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7 ways to support and sustain high performers
Written by Andrew Moore on 2 September 2025
Every organisation relies on its high performers – those individuals who consistently exceed expectations and often define a team’s performance. Yet, their very strengths can also make them vulnerable.
Without careful stewardship, high performers may burn out, disengage, or become disruptive. The real leadership challenge is how to retain them and enable them to thrive.
At WorkNest, we’ve seen that a deliberate, sustainable approach, grounded in HR best practice, is essential to keeping high achievers in the right mindset. It’s not enough to simply recognise these individuals: you must also engage them meaningfully, protect their wellbeing, and ensure fairness in how they’re managed.
Here are seven practical ways to support and sustain your high performers, helping them stay connected, motivated, and with your organisation for longer.
1. Avoid 'performance management'
One of the most common mistakes when managing high performers is what some HR professionals call performance punishment: you rely on your most capable people to absorb extra workload, but without formal acknowledgement or reward.
Without transparency, this dynamic breeds resentment. High performers deserve clear, fair documentation of responsibilities – and recognition when those stretch beyond the norm.
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2. Engage through partnership
High performers vary: some seek leadership roles, others want to deepen their technical expertise. As such, when development pathways are pre-determined by organisational needs, engagement drops.
The most effective organisations treat development as a partnership – asking individuals where they want to go and co-designing the path. This builds ownership, improves engagement and ensures that support is genuinely relevant, all of which helps the individual achieve their aspirations.
3. Provide recognition that resonates
Recognition isn’t just financial – it’s fair, consistent, and meaningful. When recognition or rewards seem arbitrary, it can demotivate employees.
A robust system-based approach ensures high performers receive both rewards and validation – such as trust, influence, and visibility. Employers should establish meaningful recognition systems to keep high-performers engaged and motivated, supporting their long-term retention.
4. Protect wellbeing
High performers are often reluctant to step back, which can make them prone to burn out.
Employers have a duty of care to manage workplace stress, and proactive measures – such as monitoring workload, encouraging time off, and normalising support-seeking – should be central to your management approach. Taking these steps isn’t just about fulfilling your legal obligations – it’s about building a culture that protects wellbeing while sustaining high performance.
Talking with employees about their wellbeing is crucial, and this is particularly important for high achievers, who may need more support maintaining a healthy work-life balance.
5. Address imposter syndrome
Paradoxically, many high achievers wrestle with imposter syndrome – the persistent belief that their success is undeserved and that their perceived shortcomings will one day be exposed. This mindset can drive them to overwork, avoid recognition, or turn down opportunities for fear of failure.
For employers, ignoring imposter syndrome risks losing talent to burnout or under-confidence. Addressing it requires a culture where success is openly acknowledged and where feedback is constructive and specific.
Leaders should:
- Normalise conversations about self-doubt, making it clear that it is common even among senior figures.
- Provide mentoring and coaching to reinforce confidence and help high performers recalibrate their self-assessment.
- Celebrate achievements in ways that emphasise both effort and ability, so individuals recognise their own contribution.
Supporting employees to overcome imposter syndrome is not only a matter of wellbeing; it ensures they fully step into the roles and responsibilities they are capable of excelling in.
6. Deal with the downsides of high performance
Even star performers can become liabilities if their engagement falters. Frustration can morph into disengagement, negativity, or even undermining behaviour.
While it may be tempting to give your high performers more leniency or even a free pass, leadership must apply performance and conduct standards evenly – no exceptions. Otherwise, you compromise your ability to manage other employees for similar issues or offences.
7. Build systems that last
Sustainable management of high performers rests on consistent frameworks:
- Clear, documented performance expectations.
- Personalised development plans co-created with the individual.
- Balanced workloads and strong wellbeing safeguards.
- Fair recognition and reward systems.
- Support mechanisms to counter imposter feelings.
- Equitable standards for behaviour and performance.
Final thoughts
High performers are among an organisation’s most valuable – and most delicate – assets. Leaders must do more than applaud them; they must create conditions where these individuals flourish, without wearing themselves out or losing confidence.
By combining thoughtful HR practices with supportive management, employers can unlock high performers’ full potential, turning their energy and talent into lasting benefits for the whole organisation.
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Need a hand managing high performers? We’re here to help
Supporting high performers is as much about culture and wellbeing as it is about compliance. WorkNest helps organisations with:
- Transparent reward frameworks that align with UK employment law.
- Wellbeing strategies that respect duty of care while maintaining performance.
- Coaching plans to engage high performers in their own career journey.
- Mentoring programmes and manager training to combat imposter syndrome.
- Embedding policies that uphold fairness and reduce legal and cultural risks.
Our tailored support ensures your top performers stay engaged, confident, and productive – for the long term.
To find out more, get in touch with our team today on 0345 226 8393 or request your free consultation using the button below.