We’ve built a workplace culture that rewards performance while ignoring the internal architecture needed to sustain it. That’s a problem—especially for your best people.
I spent nearly two decades as a sports agent, and here’s something I witnessed often: one bad game, a slump, a missed cut—and an athlete at the top of their game would fall apart.
It was not because they lacked talent or work ethic. The issue was that they hadn’t built the internal capacity to handle fluctuation.
You see, the ideas of not “always winning” or “reaching the apex and staying there” never crossed their minds. These individuals had been optimized for performance and performance only. They envisioned a professional career grid without valleys; one that solely illustrated the climb. They had no framework for the performance dips when they inevitably happened.
Today, I see the identical pattern in boardrooms. We have spent years building a workplace culture obsessed with high performance while neglecting the internal architecture that makes high performance sustainable. The result is a generation of leaders who are technically brilliant but brittle within. This person has collapsed their identity into their output and has no framework for what happens when that output shifts.
We are not describing burnout. Burnout is what we experience when it’s already too late.
I am talking about something that happens earlier and is harder to see: the slow erosion of the psychological foundation underneath high achievers, long before the breakdown becomes visible.
Why the complacency trap hits hardest at the top
Most leaders assign complacency to unmotivated employees. People who have stopped caring, stopped trying. My experience, with elite athletes and with the executives I work with through my one-on-one coaching and leadership accelerator, The Edge, suggests the opposite.
The highest achievers are often the most vulnerable. They have learned (and may have been taught) to equate success with security and any deviation from peak performance is destabilizing. A slump isn’t a slump; it’s evidence that they are the slump. That identity fusion is exactly how the complacency arc begins: drift, then decline, followed by despair. It moves fast in people who aren’t watching for it.
Diana Nyad didn’t make it across the Florida Straits on her first attempt. Nor her second or her third. What separated her from people with equal physical capacity was a resilience framework that she actively maintained. She understood that the setback was not the story. The response to the setback was the story.
Elite performance at that level is not about eliminating bad rounds. It is about having the internal infrastructure to process a bad round and come back demonstrably stronger rather than restored to baseline.
This distinction matters more than most organizations realize. Resilience is not a bounce-back. It is a path to advancement.
Curiosity is the antidote your leadership team isn’t taking
Of all the elements I’ve studied in high-performing people and teams, curiosity is the one most consistently undervalued in organizational culture. We reward certainty. We promote people who project confidence and have all the answers. We implicitly penalize the leaders who say, “I don’t know, but let’s find out.” We assume they are not eligible for the role.
That is a structural mistake. Curiosity is the best antidote to the drift that precedes complacency. A curious leader keeps asking harder questions about their industry, their team and themselves. They don’t coast/rely on what worked last quarter. They don’t assume that the map that got them here is still accurate.
I spent 15 years negotiating for athletes whose careers depended on staying curious about what was next. Not just in their sport, but in their physical conditioning, their mental game and their post-career planning. The ones who remained curious and asked questions were the ones who lasted. Those who stopped inquiring were usually the ones who called me six months later asking the inevitable: “What happened?”
The same pattern holds in every organization I work with now. The leaders who are most at risk are not the ones who seem disengaged. They are the ones who are moving fast, delivering results, and quietly stopped asking whether the foundation underneath all of it is still solid.
What organizations actually owe their best people
There is a version of this conversation that turns into a wellness checklist. I’m not talking about meditation apps, mental health days, or luxury fitness memberships.
I am talking about organizations making an organizational commitment to developing psychological architecture alongside their employee’s technical skills. It looks like this: building environments where leaders can name when they are drifting without it being a career risk. Environments where curiosity is modeled from the top, not just tolerated. Resilience should be taught as a specific, learnable capability rather than a personality trait people check off as a strength or weakness.
The people most at risk in your organization right now are not the ones you’re worried about. They are the ones delivering. They are the ones you’re counting on and they are the ones who have been told, explicitly or implicitly, that what they produce is who they are.
This is a performance culture built on a fault line and the longer it goes unaddressed, the more expensive the correction becomes in talent, in momentum, and in the kind of institutional trust that takes years to rebuild.
High performance without psychological sustainability is not a strategy. It is a countdown.