Why your best people leave—and how to win them back with smarter deals

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I still remember the Slack message. “Can we talk?” Four words that every founder dreads when they come from your strongest team member. She wasn’t just high-performing—she was the person others calibrated their standards to. Clients loved her. Interns idolized her. We’d promoted her twice in 18 months. So when she asked to talk, I assumed it was for a raise or a project pivot.

Instead, it was her notice. “I’ve been thinking about this for a while,” she said. “I just don’t see my future here anymore.” And that’s when it hit me. I hadn’t lost her to a better offer. I’d lost her because I negotiated too little, too late, and on the wrong terms.

Founders often think of negotiation as a moment—an offer letter, a promotion cycle, a last-minute counteroffer. But for your best people, negotiation is ongoing. It’s emotional, not just financial. And it’s shaped more by what you don’t say than what you put on the table. Every time we postponed a career conversation, restructured without looping her in, or praised her but didn’t re-scope her role—that was a silent renegotiation. One where she was recalibrating the deal in her head. One where we slowly eroded the belief that staying was the smarter bet.

What I’ve learned since: high performers don’t quit impulsively. They quit after a dozen small signals that their work is no longer a good trade.

We used to run a lean team. That meant more hats, more ownership, and frankly, more blurred boundaries. Our strongest contributors stepped up again and again. But when founders get used to that rhythm, we start to normalize it—until the contributor starts to feel like a ghost. Visible in output, invisible in planning. The moment we start making decisions about them, not with them, we’ve already started the countdown.

Retention isn’t about offering “more.” It’s about restoring proximity. Making sure your best people feel looped in, seen early, and safe to surface what’s starting to fray. And the only way to do that is by renegotiating before resentment kicks in. In my case, I had started to treat her as a pillar—immovable, dependable, always standing. What I didn’t realize is that even pillars erode, especially when no one checks the foundation.

I stopped asking her what she was learning. I stopped inviting her into early roadmap conversations. I assumed she was “fine”—because she was still delivering. But emotional distance isn’t loud. It shows up as delayed replies, reduced questions, a drop in spontaneous ideas. By the time she handed in her notice, she’d already left emotionally six weeks earlier. And I never noticed.

Smarter negotiation isn’t about HR scripts or comp benchmarks. It’s founder behavior. It’s how and when you re-align the deal—before they have to ask.

Here’s what I now believe good negotiation looks like with your top people:

1. Make value explicit, not assumed.
Founders often think, “They know they’re valued.” But if we haven’t told them what’s changed since their last review—what problems only they solve, what client feedback has come in, what new scopes we trust them with—we’ve left them guessing.

2. Ask for their new terms before they ask for yours.
One of the best things I’ve done since that resignation is to start every quarterly check-in with a simple question: “What would make this role feel more worth it next quarter?”

That question has opened up everything from hybrid schedule tweaks to a fast-tracked mentorship path. And in two cases, it surfaced exit risk before it became irreversible.

3. Negotiate the job, not just the salary.
Your best people grow fast. If the job doesn’t, they start to feel caged. Smart retention means constantly revisiting scope, authority, visibility, and learning—not just titles and cash.

If the core of their role hasn’t changed in six months, they’re either bored, burnt out, or looking.

I used to think the smart play was to wait until someone flagged dissatisfaction, then act. Counter with equity. Offer a promotion. Show them they matter. But by then, the trust has usually cracked. Retention isn’t a rescue mission. It’s a design system. It’s about making the environment always feel negotiable—safe for ambition, frustration, and realignment.

Here’s what changed for us:

  • We built a simple “re-scope” form that managers use every quarter: “What are you still owning that you’ve outgrown?” and “What’s one challenge you want next?”
  • We started tracking retention risk in team reviews—not just performance.
  • We made it normal to say “I want to change the deal” without it sounding like disloyalty.

The result? Fewer exits. And more honest conversations before they become ultimatums.

One of our senior hires almost left last year. She was stretched thin, under-recognized, and quietly applying elsewhere. But one conversation—timed right—changed the course. We didn’t ask her to stay with more money. We asked her what she needed to feel seen and strategic again. She said, “I want to move from firefighting to ownership. I want to stop being the person who fixes things and start being the one who builds the next thing.”

That became the brief. We reshaped her scope. Gave her hiring authority. Let her write her own KPIs for a new initiative. A year later, she’s still here. And more invested than ever.

If you build a culture where renegotiation is normal, you’ll retain better people longer—and with less drama.

Here’s what that looks like:

  • Check-ins that include scope, not just mood. Stop asking only “How are you?” Start asking, “Is the job still the right size for who you are now?”
  • Role clarity that includes exit signals. Make it okay to say, “I’m not sure I want to keep doing this,” without triggering fear or suspicion.
  • Promotions tied to curiosity, not tenure. Let people earn more complexity when they show interest, not just after a time-based cycle.

When your team knows that change is welcome—not punished—they stop searching elsewhere for reinvention.

I wouldn’t wait until they were frustrated. I’d design systems where they never had to pretend they weren’t. I’d normalize renegotiation as a rhythm—not a reaction. And I’d remind myself: your best employees don’t want comfort. They want clarity, growth, and respect. If you don’t offer it, someone else will.

So don’t negotiate harder. Negotiate smarter. Before they leave. Retention isn’t about how loud you shout when they’re leaving. It’s about how quietly you listen while they’re still deciding if they’ll stay. If I could go back, I’d realize sooner that negotiation isn’t a battle—it’s a mirror. It reflects how well your company is evolving alongside the people who helped build it. When top performers stop pushing for more, it’s not always because they’re content. Sometimes, they’ve simply stopped believing change is possible here.

The best founders I’ve met in the past two years don’t wait for annual reviews to open that door. They create space for preemptive honesty. They celebrate people not just for loyalty, but for knowing what they want next. And when the deal shifts—because it always does—they invite their team to co-author it. This mindset isn’t soft. It’s strategic. Because the true cost of losing your best people isn’t just hiring or ramp-up time. It’s the silent knowledge, the deep context, and the cultural DNA that walks out with them.

So build the habit now. Renegotiate roles before resentment sets in. Make listening your retention edge. And remember: people don’t leave bad jobs. They leave places where they stopped being asked what a good job looks like for them now.


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