Your future leaders may be at the greatest risk of burning out. Mid-career employees often face peak responsibilities at work while managing growing demands outside of it, leaving little time to think about what comes next. If you want to retain and develop experienced talent, you need to help people build careers they can sustain for the long term. Here’s how.
Create space to reflect. Build structured moments for people to pause and think beyond immediate demands. Use career conversations, reflection periods, or peer discussions to help people consider where they are and where they want to go next.
Design roles for growth. Ask whether people are still learning in their current roles. Add new challenges, encourage collaboration across teams, and create opportunities for people to expand skills without changing jobs.
Make exploration acceptable. Give people permission to test new interests through projects, learning opportunities, mentoring, or temporary assignments. Small experiments create momentum without requiring major career decisions.
Normalize transitions early. Encourage movement before people feel trapped. Support lateral moves, skill shifts, and new responsibilities so career changes feel like development rather than escape.