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From Facts to Impact: The Art of Storytelling in Interviews

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EPISODE 20 — From Facts to Impact: The Art of Storytelling in Interviews

Special Series: The Human Edge in the Job Market (Part 3 of 6)

The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 surveyed over a thousand companies and found that 39% of workers’ core skills will change by 2030. But the skills employers say are most essential right now — analytical thinking, resilience, leadership and social influence, creative thinking, empathy and active listening — aren’t the technical credentials on a resume. They’re the things you’ve been quietly building for twenty or thirty years and calling “just what I do.”

In Part 3 of The Human Edge in the Job Market, Ron Thurston walks through four questions designed to turn a vague sense of “I did good work” into something you can actually say out loud.

These four questions were built for interviews — but they work anywhere you need to articulate what you actually contributed: a performance review, a quarterly check-in, or a moment of self-doubt at the kitchen table at the end of a long week. This episode is for anyone in transition. And it’s also for the listener who is currently employed, currently questioning whether their work has been seen.

Question #1 — Who is better at their job today because of time they spent with you? Not who you trained officially. Not who reported to you on an org chart. Who is genuinely more capable, more confident, more clear on who they are as a professional — because you were in their life? That’s leadership and social influence. It’s one of the skills the WEF identified as essential. And most people have been doing it for free, often without anyone noticing.

Question #2 — What problem did you solve that nobody asked you to solve? The hardest one to claim, because by definition nobody assigned it to you. But you saw it. You acted. Something got better. An employer can hire someone to do what they’re told. What they cannot easily hire is someone who notices what nobody else is noticing — and does something about it.

Question #3 — What did the team do differently because of the standard you set? Not the policy. Not the procedure. The standard. The way people showed up, talked to each other, treated the work. Somebody set that. In a lot of cases, that somebody was you.

Question #4 — What would have been worse if you hadn’t been there? The hardest of the four — because it requires you to imagine your own absence. But it’s the most clarifying. When you can answer it honestly, you stop talking about a job title. You start talking about impact. And impact is what every hiring leader is trying to find.

“The market is full of people who can fill a role. What it cannot find enough of are people who show up with the kind of presence, judgment, and genuine investment in other people that you have been bringing to every room you’ve ever walked into. That is not a soft skill. That is the whole thing.”

🎧 Subscribe: ronthurston.com

📚 Ron’s Books:

Retail Prideamazon.com/dp/1544509456

Human Pridegeni.us/humanpride (the first four chapters are written for the person standing at this exact crossroads — trying to see their own work clearly enough to say it out loud)

🔗 Sources & Stats Referenced:


👤 Follow Ron:

LinkedIn — linkedin.com/in/ron-thurston

Instagram — @retailpride

Website — ronthurston.com

Episodes 18–23 are built for anyone in career transition — retail or otherwise. If you built something, lost a role, or you’re figuring out what’s next, this series is for you.

Next up — Episode 21: Polish Is the New Generic — How to Stand Out in an AI-Flooded Job Market

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