The People Strategist Who Thinks Beyond HR Functions
Darya Chadha
HR Director
The People Strategist Who Thinks Beyond HR Functions
Darya Chadha
HR Director
A construction site, a pharmaceutical business, and a maritime shipping operation appear to have very little in common. The pace is different, the regulations are different, and the workforce challenges often look completely unrelated. Yet moving across those worlds taught
Darya Chadha something unexpected. Most organisational problems eventually become people problems. Today, as Human Resources Director at East DSK Contracting LLC, Darya Chadha draws on nearly twenty years of experience across industries where performance, compliance, safety, and execution leave little room for error. Working in such varied environments sharpened her understanding of what truly holds organisations together when pressure increases. Long after systems, structures, and strategies are put in place, success often depends on trust, accountability, and the quality of human relationships. In a conversation with TradeFlock, Darya Chadha discusses the leadership lessons that have remained constant throughout a career spent navigating very different industries.
One thing that has always struck me is how little my answer to this question has changed. I’ve worked across the petrochemicals, pharmaceuticals, maritime shipping, and construction industries, which operate very differently from one another. Yet the factors that make people enjoy coming to work remain surprisingly consistent.
People want to trust their leaders, feel respected by their colleagues, and know that their contributions matter. While compensation and benefits are important, they rarely determine how people feel about a workplace on their own.
Many organisations look for industry-specific answers to engagement and culture challenges. My experience has been that most workplace issues are fundamentally human. When people feel supported, challenged, and trusted to do meaningful work, strong cultures tend to develop naturally, and performance usually follows.
Many organisations assume retention is primarily about compensation or benefits. I have found that people are more likely to stay when they feel understood. A common mistake is assuming everyone wants the same career path. Some people are motivated by leadership opportunities, others by technical expertise, flexibility, learning, or new challenges. Treating those ambitions as identical often leads to frustration.
We have had better results by starting with individual goals and then aligning opportunities around them. Conversations become more meaningful because people can see how their personal aspirations connect with the work they are doing. Trust also depends on psychological safety. Employees need space to ask questions, share ideas, and acknowledge mistakes without fear of judgment. When trust, autonomy, and recognition come together, retention becomes a natural outcome rather than a separate initiative.
I would move away from the idea that people can be managed through standardised programs and processes. Consistency has its place, but employees are not identical, and neither are their ambitions. Organisations often design people practices around efficiency, then expect everyone to respond in the same way. Reality rarely works like that. Individuals bring different motivations, strengths, learning styles, and career goals to work.
The companies that stand out are usually the ones that take the time to understand those differences. Employees increasingly expect support that feels relevant to their own aspirations rather than generic development frameworks. The future of people management is not about creating more policies. It is about creating more understanding. Organisations that align individual growth with business goals will build stronger cultures, retain talent longer, and achieve better outcomes over time.
The hardest decisions have never involved poor performers. They have involved talented, loyal, and respected individuals whose behaviour or mindset no longer aligns with the team’s direction.
Those situations are difficult because there is often genuine appreciation for the person and their contributions. At the same time, leaders have a responsibility that extends beyond any single individual. Team culture is fragile, and small misalignments can gradually influence accountability, collaboration, and trust.
One lesson leadership has reinforced repeatedly is that delaying difficult decisions rarely makes them easier. In most cases, it creates a larger challenge later. Protecting the long-term health of the team sometimes requires uncomfortable choices, even when they involve good people. Ultimately, the decision must favour the team and the culture you are trying to build.
The most interesting shift is that AI is beginning to move beyond assistance and into execution. Organisations are no longer using technology solely to automate administrative tasks. AI is helping identify workforce trends, anticipate capability gaps, forecast retention risks, and support planning decisions much earlier than before. This transition changes HR’s role because instead of spending time collecting information, teams can now focus on interpreting insights and taking action. Workforce intelligence is becoming increasingly valuable because it allows leaders to make decisions based on emerging patterns rather than historical reports.
Technology will continue becoming more sophisticated, but its value still depends on human judgment. The organisations that benefit most will not be those with the most tools. They will be the ones who combine digital intelligence with thoughtful leadership and a clear understanding of people.