Metaptive Group

Build adaptation
through a flow of professions.

As shocks overlap, AI is making some professions disappear and others necessary — faster than anyone knows how to build them.

The isolated skill is a commodity. New complete professions built on — framework, instrument, protocols, practitioners — become the infrastructure to adapt.

Metaptive builds the professions that adaptation is missing.

Leaders perceive a reality they do not always name: shocks no longer succeed each other — they overlap. Regulatory, technological, environmental, societal. AI today, something else tomorrow, something else again the day after. This is not a crisis nor a transition — it is a permanent condition.

Shocks no longer succeed each other — they overlap. This is not a crisis nor a transition. It is a permanent condition.

Faced with this, organizations do what they know how to do: they name what they lack. Every year, new capabilities are identified, mapped, prioritized. They need to know how to steer sustainability. They need to know how to integrate AI. They need to know how to measure impact. Reports pile up. Maturity matrices multiply. And for each identified capability, the response is the same: a transversal role, a committee, cross-cutting governance.

Organizations do what they know how to do: they name what they lack. New competencies are identified. And for each identified competency, the response is the same: a transversal role, a committee, cross-cutting governance.

I have seen this mechanism at work for fifteen years. The more an organization feels it must adapt, the more roles it creates. The more roles it creates, the more governance it creates. The more governance it creates, the less it knows who does what, with what, for what result. Everyone is responsible. No one can act.

The more an organization feels it must adapt, the more roles it creates.

It is no one's fault. It is the logical response when the only tools available are the org chart and the steering committee. We work with what we have.

But the result is clear. Capabilities are named. The professions to exercise them do not exist.

A capability says what — what the organization should know how to do. It does not say who exercises it, with what instrument, according to what protocols. It puts no one in a chair, with a tool in hand and a clear mandate. It remains a strategic wish until there is, facing it, a profession built to make it practicable.

And these professions do not emerge on their own. Historically, a profession took ten, fifteen, twenty years to emerge. A company created a position, the position was repeated, schools eventually codified it, the profession existed. This circuit worked when shocks left time. When pressures overlap instead of succeeding each other, the circuit is broken.

Competencies are named. The professions to exercise them do not exist. It is a problem of absent profession.

So we organize: we mobilize consultants, we create a dedicated role, we acquire software. Each response covers a symptom. None solves the problem — because the problem is not where we are looking.

It is not a competency problem — people are trained, often brilliant. It is not a technology problem — tools exist, often in excess. It is not a strategy problem — leadership knows where it wants to go.

I have seen organizations pile up training, certify entire teams, map dozens of competencies — and observe that nothing changed. We had trained people in bricks. Without building the profession that assembles them. We had produced maturity matrices, roadmaps, impeccable reportings. We had produced declarative. Not proof.

Declarative says what we plan to do. Proof shows what we have actually produced as value. One fills dashboards. The other changes decisions. And in most organizations I have crossed, the ratio between the two is overwhelming — declarative everywhere, operational proof nowhere.

It is a problem of absent profession. The profession that would make a critical capability practicable — not nameable, not declarable, practicable — has never been built. And as long as it does not exist, we will continue to produce reportings on capabilities that no one exercises.

The construction of professions must become an activity in its own right.

Not consulting — consultants leave. Not training — training presupposes the profession exists. Not software — software is an instrument, not a profession. It is engineering. Design the framework, build the instrument, write the protocols, train the practitioners.

And this work will not stop at the first profession built.

Professions are no longer a stock. They are a flow.

For a century, organizational professions were permanent. The CFO, the CIO, the CHRO — built over decades, installed forever. A profession settled like a stone. It lasted.

That time is over.

AI compresses the lifecycle of professions. What took a decade to become obsolete is now measured in years. Adaptation needs change faster than professions are built. Some professions will appear and withdraw in less than a decade. Others will transform to the point of becoming unrecognizable. The organization no longer needs a stock of frozen professions. It needs a continuous flow of professions that emerge, evolve and withdraw at the pace of its adaptation needs.

