Carnivore ecologists globally have eagerly embraced the remarkable advances in field techniques (eg GPS telemetry, genetic sampling) for studying movements and vital rates of wide-ranging species. However, equally impressive modelling tools also exist – but are less often used -- to illuminate practical management recommendations by marrying genetic and demographic outcomes of connectivity and harvest. I will focus on two related areas that demonstrate practical outcomes at the genetic – demographic interface, using examples from carnivores in North America and Scandinavia. First, genetic rules of thumb such as “One Migrant Per Generation” (OMPG) are best interpreted in a demographic context. Of course, this means that an immigrant serves as a ‘genetic migrant’ only if it breeds. However, a less recognized corollary is that the demographic costs and benefits of a given level of gene flow (e.g. OMPG) depend on life history traits such as population growth rate. Second, I will assert that among population connectivity can affect population growth rate more than within-population vital rates. This somewhat non-intuitive principle has substantial implications for managing wide-ranging species because it means that conventional management to improve population trends within a country may be less important to population persistence than management on or across administrative or national borders. Just as sophisticated cutting-edge tools have emerged to estimate movements and vital rates, tools also exist to integrate genetic and demographic processes in powerful new ways.