Celebration Is Not a Reward. It Is a Recalibration Tool.
This week the country pauses.
Most leaders do not. They check email, handle one urgent thing, tell themselves they will be back Monday. The pause is nominal. The work continues.
I understand the impulse. There is always something pressing. Pausing feels like falling behind. And in high-growth organizations, the distance between where you are and where you need to be is never small enough to feel comfortable stopping.
But here is what gets lost when organizations never pause to mark progress.
The team loses the ability to know whether they are winning or just surviving.
Those are not the same thing. Surviving means you made it through. Winning means the effort registered, the progress was real, and the next challenge starts from a higher baseline. Without a conscious moment of acknowledgment between one hard thing and the next, the work becomes a continuous undifferentiated grind. No mile markers. No signal that it mattered.
That is not a morale problem. That is a recalibration problem.
Two leaders I work with are genuinely good at individual recognition. At a fast-paced technology company, they have named awards, real traditions, a culture that visibly values its people. When I asked how they celebrate milestones as a company, there was a pause. They could name the awards. They could not name the last time the whole organization stopped to celebrate how far it had come. The other was redesigning their merit pay system. Thoughtful work, well-intentioned. Entirely focused on the individual. No mechanism for recognizing what the team had done together. Both leaders care deeply about their people. Neither had a system for acknowledging the collective.
I made the same mistake. At Compaq we moved fast, faster than almost anyone at the time. We hit milestones that would have seemed impossible the year before. And almost every time, the reaction was: great, now what’s next? I wish I had stopped more. Not for long. Just long enough to know we had won something before we started chasing the next thing.
Celebration is not a reward for finished work. It is a mechanism. It marks where you have been so you know where you are starting from. Leaders who skip it are not being disciplined. They are depriving their teams of the information they need to keep going.
Ambient urgency — the permanent background pressure that makes pausing feel irresponsible — makes this worse. When everything is urgent, there is always a reason the timing is not quite right. So the milestone passes unmarked. Then the next one. Until the team is running hard with no sense of whether any of it is working.
What recalibration actually looks like is not a party or a forced fun offsite. It is a conscious moment (a conversation, a specific acknowledgment, a named win) before the next thing starts. It might sound like: “Before we move into the next quarter, I want to name what we actually did. We shipped under pressure. We covered for each other. We did not break. That matters.” That is the whole thing. Thirty seconds. Done before Monday.
This weekend, before you close the laptop, think about what your team has done in the last ninety days that has not been named yet.
Name it. Not in your head. To them. Before Monday.
Then close the laptop.
🟥
Take good care,
Karen
If you are navigating what actually matters versus what just feels urgent, let’s talk. I work with senior leaders to create clarity where it counts most.
→ Learn more: www.karenwalker.us

Well said @Karen Walker Have a lovely weekend!