shirts. Stiff, heavy polo shirts in colors selected by committee, embroidered with a logo that will be permanently affixed to the left breast, which is, without exception, the exact wrong location for approximately every human body it encounters.

The Fabric Problem

Let’s start with construction, because the fabric deserves its own reckoning. The traditional corporate polo tends toward a heavy pique cotton that’s designed to hold its shape and project a certain… seriousness of purpose, I suppose. It is also, in practice, quite warm; particularly delightful in the summer months when your organization decides to send everyone to an outdoor event in matching polos, and they all spend the afternoon wilting in unison. And if the organization has moved toward the more “modern” moisture-wicking performance fabric – the kind that’s marketed as breathable and athletic – the experience is not meaningfully better, because that fabric will cling in ways that feel deeply personal. (And is rarely flattering to anyone who is not actively competing in a triathlon).

The Neckline Problem

Then there’s the neckline, which is to say: the placket. That two-to-three-inch strip of buttons sitting at the collar, rubbing against your neck with the persistence of a minor grievance. For anyone who has worn a polo for more than two hours, that placket becomes impossible to ignore; a low-grade irritant that you keep trying to adjust, unconsciously, approximately every eighteen minutes throughout the event. It’s the kind of design detail that makes you understand, at a visceral level, why turtlenecks need to have a revival.

Women, in particular, have reached a kind of collective, unspoken consensus on the polo neckline, and that consensus is not favorable. The collar sits at an awkward height, neither open enough to be comfortable nor structured enough to look deliberate, and the buttons suggest a formality that the rest of the shirt doesn’t quite support. It’s a highly unflattering neckline that commits to nothing while simultaneously managing to irritate everyone.

The Logo Problem

And then we arrive at the logo; the whole reason we’re here and the very point of the shirt’s existence.  The logo is embroidered with careful precision onto the left breast and placed, through some alchemy of garment sizing and human biology, in a location that is uniquely – and reliably! – wrong for women across the full spectrum of body types, ages, and sizes. It’s too high on one person, too low on another, and occasionally landing in a spot so anatomically nipple-specific that it becomes a conversation starter in itself.

The logo, to be clear, is not the problem; it merely has the reasonable ambition to represent the company brand. It’s the placement of the logo that raises the question of whether anyone involved in this process has ever worn one of these shirts, or whether the decision-making happened entirely as an abstract exercise.

Safe, Not Strategic

Now the impulse behind giving people corporate branded apparel – shirts, bags, mugs, whatever – is a fundamentally nice human gesture. There’s warmth in it and organizations that invest in belonging and shared identity are doing something meaningful. The intent behind the polo is not the problem.

The problem is that the polo has become the default because it feels “safe”. Oh, it’s undoubtedly the “best practice” of corporate swag; no one gets fired for ordering polo shirts, no one raises an eyebrow, and no one challenges the assumption that this is simply what you do. So, the purchase requisition gets approved, the shirts are ordered in bulk, they arrive 14-17 business days later, and they’re distributed by already-overworked department supervisors. Each employee takes the shirt home and shoves it in the bottom drawer of a dresser where it is destined to reside for eternity with an occasional appearance for either yard work or the casual Friday when every other wardrobe option is in the laundry.

But if organizations are willing to think critically about engagement strategy and employee experience and about whether their systems and processes meet the needs of the people using them (and most organizations will tell you they are), then perhaps it’s not too radical to extend that thinking to the corporate polo shirt. To ask before placing the default order:

  • Does this represent ALL of us?
  • Does anyone even want to wear this style/color/fabric?
  • Does this shirt make the people wearing it feel good?
  • Does it fit and/or flatter the range of bodies on our team … or just the theoretical average (male) body someone was imagining?

The Corporate Polo Shirt endures because no one has asked, for 50+ years, whether it should continue to do so. And that, if you’ll forgive my pointing it out, is a very HR thing to do.

