Careers don’t always move in straight lines. At some point, every employee will hit a plateau, and experience that feeling of standing still, with no clear next step.
Left unchecked, this stall can quickly turn into disengagement, quiet quitting, or even resignation.
For leaders, this isn’t just about retention. It’s about wasted potential. Stalled careers drain motivation, dull creativity, and hold teams back from reaching their full impact.
With the right leadership approach, you can help employees find fresh momentum, even when promotions aren’t on the table.
In this article, we’ll explore the most common reasons careers stall, and how leaders can reignite growth through stretch, visibility, and conversations.
When employees feel stuck, it rarely stays hidden.
Motivation slips, discretionary effort fades, and output begins to plateau alongside ambition. Gallup research found that lack of growth and development opportunities is one of the top three reasons employees leave their jobs.
It’s also closely linked to quiet quitting. People don’t necessarily walk out immediately; they often disengage and do the bare minimum until something better comes along.
The cost to organisations is enormous: low engagement has been estimated to cost the global economy $8.8 trillion in lost productivity annually.
It’s easy to assume stalled careers are about ambition mismatch or lack of drive.
In reality, the problem is often systemic, and caused by how organisations structure opportunities and feedback.
The three most common culprits are:
When careers stall, leaders need to act quickly. The goal isn’t just to retain employees but to recover their motivation.
Here are three practical levers leaders can use:
Too often, career development only comes up during annual reviews. Disengagement may have already set in by this point.
A better approach is to build career conversations into regular one-to-ones.
Ask questions like:
Microsoft research found that employees who have frequent career conversations are 2.5x more likely to be engaged at work.
Not every growth step needs to be a promotion. In fact, some of the most valuable development happens through lateral moves: switching functions, joining cross-functional projects, or taking on temporary assignments.
Why it works:
Case in point: Google has often highlighted internal mobility as a growth tool, allowing employees to move between teams and disciplines to avoid stagnation.
Project-based opportunities are one of the fastest ways to reignite careers.
Assigning employees to visible, strategic initiatives gives them fresh stretch, exposure to leaders, and chances to showcase capability.
Project-based growth is powerful for a number of reasons:
Research shows that engaged employees with meaningful work and visibility perform 20% better and are 87% less likely to leave.
Project assignments unlock hidden potential, build confidence, and create real career momentum without the bureaucracy of title changes.
While projects and conversations spark immediate momentum, leaders also need to think longer term.
Careers don’t move in a straight line, and during slower phases, employees need reasons to stay invested.
That’s where share schemes can pay off. It isn’t just about financial perks, it’s also a psychological anchor that ties employees to your company’s future.
“Equity has become a key driver of retention, engagement, and value across the entire organisation.” - Kate Winget, CRO, Morgan Stanley at Work
When career momentum dips, employee share schemes can keep employees committed to the bigger journey, even when short-term growth feels flat.
Career stalls are inevitable. Every employee will hit a plateau at some point. What matters is how leaders respond.
Dealing with this issue requires consistent, thoughtful leadership with regular career conversations.
In addition, visible internal opportunities, projects, and equity that ties employees to the bigger vision all help to overcome career stalls.
At Vestd, we help founders and leaders design employee share schemes that keep employees motivated for the long haul.