Not who they are.
Who they'll become.
34 skill families. A prediction engine that gets more accurate with every hire. The taxonomy that powers R7's ability to identify A-Players before they start.
SF34 doesn't evaluate candidates. It predicts who will excel.
Most frameworks measure people in absolute terms. SF34 gives organizations the architecture to design better evaluations — then takes those results as input to predict A, B, or C Player classification for a specific role.
This distinction is everything. SF34 is a design tool and a prediction engine, not an assessment instrument.
SF34 doesn't administer tests or psychometrics to candidates directly.
SF34 doesn't replace structured interviews, reference checks, or domain testing.
SF34 predicts A, B, or C classification — not a ranked list of candidates.
Weightings and gates are role-specific and criticality-adjusted.
Gives organizations the architecture to build better JDs, competencies, and assessments.
Takes assessment results as input and predicts A, B, or C Player classification for a specific role.
At 12 months, compares predicted vs. actual — continuously improving accuracy over every cycle.
Every Recruit→Rate cycle tightens the model. The data tells you what works — not theory.
"SF34 is not about measuring people. It is about giving organizations the precision to put people in roles where they can be A-Players."
Teachable or Not-Teachable. This changes everything.
Every skill family in SF34 is classified as Teachable (T) or Not-Teachable (NT). A NT gap in a critical role is a fundamentally different signal than a T gap. One closes with time and investment. The other must be selected for — it cannot be trained into someone.
This single distinction drives assessment strategy, development investment, and the entire B→A conversion pathway.
"A candidate who fails on a Teachable gap can be a strong hire with a development plan. A candidate who fails on a Not-Teachable dimension in a critical role is a C-Player hire — regardless of domain expertise."
— R7 Framework™ · SF34 Assessment ProtocolEvery role. Every level. One taxonomy.
The SF34 taxonomy is exhaustive and mutually exclusive — every human capability relevant to workplace performance maps to exactly one skill family. Filter by teachability or cluster below.
Assessment depth that matches the cost of a wrong hire.
Not every role warrants the same assessment investment. SF34 deploys across four tiers calibrated to role criticality and seniority — precision where it counts most, efficiency everywhere else.
The model that gets smarter with every hire.
At month 12, SF34 compares the predicted A/B/C classification at hire against measured role performance. Over successive cycles, this tightens the model — building an evidence base unique to your organization's roles and context.
Candidate assessed across role-relevant SF families via structured interview, psychometric, and reference inputs
SF34 inputs produce a predicted classification for this specific role and criticality tier
SF family ratings and assessor notes archived against the candidate record for later reconciliation
Organisation proceeds based on predicted classification and role criticality tolerance threshold
Actual role performance measured against the same role's KPIs over the last 12 months
Role-relative classification confirmed — did this hire perform at A, B, or C level?
Which SF families predicted accurately? Which missed? Pattern identified across the cohort.
Weightings and thresholds updated for this role type — prediction improves for the next cycle
When the candidate stays in the role they were hired for
SF34 compares original assessment results against LTM performance on the same role's JD — revealing exactly where assessment predicted accurately and where it missed, enabling targeted recalibration.
When the candidate has moved to a different role
SF34 reconciles on competencies only — isolating which underlying human capabilities predicted performance regardless of role context, strengthening the universal skill family model.
The percentage of new hires who achieve their predicted A-Player classification at 12 months.
Organizations using SF34 can state this number to candidates as an auditable EVP claim — not a brand promise, but verifiable evidence of hiring precision. This is what makes R7 EVP differentiation real.
What no other framework has solved.
After benchmarking against eight major frameworks, six elements of SF34 have no equivalent in any existing taxonomy. These are architectural differences — not incremental improvements.
Role-relative prediction, not absolute ranking
Every other framework evaluates people in absolute terms. SF34 predicts performance relative to a specific role's KPIs — a warehouse supervisor is assessed against warehouse supervisor standards, not a universal excellence baseline.
Teachable / Not-Teachable classification at the taxonomy level
No existing major framework systematically classifies skills as teachable vs. not-teachable. SF34 does this for all 34 families — with direct implications for assessment strategy and development investment decisions.
The self-healing reconciliation loop
SF34 is the only framework with a built-in feedback mechanism that continuously improves its own prediction accuracy. The Recruit→Rate reconciliation is not an audit — it is a model recalibration engine that gets smarter with every hire.
Four split pairs — within-family T/NT separation
For EQ, Creativity, Leadership, and Strategic Thinking, SF34 explicitly models the teachable and not-teachable components separately. No existing framework acknowledges or operationalises this within-family split in assessment design.
Role criticality multipliers on assessment thresholds
SF34 applies different NT thresholds based on role criticality (Critical 1.5×, Standard 1.0×, Support 0.7×). Assessment standards are not uniform — calibrated to the actual cost of a wrong hire at each level.
Sustainability Orientation as a standalone NT skill family
The only major taxonomy to classify Sustainability Orientation as a distinct, Not-Teachable SF (SF34) — aligned with WEF 2025 findings but operationalised as a selection criterion, not a training objective.
"The question is no longer which skill framework is most comprehensive. It is which framework connects skills to A-Player prediction, and improves that prediction over time."
— R7 Framework™ · SF34 Design PrinciplesWhat Happens Next
Prediction that gets better with every hire.
SF34 is not a static framework. It is a prediction engine that improves every time you run the Recruit→Rate reconciliation. The longer you use it, the more precisely it knows your organization.
Request an R7 Briefing
See SF34 mapped to your critical roles in a 45-minute private session.
Join the Validation Study
Participate in the 300-organisation empirical study validating SF34's predictive validity coefficients.
Explore the Framework
See how SF34 connects to R7's full L1→L4 measurement architecture.
