Why Compensation, Confidence And Execution Discipline Are More Connected Than Many Leaders Realize
One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned as a leader is that performance rarely suffers because people lack talent – assuming you have the right people. More often, it suffers because they are distracted, lack clear direction, are experiencing burnout, or operating under pressure that leaders cannot always see.
The strongest organizations invest heavily in leadership development, culture and employee engagement because they understand that people perform at their best when they are focused on the mission. But one of the most practical lessons from motivation theory is also one of the easiest for leaders to overlook: people cannot consistently reach higher levels of performance when lower-level concerns are consuming their attention.
That is why financial stress matters.
Leaders often talk about purpose, ownership, accountability and high performance. Those things matter deeply. But if employees are worried about paying bills, managing debt, absorbing inflation, saving for retirement or handling unexpected expenses, it becomes much harder for them to bring full focus, creativity and execution discipline to the work in front of them.
According to the 2024 PwC Employee Financial Wellness Survey, financially stressed employees are significantly more likely to be distracted at work, spend hours each week dealing with personal financial issues during business hours and actively seek new employment. Those findings reinforce a critical leadership lesson: financial wellness is not simply a personal issue. It is increasingly a performance, retention and execution issue.
Motivation Starts With Stability
Most leaders are familiar with some version of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. At the base are physiological and safety needs. Higher up are belonging, esteem and self-actualization. In modern organizations, we often want employees to operate at the top of that pyramid: take ownership, innovate, collaborate, lead through ambiguity and pursue excellence.
But leaders cannot ignore the foundation.
If people do not feel financially stable, it is harder for them to feel psychologically safe, professionally confident or fully committed to the mission. This does not mean compensation alone creates motivation. It does not. But insufficient compensation, unclear incentives or weak financial security can absolutely undermine motivation.
This is where leaders need to think more holistically about financial wellness. Base salary, commissions, bonuses, retirement planning options, healthcare costs and financial education all shape how secure employees feel. When people believe their basic financial needs are reasonably protected, they are more capable of focusing on higher-quality work, stronger decision-making and disciplined execution.
