There’s a difference — and it changes everything about how you show up, how you recover, and how far you can go.
Most professionals build positional value — expertise, relationships, and reputation that are deeply tied to a specific employer, industry, or title. When the position disappears, the value disappears with it. Not because it was fake. Because it was never truly theirs.
Transferable Capital is the framework for building portable value — assets that belong to you, travel with you, and compound over time regardless of who signs your check.
The professionals who navigate disruption well — through layoffs, industry shifts, career pivots, and economic shocks — aren’t always the most credentialed. They’re the ones who built capital that travels. TC gives you the language, the diagnostic, and the development path to do the same.

What you know and can do
Human Capital is your knowledge, skills, and expertise — the capabilities that let you produce value in any context. When it’s strong, you’re sought out. When it’s weak or narrow, you’re replaceable. The professionals with the deepest Human Capital aren’t just technically skilled — they’ve developed the ability to apply what they know across different industries, problems, and contexts. The risk: expertise that only works inside one company, one industry, or one function.
If your employer disappeared tomorrow, which of your skills would still be in demand — and which ones were really just fluency in your company’s way of doing things?

Who knows you and trusts you
Social Capital is your network — but not the surface-level connections most professionals think of. It’s the relationships where trust, credibility, and genuine mutual investment exist. It’s the people who will take your call, make an introduction, or vouch for you when you need it most. When Social Capital is strong, opportunities come to you. Most professionals dramatically underinvest here until they’re in transition — and then it’s too late to build what they need quickly.
How many people in your network would proactively reach out to you with an opportunity — without you asking? That number is your real Social Capital.

What you own and what generates income
Economic Capital is the financial dimension of portability — the assets, income streams, and financial resources that exist independently of your employment. It’s the difference between a professional whose entire income depends on one employer and one who has built financial infrastructure that provides flexibility and leverage. This doesn’t require being wealthy. It requires being intentional. Every financial decision either builds or erodes your portability.
If you lost your primary income source today, how many months of runway do you have — and what assets do you own that could generate income while you transition?

Where you belong and how you move through rooms
Cultural Capital is your ability to navigate environments, read contexts, and command presence across different communities, industries, and power structures. Professionals with strong Cultural Capital move fluidly between contexts. This is particularly powerful for professionals from underrepresented communities who have been code-switching their entire careers — that ability is an asset, not just a survival mechanism.
In which rooms do you move with ease and authority — and which rooms still feel like you’re performing rather than belonging?

How you think, recover, and persist
Psychological Capital is the internal infrastructure that sustains everything else. It’s your mindset, resilience, optimism, and self-efficacy — the belief that you can figure things out, recover from setbacks, and persist through uncertainty. Without it, even strong portfolios in the other five capitals can collapse under pressure. Professionals who invest in their psychological infrastructure before they need it are categorically more portable.
How do you respond when your professional identity is threatened? That response — not your resume — is the truest measure of your Psychological Capital.

How you're perceived and what your name signals
Symbolic Capital is your reputation, authority, and the meaning others attach to your presence and work. It’s what people say about you when you’re not in the room. Strong Symbolic Capital means you don’t have to explain yourself — your presence does the work. Professionals who build deliberately and consistently develop a reputation that opens doors before they knock.
What do people say you’re known for — and is that what you actually want to be known for? The gap between those two is your Symbolic Capital opportunity.
There is a pattern that shows up consistently in the careers of professionals from underrepresented communities — and it is one of the most important things Transferable Capital was built to address.
At a certain point, additional credentials stop producing proportional returns. The degree that was supposed to open the door doesn’t. The promotion that was earned three times over keeps getting deferred. This isn’t about effort. It’s about a system that doesn’t always reward portable value the same way for everyone.
When institutional pathways produce diminishing returns, the answer isn’t more credentials. It’s a deliberate shift toward building capital that cannot be gatekept — Social Capital that generates referrals and sponsorship, Symbolic Capital that creates authority independent of title, Economic Capital that provides runway and leverage, and Psychological Capital that sustains the long game.
Transferable Capital doesn’t ignore the system. It builds the assets that give you power within it — and outside of it when necessary.
AI is not coming for jobs. It’s coming for tasks. The professionals whose entire value proposition is task execution are the most exposed. The professionals who have built deep Social, Symbolic, and Psychological Capital — who have relationships, reputation, and resilience — are the most protected.
Transferable Capital is not a reaction to disruption. It’s a proactive strategy for building the kind of professional infrastructure that compounds over time — regardless of what the market does next.
The TC Audit will map your capital across all six dimensions and help you identify your strongest assets and highest-risk gaps. Answer a few questions to see where you are.
Complete The Free Audit Online →The framework is the foundation. The Clarity Session is where you apply it to your specific situation, your specific gaps, and your specific next move.