In professional sport, victory depends on how well a team recruits, develops, and retains its players. In corporate life, the same principle applies, yet few organizations approach talent management with the precision of a football academy.
That contrast lies at the heart of a new study by Dr. Sarvan Ghisaidoobe, a Dutch researcher whose work blends economics, behavioral psychology, and sports science. His paper, From the Football Field to the Boardroom, argues that businesses could dramatically improve retention and performance if they adopted the systematic, data-driven talent models used in elite sport.
The Scouting Paradox
Modern companies, Ghisaidoobe observes, still recruit reactively. “Most firms don’t scout; they panic-hire,” he writes. “Vacancies trigger searches rather than strategies.”
By contrast, football clubs operate on a continuous scouting cycle. Academies identify prospects years before the first team needs them. Coaches assess potential, not immediate output. “Every professional club knows who its next left-back will be,” Ghisaidoobe told the London daily post. Most corporations don’t know who will lead a department next spring.
The numbers underline the problem. According to Dutch labour-market data, one in five employees switches employers every year, while a 2024 Gallup report found that 42 percent of voluntary turnover could have been prevented through stronger leadership and clearer development pathways. In economic terms, the cost of replacing a skilled worker typically equals 30 percent of annual salary a burden that compounds across entire organizations.
Lessons from the Locker Room
Ghisaidoobe’s thesis borrows directly from the layered composition of professional teams. Football squads are built from youth players, breakthrough players, core players, senior professionals, and star performers.
He translates this into the corporate world as apprentices, juniors, mediors, seniors, and executives, each with defined expectations and advancement criteria. “It’s not a hierarchy of power,” he explains. “It’s a hierarchy of growth.”
In elite sport, success comes from maintaining balance among those layers: fresh energy from youth, stability from veterans, and vision from leadership. “A company without young prospects is like a team without a bench,” Ghisaidoobe notes. “Eventually, it runs out of substitutes.”
The Economics of Loyalty
The Dutch Football Association (KNVB) reports that around 60 percent of professional players in the Eredivisie are home-trained within club academies. Ghisaidoobe argues that similar internal development programs could help firms reduce turnover by comparable margins.
His data simulations suggest that if a medium-sized company (200 employees) increased internal promotion rates by just 10 percent, it could save the equivalent of €400,000 annually in recruitment and onboarding costs, without counting productivity gains.
Yet such investment demands patience. The average Dutch employee remains with a company for about 7.5 years, roughly the same duration as a professional football career. “That’s long enough to build an internal league of loyalty,” he writes, “if organizations treat employees as developing athletes, not replaceable units.”
Promotion and the Psychology of Growth
One of the study’s more provocative findings concerns “promotion hesitation.” Ghisaidoobe argues that corporations frequently lose high potential staff not because of over promotion but under-promotion.
“When a player performs above his level, the manager promotes him to test higher performance,” he explains. “In business, we wait until there’s a vacancy.”
Employees who perceive no visible path forward are three times more likely to quit within a year, according to a 2023 PwC workforce report. Sports academies, by contrast, define progress explicitly U17 to U19 to reserve squad, making ambition SMART, measurable and achievable.
Building Corporate Academies
Some corporations are beginning to adopt what Ghisaidoobe calls “the academy mindset.” Major European firms such as Siemens, Airbus, and Unilever now run internal rotation schemes modeled on youth academies: trainees move across departments, receive structured mentoring, and graduate into specialist roles.
Yet most industries remain heavily reliant on external recruiters. “Football clubs never outsource their scouting completely,” Ghisaidoobe notes. “They know their DNA, companies should too.”
The model may sound idealistic, but longitudinal HR studies suggest otherwise: organizations that invest in internal learning frameworks achieve 20 to 40 percent higher retention within five years.
The Broader Implication
Ghisaidoobe’s argument reaches beyond HR policy. It touches on how organizations define success itself. Sports teams invest in people long before profit; they measure outcomes collectively, not transactionally. “Corporate culture tends to reward immediate output,” he says, “while sport rewards consistent development. Over time, the latter always wins.”
His conclusion is disarmingly simple: treat employees as athletes in training. Identify potential early, design transparent growth ladders, and build succession plans long before crises emerge.
“Stop hiring teams,” Dr. Ghisaidoobe tells me as our interview ends. “Start building them.”
It’s a line that reads as both management advice and moral challenge, a reminder that the future of work, like sport, belongs to those who train for it.


