HR Career Realignment: Ditch the Logo, Chase the Impact

HR career realignment

For decades, HR professionals have played an unspoken career game: chase the biggest logo you can land. The assumption baked into this – that working for a massive, household-name enterprise signals intelligence and ambition, while toiling at a mid-market privately-held bank or a 300-employee hospitality group signals something lesser – has shaped career decisions, résumé choices, and professional identities across the field. Nobody wrote this rule down because nobody had to.

It’s OK to acknowledge this weird ego-driven reality, as well as realize that it doesn’t just play out on the coasts. Even in middle America, if you’re in a city of 70,000, the “prestigious” (and coveted) HR gigs will be those at the regional medical center, community college or lone remaining name-brand manufacturer as opposed to the family-owned home building company.

And we are currently at yet another work and tech inflection point – one that, like early 2020, has the potential to reorder nearly everything we thought we knew about how work functions, and fast. As agentic AI – autonomous systems that can execute complex projects rather than just answer prompts – becomes standard in 2026, I predict that the “prestige” of the enterprise HR role is evaporating.

I believe that in a swiftly coming reversal of all we have previously believed, HR professionals will soon be clamoring to work for Small and Medium Businesses (SMBs) and mid-market organizations and backing away from enterprise giants.

Let me tell you why.

The Enterprise Efficiency Trap: Math That Eliminates You

Imagine you’re an HR Manager, an HRBP, or an HR Generalist (whatever moniker they’ve assigned you) working for a large enterprise with 100,000 employees. Using a headcount calculation in a shared services model that also has HR Centers of Excellence, there is roughly one HR staffer for every 300 employees. That puts the total HR population at around 333 people, with perhaps 175 of those being you and your fellow HRBPs.

In this environment, each of those 175 HR Managers might spend seven hours a week on repetitive administrative tasks — data entry, routine inquiries, performance review tracking. With the agentic revolution, companies can now deploy AI to take over these tasks, compressing seven hours of work into roughly 20 minutes of oversight. Speakers at HR conferences and various HR pundits tend to call this the “strategic dream,” but the enterprise reality looks considerably different.

Saving seven hours per week across 175 managers equals 1,225 hours – the equivalent of more than 30 full-time HR positions. Jittery CEOs, eager to reassure boards in an uncertain economy, will use these efficiencies to justify headcount cuts, and the end result is that you either absorb a much larger, more stressful territory with no increase in pay, or you discover you’ve been replaced by the very software that promised to free you.

The SMB Sweet Spot: Scale That Protects You

Now in an SMB or mid-market firm – think organizations in the range of 100 to 999 employees – the math is entirely different. These organizations often operate with a tighter ratio, perhaps 1:50, meaning a company of 150 people might have a small, dedicated HR team of three or four people. In these environments, AI is deployed to improve the work rather than eliminate the worker, and the reasons why are worth understanding.

When AI saves time on administrative tasks for a three-person HR department, the time recovered simply doesn’t reach the threshold of elimination for a full-time position. That said, the time freed up also just doesn’t disappear into a spreadsheet, but rather gets redirected into genuinely high-value work: culture building, employee retention, and organizational effectiveness. SMBs will continue to rely more heavily on human judgment to navigate performance issues, mental health conversations, and interpersonal conflict – all those areas where AI still lacks the nuance and empathy that HR work demands.

From Transactional Partner to Human Capital Consultant

This realignment isn’t just about job security, though. It’s also about job fulfillment.

A Mercer survey just two years ago found that nearly half of HR Business Partners felt more like “transaction partners” than strategic advisors – and that was before AI accelerated the commodification of routine HR work. In my estimation, the most exciting roles emerging right now may be in mid-market firms, where HR can finally evolve into something closer to a Human Capital Consultant: someone who uses Generative AI (GAI) to process and interpret talent data, who acts as a genuine strategic partner to senior leadership, and who is adept at translating people data into the business actions that leaders will take.

The concept of antifragility is worth naming here – the need to develop HR professionals who don’t just withstand disruption but grow stronger because of it. That’s the kind of work that requires a human being who understands an organization’s culture, history, and people – not the kind of work that scales nicely into some sort of workflow automation.

