Skip to the main content.
The sharetech platform

Manage your equity and shareholders

Share schemes & options icon

Share schemes & options

Give key people some skin in the game

Equity management icon

Equity management

Powerful tools and automations

The sharetech platform

Launch funds, evalute deals & invest

SPV icon

Special Purpose Vehicles (SPV)

Create a syndicate or fund

Manage icon

Manage your portfolio

Add and monitor your investments

The sharetech platform

Predictable pricing and no hidden charges

Startups icon
SME icon

For scaleups & SMEs

Build and retain a winning team

Enterprise icon

For larger companies

Streamline equity management

The sharetech platform

Ideas, insight and tools to help you grow

Learn icon

2 min read

Boost retention with better career conversations

Boost retention with better career conversations
Boost retention with better career conversations
4:17

Good people rarely leave because of money alone. They leave because they don’t see a future. 

In fact, lack of career development is one of the top reasons employees quit, consistently ranking above pay in exit surveys.

For founders and managers, that’s both a risk and an opportunity. If you want to keep your best people engaged, regular career development conversations are one of the most powerful (and underused) tools you have.

This article shows why these conversations matter, how to avoid the tick-box trap, and practical frameworks managers can use to make them meaningful.

Why career conversations matter

Engagement isn’t just about perks or flexible working. It’s about whether employees feel they’re growing.

  • 94% of employees say they’d stay longer if a company invested in their career development, according to LinkedIn research.
  • Gallup research shows employees who have regular development conversations are 2.9 times more likely to be engaged at work.

The message is clear: if managers aren’t having these conversations, they’re missing the easiest retention lever available.

Growth conversations are retention conversations. Ignore them, and you risk losing your best people.

Why reviews fall short 

Too many organisations confuse performance reviews with career development. 

The result is a formal, once-a-year process that ticks compliance boxes but fails to inspire.

  • Performance reviews focus on past performance, ratings, and short-term goals. They’re often bureaucratic and backward-looking.
  • Career development conversations are forward-looking. They explore aspirations, skills employees want to build, and blockers standing in the way.

Employees don’t leave because their last review was tough. They leave because they can’t see how today’s work connects to tomorrow’s growth.

Reviews merely measure what’s done, but conversations enable you to shape what’s next.

How to have better career development conversations

Managers don’t need to reinvent the wheel. A few simple frameworks make these conversations more structured and valuable.

  1. The skills framework
    • Ask: ‘What skills do you want to build in the next 6–12 months?’
    • Agree on projects or training that build those skills.
  2. The aspirations framework
    • Ask: ‘Where do you see your career in 2–3 years?’
    • Connect their aspirations to opportunities inside the company.
  3. The blockers framework
    • Ask: ‘What’s getting in the way of your growth right now?’
    • Work together to remove obstacles, whether workload, lack of support, or unclear priorities.

These frameworks shift the conversation from generic encouragement to practical, actionable steps.

Structure helps managers go deeper in career conversations and makes growth feel real.

Three questions to start every career conversation

If managers feel unsure how to begin, these simple prompts open the door without feeling forced:

  • What skills do you want to develop this year?
  • Where do you see yourself in two years, and how can we help you get there?
  • What’s one thing making your work harder than it should be right now?

These questions cut through small talk and signal genuine interest in growth.

Linking growth to incentives

The most powerful career conversations go beyond skills and aspirations. They show employees how their growth is tied to the company’s growth.

Employee share schemes and incentives play a role here. When people have a stake in the business, they think about their career not just in terms of roles, but in terms of impact.

An employee who understands that their contributions drive business growth, and that growth enhances the value of their rewards, can clearly see how personal development connects to company success.

Align incentives with career development, and you create employees who think like owners.

Summary

Retention isn’t won with slogans or perks. It’s won in regular, human conversations where managers listen, support, and show how personal growth connects to company growth.

If your managers are still relying on annual reviews, you’re missing the point. Career development conversations are the simplest, most effective secret weapon for keeping your best people.

Curious about how equity could fit into your retention strategy? Vestd makes it simple to get started.

How better career conversations unlock growth and loyalty

How better career conversations unlock growth and loyalty

When employees quit, it’s rarely just about pay.

Read More
How to handle overlapping responsibilities without the drama

How to handle overlapping responsibilities without the drama

Startups can be messy, with fast evolving roles, fluid job titles, and changing priorities.

Read More
Practical ways to manage up and influence effectively

Practical ways to manage up and influence effectively

Managing up often gets a bad rap. To some, it sounds like office politics, flattery, or manipulation.

Read More