It is not a threat — it is an engineering fact. And this fact makes the historical circuit of profession manufacturing definitively inadapted.

Capital needed a vehicle to deploy in companies. The market invented investment funds.

Organizations need a vehicle to build the professions that adaptation makes necessary.

That vehicle did not exist. So we created it.

Metaptive Group operates like a fund — but its thesis is not an investment thesis. It is an operationalization thesis.

Identify critical organizational capabilities that no one makes practicable — because the profession to exercise them was never built — then build the complete profession. Framework. Instrument. Protocols. Practitioners.

Build the complete profession. Framework. Instrument. Protocols. Practitioners.

But these professions are not conceived in a chamber. They are built on the ground.

Metaptive deploys an Operating Field alongside the organization. We bring competencies and protocols that the client does not have — because they do not exist yet on the market. We treat their concrete subjects with these novel means. And while we help them overcome their obstacles, we build: the competencies, instruments, protocols — even professions — that they lack.

What the organization lacks is not available on the market. It has never been built.

The client benefits from what already exists. Their ground makes emerge what will come.

But not everything that emerges from the ground becomes a profession. Each competency, each protocol forged on the ground is subject to a demanding filter: does what we just built justify a full-fledged profession — with its framework, its instrument, its practitioners? Most do not cross this threshold. They remain powerful intervention protocols, integrated into existing professions. Only those who cross it become complete professions.

Not everything that emerges from the ground becomes a profession. That is what distinguishes a conviction fund from an agency that says yes to everything.

Unlike a fund seeking exit:

Metaptive is a permanent infrastructure. The infrastructure for manufacturing the professions that adaptation makes necessary.

The flow does not stop. Neither does the infrastructure.

In 2016, Mervyn King — then chairman of the International Integrated Reporting Council — called for the creation of a Chief Value Officer. A leadership role capable of steering value creation across all dimensions of an organization. Financial, human, intellectual, industrial, relational, natural.

The idea is right. The capability is identified. But for seven years, it remains a wish. Because the cognitive scope of what King describes — tracing, proving and steering value creation across all dimensions of an organization, in real time — exceeds what a single human can exercise alone. Without an instrument, the profession is impracticable.

In 2023, generative artificial intelligence changes the equation. Not by replacing human discernment — but by multiplying it. What was cognitively impossible becomes practicable. Human×AI. The candidate passes the operationalization filter.

Metaptive builds the complete profession. The Value Office — first asset from the thesis.

A profession (the Value Officer), an instrument (the Value Operating System), the intervention protocols, the practitioners, the training. A permanent infrastructure, installed in the organization — not a mission that ends.

And this is only the beginning.

Let us build together the professions of adaptation.

Frédéric Peters — Founder, Chairman Metaptive Group

Chief Value & AI Officer→ LinkedIn

A conversation about your situation? Write to me directly

Assets from our operationalization thesis

Not everything that emerges from the ground becomes a profession. Some become powerful intervention protocols. Only those who cross the threshold become complete professions.

Governance & strategyOperational & fieldField SignalsNew intervention protocolsNew professionsCEO / CHRO / CFOBU DIR. / SPONSORCHIEF TRANSFO / CIOTransformation DoctorOrg. dynamicsSPONSOR / COMEXDAF / DSIBU MANAGERSPROGRAMME DIR.Programme DoctorProgrammesPROGRAMME DIR.PMO / PORTFOLIO DIR.PMFINOPS / VMOOperational ClosingPortfoliosCIO / CHIEF AI OFFICERARCHITECTSBUSINESS PMData / Tech LeadIA & Technology DoctorTech. assetsValueOfficeBoard MemberCOMEX & CODIRInvestment DirectorBusiness AcquirerCash-to-ValueBacklog-to-CashStructuring in progressNew intervention protocolsNew profession

They trust us

AllianzCrédit Agricole AssurancesCrédit Agricole Leasing & FactoringAreas Assurances