The New Career Currency: AI Adaptability

To thrive in this realigned market, it’s time to recalibrate what career success looks like for HR professionals which includes recognizing the logo on your resume matters considerably less than your digital agility. The good news is that making this shift to AI adaptability isn’t as daunting as it sounds.

Prompt engineering, for instance, sounds intimidating until you realize it’s essentially learning to give very precise instructions – something HR has been doing for decades (am I right?) just usually with managers instead of machines. Learning to design refined AI instructions for functions like recruitment screening or engagement analysis is a skill that transfers quickly and pays dividends fast. Beyond that, HR can lead the AI transformation by example; practically integrating GAI into everyday workflows and then telling that story to leadership (loud and proud!) and demonstrating, concretely, what the HR function is now capable of.

On the flip side, the ability to use explainable AI to understand things like attrition patterns and adjust the contributing factors for individual employees will become one of the most valuable skills in the profession. In an economy where organizational anxiety runs high and stability is a genuine competitive advantage, understanding staff retention (with precision!), is clearly much more than a soft skill.

The most important year of your HR career

The window to adapt, however, is brief, and the HR practitioner who understands what’s coming – and can navigate the shift with both strategic clarity and human judgment – will be the most valuable HR pro in the room. And while enterprise organizations are using AI to satisfy shareholders by thinning the herd, SMBs and mid-market firms are where AI is rapidly being used to empower HR to finally do the strategic, human-centric work we’ve always wanted to do.

It’s time to stop chasing the biggest logo and start chasing the biggest impact.

The Yard Sale Theory of Talent Optimization

yard sale theory of talent sharing strategy and optimization

Last Saturday I woke up at 5 AM, loaded my car with boxes of things I no longer needed, drove to a friend’s house, and spent the next eight hours standing in a driveway selling them to strangers. Five households, one location, and one shared mission: clear out the clutter, put useful things back into circulation and, ideally, make a few dollars in the process.

Whether you call it a rummage sale, a yard sale or a tag sale it was a glorified public purging. With Bloody Mary’s and mimosas.

And somewhere between pricing multiple sets of china and watching my friend Steph wrangle a 10 x 10 canopy tent it hit me: this is exactly what talent strategy should look like – and almost never does.

The Problem with How We Think About Talent

Most organizations treat people like inventory. You acquire them through a defined process, deploy them in a defined role, and when that role changes or simply no longer exists (or when the person’s skills no longer fit what the role requires) you either hold on to them too long out of inertia or you let them go. And sometimes you “manage them out,” which is a remarkably sanitized phrase for a genuinely horrible and painful process.

What we rarely do is ask the more interesting question: what if this person’s value lives somewhere else … and we can make that happen?  

The #1 yard sale principle is that one household’s overflow is another household’s treasure. The champagne flutes I was unloading had served their purpose in my home, but Vivie saw them and lit up. The (purple!) rolling suitcase Steph no longer needed was exactly what I’d been looking for so I got to take it home. Nothing was wasted and everything found its right place – not via a formal procurement process, but through proximity, transparency, and a little trust.

Now imagine applying that logic to talent management.

What If We Treated Skills Like Items on a Table?

Here’s my thought experiment: what if five, ten, or twenty companies in your industry – or simply in your geographic area – built the infrastructure for a talent sharing strategy the way our 5 households shared goods at that yard sale?

Here’s what that might look like:

A mid-sized manufacturer (Company A) in your region is winding down a major project, and their supply chain analysts are going to be underutilized for the next six months. Three miles away, a distribution company (Company D) is about to launch a new operation and is desperately trying to hire for precisely that skill set. Under the current model, the manufacturer quietly absorbs the cost of underutilization while the distributor scrambles to hire, onboard, and ramp someone new. Both companies lose. The employee, stuck in neutral at Company A, loses too.

