Summary: People over 50 hold the majority of wealth, make up a growing share of the workforce and bring cognitive and emotional advantages that younger employees simply haven’t had time to develop. Yet age remains the blind spot of most talent and DEI strategies.
Most organisations say they value experience, but their behaviour suggests the opposite.
Across developed economies, people over 50 hold the majority of wealth and make up a growing share of the workforce, yet they are consistently underrepresented in hiring, overlooked in development and often the first to be made redundant.
Age is one of your organisation’s most unappreciated assets and one of its biggest missed opportunities.
Experience is a cognitive advantage
By midlife, most professionals have encountered hundreds (if not thousands) of variations of the same underlying problems: difficult stakeholders, failing projects, market shifts, organisational politics.
This exposure builds pattern recognition. What ‘feels’ like instinct is often not instinct at all.
Studies of expert performance, from surgeons to chess players, show that rapid, confident decisions are driven by the brain recognising familiar patterns and retrieving solutions from long-term memory.
In practice, this means experienced employees are more likely to:
- Spot risks before they escalate
- Make decisions with less information
- Navigate complex interpersonal dynamics
- Know when not to act.
As we get older, our thinking becomes more efficient.
Hardship builds resilience and better judgment
Experience isn’t just cognitive. It’s emotional.
Except in rare cases, life exposes us to more hardship as we age: loss, illness, conflict, failure.
Studies consistently show that resilience increases as a result. What once felt overwhelming becomes manageable. Living through difficulty builds a kind of psychological armour we simply don’t have when we’re younger.
That changes how we behave at work. It means:
- Caring less about what others think and being more willing to speak up
- Standing your ground in difficult conversations, backing others when it matters
- Not being derailed by setbacks
- Making decisions with perspective, not panic
- Focusing on what actually matters rather than what simply feels urgent in the moment.
In environments defined by pressure and uncertainty, these aren’t ‘soft’ skills, they’re essential.
Rapid, confident decisions are driven by the brain recognising familiar patterns and retrieving solutions from long-term memory
Give innovation a boost
One of the most persistent assumptions in business is that innovation belongs to the young.
Economist David Galenson has shown that while some innovators peak early, many of the most significant breakthroughs come from “experimental innovators” – the people whose ideas are built over years of trial, refinement and accumulated insight.
Innovation isn’t just about generating ideas. It’s about knowing which ideas will work and which won’t.
It’s about connecting ideas and navigating the realities of implementation. All skills that require experience. You may be starting to sense a theme…
Youth isn’t the default
We’ve known about the ageing workforce since the 1960s. So, why are we still failing to act?
Populations are ageing. People are living longer, working longer and controlling an increasing share of wealth and spending.
Despite all of this, research shows that around 70 per cent of business leaders don’t include age in their diversity and inclusion initiatives at all, with nearly half (48 per cent) admitting other aspects of diversity feel more pressing, and one-third (33 per cent) saying age simply isn’t important.
This is despite 83 per cent of those same leaders acknowledging that an age-diverse workforce is important for business success.
Organisations still design both their workforces and products as if youth is the default:
- In the consumer world, this misalignment shows up as missed growth
- In the employment world, it shows up as weaker decisions and repeated mistakes.
In both cases, organisations are not just overlooking experience, they are actively underutilising one of their most valuable assets.
Around 70 per cent of business leaders don’t include age in their diversity and inclusion initiatives at all
Rethinking how value is created
Some organisations are starting to recognise this, but I’d argue most are not moving fast enough.
If organisations are serious about treating age as an asset, the changes required are not complicated – but they might feel uncomfortable.
- Invest in development across the lifespan: We see the graduate schemes – now build and show me the career changer programmes
- Bring age to the table: Let’s talk about how experience changes what people want from work. If we can’t talk about age, how can we understand its impacts and how it shapes what we want and need?
- Stop rewarding presence over performance: Five days in the office is not a proxy for value, outputs are.
Design roles around what people deliver, not how long they sit at a desk. As we age, people increasingly value flexibility and the need to balance out their time with their personal responsibilities. - Stop assuming managers should control careers: Many people won’t tell their manager they’re bored or want a change, so they say nothing, and then leave.
Give employees the space and ownership to shape their own path.
It’s up to you
The opportunity to lead on this is wide open. Most organisations are still waiting to see what others do.
The organisations that get this right will build stronger, more resilient workforces. The ones that don’t will keep repeating the same mistakes: confusing potential with performance and removing the very people who could make the difference.
This isn’t about a lack of money or talent. It’s about leadership: who is willing to challenge the status quo, and who is not.
Which side are you on?
Actionable insights
1. Check for age bias: If people over 50 are consistently missing from your hiring, promotion and redundancy data, there’s a pattern that needs to be addressed.
2. Ensure age is in your DEI strategy: If it’s not explicitly included, it won’t be prioritised.
3. Invest in mid and late-career development: While graduate schemes exist, what’s the equivalent for someone at year 20 of their career? If the answer is nothing, that’s your starting point.
If you found this article interesting, check out: Promotion burnout: Are women less motivated to pursue promotions than two years ago?



