Kit Krugman, SVP of People and Culture at Foursquare, joins to unpack what it really means to be a systems thinker in people leadership. She explains how to move beyond process for process's sake, design people systems that actually work together, and create the kind of vibrancy that drives both performance and connection. This is a conversation about how to think, not just how to operate—ideal for anyone building or leading modern people functions.
Key Takeaways
• Systems thinking helps people leaders see the entire ecosystem, not just isolated policies or tools.
• Moving from process-driven to principle-driven decisions builds trust and consistency without bureaucracy.
• Change management requires deciding between incremental evolution and disruptive redesign—both have a place.
• Performance cultures thrive when feedback is continuous, candid, and clearly tied to outcomes.
• Measuring "vibrancy" and connection creates a more meaningful signal than traditional engagement metrics.
Timestamped Highlights
[01:52] What systems thinking really means for people and culture leaders
[04:32] Why principles should outweigh policies when designing fair organizations
[08:39] How to balance incremental versus disruptive change
[13:01] The "post-PIP world" and diagnosing root causes in performance systems
[17:12] Reframing engagement as vibrancy—and how words shape culture
[25:34] Why people leaders must show strategic value instead of waiting for recognition
Memorable Moment
"I'm tired of the narrative that HR needs to be recognized as strategic. It's on us to show it—to build the evidence that we're driving massive value." — Kit Krugman
Pro Tip
If everything feels like it needs a new process, pause and map the system. The issue might not be the process—it might be the underlying philosophy or misaligned signals across your tools, policies, and people.
Call to Action
If this conversation challenged how you think about people systems, share it with a fellow leader and follow The Talent Tango on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Every episode explores how people, impact, and technology come together to shape better workplaces.