But…in a talent-sharing model, a kind of regional skills exchange, Company A seconds those analysts to Company D for a defined period. Company D gets experienced contributors without the lead time of a traditional hire and Company A retains talent they’d otherwise lose to boredom or a better offer. And the employees themselves? They get exposure, growth and learning opportunities, and the signal that their organization sees them as people worth investing in rather than simply headcount to manage. Or manage out…..

This isn’t a radical idea. It’s actually a very old idea, borrowed from industries that have practiced it for years. Construction and film production have operated on project-based talent pools forever and consulting firms loan people across client engagements. The question is why this thinking hasn’t taken hold more broadly, and I’d argue it’s because most organizations are still operating on a model of talent ownership rather than talent stewardship.

A Few More Yard Sale Principles Worth Stealing

The talent-sharing consortium is the headline concept, but the rummage sale metaphor has a few more similarities:

  • Transparent pricing. At a yard sale, everything has a visible value. You walk up, see what’s there, and make a quick and immediate decision. Compare that to how most organizations communicate what skills they have, what roles need filling, and what development pathways exist internally. In too many companies, employees don’t know what opportunities exist two departments over, and managers don’t know what capabilities are sitting idle in the team next door. Internal talent marketplaces – the kind where employees can surface their skills and interests, and managers can see them – are the organizational equivalent of putting your items on the table and marking them to move.
  • The swap economy. Our group had a rule: if you saw something one of us was selling and you wanted it, just take it. No transaction to record on the tracking sheet, no negotiation, no venmo’ing – just a direct exchange between two people. That dynamic has a workforce analog in structured rotational programs, cross-functional project assignments, and what some organizations might call “talent loans.” When two teams agree to temporarily exchange contributors, both sides gain perspective and capability they couldn’t have built in isolation.
  • Early access for the regulars. We opened at 8 AM and by 7:15 AM people were already wandering up the driveway. (We let them look. We’re not monsters.) The point is that the most motivated buyers show up early, before the general public arrives, because they’re paying attention to the yard sale eco-system. Translated to talent strategy: the organizations that build authentic relationships with universities, coding bootcamps, trade programs, and community colleges, before they have an open req, will get access to people others haven’t found yet.  This is pipeline-building – the talent equivalent of showing up early.
  • Letting go of what no longer serves you. This one’s the hardest, and it’s where the analogy gets a little uncomfortable. Part of what makes a yard sale work is the willingness to honestly assess what still belongs in your house and what needs to find a new home. Organizations do this poorly – and in both directions. They hold on to structures, roles, and sometimes people long past the point of mutual benefit, and they also cut too quickly when things get tight thus losing institutional knowledge and relationships that took years to build. The discipline of the yard sale is the discipline of honest assessment: what is still providing me with satisfaction ,,, and what is just taking up space?

The Real Barrier Isn’t Logistics

I want to be clear that none of the concepts above are technically complicated. Talent-sharing consortia exist; a handful of forward-thinking organizations and regions have piloted them with notable success. Internal talent marketplaces have been built and rotational programs are not new.

The barrier isn’t figuring out the mechanics, but rather the underlying assumption that talent is a zero-sum game: i.e. “if I share my best people I lose, and if I let a competitor see what I have I’m exposed”.

That assumption made more sense in a world where skills were static and labor markets were local and slow-moving. But it makes considerably less sense now, when the half-life of a specific technical skill is shrinking, when the talent shortages in most industries are structural rather than cyclical, and when the organizations employees most want to work for are, increasingly, the ones that treat them like the complex, ambitious, multi-faceted humans they actually are.

There was a principle embedded in the way our little five-household sale worked that I keep coming back to: we all had more when we shared than we would have had if we’d each tried to sell separately. The foot traffic was better, the energy was off the charts, and the overall outcome was more than any of us expected.

It was talent optimization in action:  just with donuts, Bloody Marys, and a dozen folding tables.

Why Thursday Night Feels Like Friday Eve. And Always Has.

