Most teams do not wake up one day completely disengaged. Motivation usually fades quietly. Energy drops. Conversations get shorter. Good people start doing just enough to get by.
Leaders often respond by pushing harder or rolling out new initiatives. That rarely works. If motivation is slipping, the problem is usually not effort. It is misalignment, fatigue, or a disconnect between people and what the work is asking of them.
If you felt this slow down happening towards the end of last year you're not alone. The end of the year is a prime time to see a dip in engagement. But now that things are back in gear, it's time to get your team back in tip top shape. Here are the most common signs your team is losing motivation, why they matter, and what you can do about them this year.
1. Energy is low, even when workloads are manageable
One of the clearest signals of fading motivation is emotional flatness. Meetings feel dull. Wins barely register. People show up but they are not fully there.
This is not always about burnout from long hours. Gallup reports that only 21% of employees globally are engaged at work, even when many are not working extreme hours. Low energy is often about a lack of meaning or ownership, not capacity.
What to do:
- Shift conversations from tasks to purpose. Ask what parts of the work feel worthwhile and which feel draining.
- Reconnect individual roles to real outcomes, customers, or impact.
- Use structured tools, like assessments, to understand what naturally energizes each person so work can be adjusted where possible.
Read More: Will your values help you build a stronger culture?
2. Initiative has disappeared
When motivation drops, initiative is usually the first thing to go. People stop suggesting improvements. Problems are flagged late, not early. Teams wait for direction instead of taking ownership.
This is often misread as complacency. In reality, it is frequently a signal that people no longer feel safe, heard, or confident that speaking up will lead to positive change.
Research from Google’s Project Aristotle showed that psychological safety is one of the strongest predictors of high-performing teams. Without it, motivation erodes quickly.
What to do:
- Reward early input, not just polished ideas.
- Respond visibly when feedback is given so people see it matters.
- Check whether decision-making authority is clear or whether people feel overruled after the fact.
3. Performance is inconsistent, not uniformly poor
A stalled team does not usually fail across the board. Instead, performance becomes uneven. Some days are strong. Others fall flat for no obvious reason.
Inconsistent performance is often a motivation issue, not a capability one. When people care deeply, effort is more stable. When motivation drops, effort fluctuates based on mood, pressure, or proximity to deadlines.
What to do:
- Look for patterns, not isolated misses.
- Separate skill gaps from motivation gaps before taking corrective action.
- Use assessment data to understand where people feel confident versus stretched beyond their natural style.
4. Collaboration feels forced
Motivated teams share information freely. When motivation slips, collaboration becomes transactional. People do what is required but stop helping proactively.
This often shows up after periods of change or prolonged stress. The American Psychological Association has found that chronic workplace stress reduces trust and cooperation over time. You might also notice more siloed work and fewer informal check-ins. Collaboration shifts from “how can I help” to “what do you need from me,” which is a subtle but important change in mindset.
What to do:
- Reset expectations around how work gets done, not just what gets done.
- Acknowledge strain openly rather than pretending everything is fine.
- Rebuild trust through small, reliable commitments instead of big culture statements.
5. Feedback is avoided or emotionally charged
Another subtle sign of declining motivation is how feedback lands within the team. Leaders may notice that feedback is either avoided altogether or met with defensiveness. Conversations that once felt constructive start to feel tense or unproductive. When people are motivated, feedback is seen as information that helps them improve. When motivation drops, the same feedback can feel personal, critical, or simply not worth engaging with.
What to do:
- Focus feedback on behaviours and impact, not intent.
- Ask people how they prefer to receive input and adjust where possible.
- Use objective data, including assessment insights, to ground conversations and reduce emotional interpretation.
Read More: Check out these tips to improve team alignment
6. High performers are quietly disengaging
One of the most dangerous signals is when your strongest contributors start pulling back. They still deliver, but the spark is gone.
Gallup research shows that high performers who disengage are significantly more likely to leave within the next year. By the time they say something, the decision is often already forming. Often, this withdrawal shows up as less participation in discussions or a reluctance to take on new challenges. Because these employees are still performing, their disengagement can be easy to miss until the risk of losing them is much higher.
What to do:
- Do not assume silence means satisfaction.
- Have regular check-ins focused on growth, not just output.
- Use tools like McQuaig to explore whether role demands still align with natural strengths and motivators.
Fixing motivation starts with understanding, not pressure
Trying to motivate a stalled team with pressure usually backfires. Motivation is not something you apply to people. It is something you remove barriers to.
That starts with understanding who your people are, how they are wired, and what the work is currently asking of them. When there is a mismatch, motivation drops no matter how capable the team is.
This is where structured insight matters. McQuaig assessments help leaders move past assumptions and see what truly drives performance, resilience, and engagement at an individual level.
When leaders respond to lost motivation with clarity, empathy, and informed action, teams do not just recover. They often come back stronger, more focused, and more aligned than before.
Motivation is not a perk. It is a signal. When you listen to it early, you give your team a real chance to get back on track.