My strongest employee gave notice on a Tuesday morning, and my first instinct was to immediately calculate whether I could counter with more money. She turned down the counteroffer without much hesitation, and in the honest exit conversation that followed, money barely came up at all. What actually drove her out had been building quietly for months, in ways I hadn’t been paying close enough attention to notice until it was already too late to fix.
This pattern is extremely common in small businesses specifically, and the instinct to reach for a raise as the fix is usually addressing the wrong problem entirely.
Why Founders Default to Assuming It’s About Money
Money is the easiest variable to see and the easiest one to act on quickly. A counteroffer is a concrete, immediate response that feels like decisive action in a moment that otherwise feels alarming and out of your control. It’s also, based on actual exit conversations across the businesses I’ve been close to, rarely the real underlying reason a strong performer specifically chooses to leave.
Weak performers sometimes do leave primarily over money, since they may not have other, deeper reasons to stay engaged with the business in the first place. Strong performers, the ones a business can least afford to lose, tend to leave for a different, more specific set of reasons that a raise alone doesn’t actually address.
What Actually Drove My Best Employee Out
In her exit conversation, three things came up clearly, none of them compensation. She felt her role had stopped growing, doing largely the same tasks for over a year with no clear path toward more responsibility or a different kind of challenge. She felt her input on decisions had stopped being genuinely sought, not because I’d intentionally excluded her, but because I’d quietly stopped asking as the business settled into more established routines. And she felt a specific, sustained frustration about a process inefficiency she’d raised twice without seeing any real change, which read to her, correctly in hindsight, as a signal that her feedback wasn’t actually being taken seriously.
None of these three things would have been fixed by a raise. All three had been visible, at least partially, for months before she actually gave notice, if I’d been paying closer attention to the right signals instead of assuming things were fine simply because she hadn’t complained loudly.
The Pattern Behind Why Strong Performers Specifically Leave
Strong performers tend to have more options than weaker performers, which means they’re leaving toward something, not just escaping a bad situation, and they tend to be more sensitive to stagnation specifically, since growth and challenge are often part of what makes them strong performers in the first place. A role that stops offering growth, autonomy, or genuine influence starts to feel limiting to exactly the kind of person a small business most needs to retain, well before compensation becomes the deciding factor in their thinking.
Research on employee retention consistently points toward autonomy, growth, and feeling genuinely heard as stronger predictors of retention among high performers than compensation alone, once pay is reasonably competitive to begin with. My employee’s pay had been competitive. The other three factors had quietly eroded without me tracking them the way I tracked more visible business metrics.
The Signals I Missed, in Hindsight
She’d stopped volunteering ideas in team discussions over the final couple of months, a genuine shift from her earlier pattern of proactively raising suggestions. I’d noticed this shift and interpreted it, incorrectly, as simply being busy rather than as a real signal of disengagement. She’d also brought up the same process inefficiency twice, both times in passing rather than as a formal complaint, and both times I’d acknowledged it without following up with any concrete action, a pattern that, again in hindsight, likely read as dismissal rather than the genuine oversight it actually was.
How to Actually Catch This Earlier
Regular, genuine one-on-one conversations that go beyond status updates and specifically ask about growth, autonomy, and whether the person feels heard, not just whether current tasks are getting done, create real opportunities to catch this pattern before it reaches the resignation stage. I’ve since built quarterly conversations specifically around these three questions, separate from regular work check-ins, precisely because the earlier pattern showed me these signals don’t reliably surface in standard day-to-day conversation.
Following through visibly on feedback, even small feedback, matters more than the size of the specific issue raised. A quickly acted-upon minor suggestion signals that input is genuinely valued in a way that dramatically outweighs the size of that particular fix, while a repeatedly ignored concern, regardless of how minor it might seem from the founder’s side, signals the opposite clearly.
What to Do Now
If you have a strong performer on your team right now, have a genuine conversation this week specifically about growth, autonomy, and whether their input actually feels heard, separate from a standard status check-in. Look back at any recent feedback or suggestions they’ve raised and honestly assess whether you followed through visibly, or let it quietly drop.
Catching disengagement in these three areas early is a far more effective retention strategy than being ready with a counteroffer once someone’s already decided to leave.