Career Guidance

Your Company Could Be Hooked On This Negative Motivation Pattern — Here’s How to Fix It

Many high-performing teams are unknowingly wired like slot machines — chasing constant dopamine hits that fuel burnout, distraction, and mediocre output instead of sustainable success.

Before the pandemic struck, my brother Craig and I wrapped up a book project we’d pored over for two years. The manuscript was finalized, the publisher was thrilled, and the launch was set. We celebrated with our editorial team, enjoying pizza around the boardroom table.

Halfway through, someone casually asked, “What’s next?”

Suddenly, just like that, we shifted from celebrating a monumental achievement to brainstorming the next project. The pizza was still fresh, but we’d barely let the accomplishment sink in before our minds were on the next goal.

That was my old mindset. I’ve since learned a better way of working, one I shared in a previous article about recovering from burnout and discovering what truly fuels sustainable performance. Back then, though, I was caught in the dopamine loop.

During my recovery, I met a Stanford neuroscientist who showed me brain scans of both gambling addicts and high-performing professionals. The similarities were shocking. Both groups had identical dopamine patterns. The same neural pathways fired. The same cycle of anticipation, pleasure, and crash.

He told me, “You and your best people are running on the same brain chemistry as slot machines.”

It hit me. I realized we’d built businesses that operated like casinos.

The Dopamine Trap

Silicon Valley created a culture that thrives on dopamine hits: instant notifications, badges of achievement, looming deadlines, and constant validation. Dopamine fuels the wanting, not the having. It drives us to chase the next rush, but offers little in terms of actual satisfaction. And businesses fueled by dopamine are burning out their top talent, while creativity stagnates.

Here’s what a dopamine-driven workplace looks like: Constant pings on Slack. Quarterly targets that reset as soon as they’re met. Leaderboards pitting employees against each other. "Crushing it" is celebrated while steady excellence is ignored. Urgency becomes a virtue.

The neuroscience is clear: dopamine spikes when we anticipate a reward, but crashes immediately after achieving it. It’s the same chemical at work in addiction, gambling, and doomscrolling. Yet, we’ve turned our workplaces into dopamine casinos.

The cost to businesses is real. Research from the University of California at Irvine shows that it takes 25 minutes to regain focus after being interrupted. Teams living in constant dopamine mode rarely reach the deep cognitive states required for breakthrough ideas. They’re always on the hunt for the next quick hit, but never create anything truly original.

I’ve watched talented teams churn out mediocre work because they were stuck in reaction mode. They focused on quick wins, surface-level solutions, whatever could deliver a dopamine spike the fastest.

That was exactly what we were doing during our pizza celebration. We didn’t pause to appreciate what we had achieved. We were already chasing the next high. It wasn’t until that neuroscientist pointed it out that I saw how destructive the pattern had become.

The Serotonin Alternative

Serotonin works differently. It’s the neurochemical of belonging, contentment, and lasting fulfillment. While dopamine says, “More,” serotonin says, “Enough.” Where dopamine drives individual achievement, serotonin thrives on connection and contribution. Where dopamine spikes and crashes, serotonin builds steadily over time.

Companies that operate on serotonin don’t move more slowly. They move smarter. They produce better work because their teams can focus deeply. They retain talent because people feel truly fulfilled, not just temporarily high. They innovate because they give their teams the cognitive space to think creatively.

Take Patagonia, for example. They prioritize long-term environmental impact over short-term profits. Their retention rate is just 4% annually, compared to the industry average of 13%. Or Atlassian, which gives employees "ShipIt Days"—24-hour blocks of uninterrupted work time to focus on passion projects. Some of their most successful features came out of these sessions.

A serotonin-focused business culture isn’t about slowing down or lowering standards. It’s about cultivating sustainable excellence, rather than fostering an addictive sense of urgency.

Five Ways to Build a Serotonin Culture

  1. Audit Your Reward Systems
    Look at what your company actually celebrates. Are you only recognizing major wins? Shift your focus to reward consistent effort, thoughtful collaboration, and patient problem-solving. These changes help incentivize steady contributions and sustainable performance.

  2. Create Real Focus Zones
    Ban notifications for large blocks of time each day. Research shows that deep work requires at least 90 uninterrupted minutes. One company I advised implemented “Maker Mornings,” where Slack and email were off-limits until noon. Productivity jumped by 34% in the first quarter.

  3. Pause Mid-Project for Better Insights
    While post-mortems have their place, taking a step back during a project can be invaluable. Shopify uses “project retros” and “fresh eyes sessions” where teams reflect midway through a project. This process strengthens connections and promotes a deeper collective understanding, stimulating serotonin production.

  4. Build Mastery Paths
    Stop optimizing for immediate output. Focus on expertise development. Create three-year skill roadmaps for every employee. Research shows that people stay in places where they can become masters of their craft—not just where they can rack up achievements. Curiosity and mastery trigger serotonin; achievement chasing triggers dopamine.

  5. Practice Gratitude
    End each team meeting by having everyone share one thing they appreciate about a colleague’s work that week. Sounds soft? It’s actually science. Research from the American Brain Foundation shows that gratitude boosts serotonin production. It also strengthens social bonds and increases team collaboration.

The Business Case

The numbers don’t lie. Studies reviewed by the National Institutes of Health show that collaborative teams are up to 73% more productive than those working in hyper-competitive environments. Gallup’s research reveals that employees who find their work meaningful are up to four times more likely to stay with their company. And businesses with high employee satisfaction outperform their competitors by 20% annually.

But the true advantage is harder to measure: the breakthroughs that happen when people have the cognitive space to think deeply, the psychological safety to experiment freely, and the sustained focus to solve difficult problems.

That’s how you build something that lasts.

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