Thursday Friday workweek psychology

There’s a particular feeling that arrives every Thursday evening, somewhere around 5 p.m., that has nothing to do with the actual calendar. The week isn’t over, you still have a full workday ahead of you, and yet something shifts…quietly and reliably, like a dimmer switch being turned down just a notch. It’s the faint but unmistakable scent of “weekend” in the air.

This is not new.

This has, in fact, been going on for decades.

For as long as I can remember, Thursday night was the unofficial launchpad to fun. It was the night you felt safe saying ‘yes’ to after-work drinks. The beauty of Thursday at the watering hole near the office was that everyone would be mildly hungover – together – on Friday. Your boss, the guy from accounting, the woman who always cc’s too many people on emails – all of them, being equally human, would be equally compromised. There’s real workplace solidarity in that – a kind of shared understanding that nobody is going to be firing on all cylinders come 9 a.m. Friday, somehow makes the whole endeavor not just acceptable but practically responsible! (And yes; I realize I’m dating myself by having worked when “after work drinks” was a thing since, apparently, no one does this anymore).

Friday itself, meanwhile, evolved into a kind of gentlemen’s agreement. Fewer meetings, a leisurely lunch that stretches well past any reasonable window, and casual attire (back when that still meant something). And if the stars align – a federal holiday Monday gleaming on the horizon!! – practically everyone with accumulated PTO has already submitted their Friday absence request by Tuesday afternoon, because why wait? The office thins out, the pace slows, and a collective exhale settles over the whole floor like a light fog that nobody wants to disturb.

Calling it “the long weekend” means, of course, “we’ve been engineering this since the last holiday weekend.”

The Exception That Proves the Rule

That said, I should pause here and acknowledge, with some affection (and a fair amount of personal scar tissue) that not every industry gets to participate in this ritual.

Casinos, and I’ve worked at two, do not observe the Thursday-Friday social contract – not even a little. In hospitality and and gaming, Friday isn’t the day you quietly disappear; it’s the day everyone shows up. Guests are piling through the doors, senior leaders are doing walk-throughs in pressed shirts, and the whole elaborate production is running at full volume. If you want to schedule a meeting with every department head present and accounted for, you put it on a Friday or a Saturday, or a Sunday because they are there. Always there. Reliably there. In a way that feels almost defiant of the calendar rules that normal people live by.

The funny thing is, I have genuine affection for those industries, scar tissue and all. But they do operate on an entirely different rhythm, one where the weekend is something that happens to other people; the ones who work in offices with a parking lot that empties out by 3 p.m. on Fridays.

And yet here’s what’s interesting – even in those worlds, even among the people whose Fridays look more like everyone else’s Mondays, there’s still a Thursday feeling. There’s a small, private mental pivot and a quiet internal acknowledgment that something is about to change; even when the schedule says otherwise, the property is fully staffed, and the weekend rush is about to begin.

The Escape Hatch is Psychological

On the flip side, heading for the escape hatch is what’s really going on here, isn’t it? Thursday evening is about granting yourself permission – specifically the permission to mentally disengage from the week’s accumulated weight. Thursday gives you plausible deniability for, well, lots of things. You perhaps haven’t checked out and you’re still technically “present” … but you’ve quietly begun the psychological process of leaving.  Somewhere, along the way, we all silently agreed this was not only okay … but, more than likely, necessary.

Because if Friday is the off-ramp, then Thursday is when you start looking for the “Exit Here” sign.

Now, of course, with hybrid schedules and remote work reshaping the geography of the workweek, Friday has grown even more porous; we have half-day Fridays, no-meeting Fridays, and the slow creep of the four-day workweek experiment inching its way into more and more companies. Which perhaps explains why Thursday REALLY feels loaded with anticipation; it’s no longer just the kickoff to the weekend it’s the last real foothold before the whole structure loosens and people begin quietly migrating toward the version of “off” that exists for them now.

We’ve gotten more sophisticated about the escape, the tools are more varied and the justifications are more elaborate. The impulse itself, though, is as old as the office … which is to say, it’s probably not going anywhere.

Some things, it turns out, are genuinely immune to disruption.

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