ATD Blog
Why Celebration Belongs in Your Talent Strategy (Plus 4 Ways to Start Today)
What might become possible in your organization if celebration were the norm, not the exception?
Mon Jul 07 2025
When was the last time you really celebrated a win?
Not just checked a box or moved on to the next goal—but actually paused, acknowledged your effort, and let yourself feel proud.
Research shows that pausing to celebrate progress and small wins releases dopamine, the “feel-good neurotransmitter” linked to motivation, learning, and performance. But in today’s fast-paced culture, it's easy to move from milestone to milestone without pausing to acknowledge progress.
The cost? People begin to disconnect from purpose, undervalue their contributions, and burn out. This is especially true for high performers, who often downplay success and push celebrations to “someday.” They tell themselves:
“It wasn’t that big of a deal.”
“If I celebrate now, I’ll get complacent.”
“I don’t want to seem arrogant.”
“I’ll celebrate later.”
But that later rarely comes.
These beliefs may seem productive, but they actually suppress motivation and rob people of the momentum needed for future success. Over time, this erodes engagement, accelerates burnout, and quietly disrupts leadership development and retention.
The antidote?
Creating a culture of celebration—where progress is seen, valued, and shared—can reignite motivation, build connection, and drive sustainable performance.
Celebration Fuels Motivation and Performance
Celebration reinforces progress in a way that propels future action.
Think of a baby learning to stand. They grab a chair, wobble, lift one leg, then the other—before toppling over. What do we do? We cheer: “That was amazing! Keep going—you’ve got this!” We celebrate their effort, not just the outcome, which builds their confidence and keeps them trying.
Now imagine saying, “You’re already a year old and can’t even stand? Forget walking.” That kind of feedback would crush motivation.
Adults are no different. When we try something new and pause to celebrate—even a small win—dopamine is released, reinforcing the behavior. Over time, this strengthens the brain’s reward system, making us more likely to persist through challenges and pursue bigger goals.
Celebration Strengthens Engagement and Retention
A significant benefit of cultivating a culture of celebration is the sense of belonging and connection that’s created. When we tell others about achievements, it leads to closer, more positive relationships. A 2023 Gallup report found that “employees who receive great recognition are 20 times as likely to be engaged as employees who receive poor recognition.”
A 2024 research by Gallup also found that employees receiving high-quality recognition “are 65% less likely to be actively looking or watching for another job opportunity.” Additionally, employees who receive recognition on at least four of the five Gallup pillars of recognition are nine times as likely to be engaged as employees who don’t receive any recognition in those pillars.
Despite leaders increasingly acknowledging the important role of recognition, only 22 percent of employees say they receive the right amount of recognition. By promoting a culture of celebration, organizations can tap into a powerful competitive advantage with sweeping benefits.
Celebration Builds Resilience and Well-Being
Celebrating wins isn’t a productivity hack or a way to justify taking a break. It’s a mindset shift and a powerful strategy for supporting both mental and physical well-being.
Studies have shown that pausing to celebrate positively influences well-being. People who celebrate tend to:
Have improved physical health and a stronger immune system
Have better coping strategies and can bounce back more quickly from adversity
Are more optimistic
Have a stronger social network
Take better care of themselves
Tend to be less stressed
Celebration isn’t a luxury—it’s a strategy with measurable impact on well-being and the bottom line.
How Organizational Leaders Can Embed Celebration
To make celebration a meaningful part of your talent strategy, it must go beyond the occasional shout-out or team lunch. It needs to be modeled by leadership, reinforced through culture, and operationalized into the rhythm of how people work and grow.
The first key step? Gathering insights.
Before introducing new recognition practices, organizations should start with stakeholder interviews to understand how celebration is currently experienced. These insights uncover gaps, highlight overlooked behaviors, and lay the foundation for strategies that are authentic, inclusive, and reflect your workplace culture and values.
As you begin gathering insights, consider piloting a few of these quick-win practices to start signaling the importance of celebration:
Open Meetings With Celebration. Kick off team meetings by asking: “What’s one thing you’re proud of this week?” This normalizes celebration and shared wins.
Close the Week With “Fist Bump Friday.” Set a recurring Friday-at-3 p.m. reminder for the team to share personal or professional wins—via Slack, email, or even a quick live meeting. It’s an easy ritual that helps end the week on a positive note.
Create a #BRAG Channel. Launch a Slack/Teams channel like #brags or #champagnemoments where team members are invited (and encouraged) to share their wins. It gives people space to celebrate out loud—and inspires others in the process.
Start a “Kudos Korner.” Create a space—like a #kudos-korner channel or a quick end-of-week agenda item—where team members can thank someone who helped, supported, or inspired them. This reinforces appreciation, strengthens relationships, and cultivates a culture of gratitude.
The Strategic Return on Celebration
When organizations normalize celebration, they’re not just boosting morale—they’re:
Increasing motivation and engagement
Strengthening resilience in times of change
Deepening learning and retention
Encouraging leadership behaviors across all levels
Improving talent retention by reinforcing personal meaning and value
Celebration fuels performance and potential—making it a high-impact, low-cost strategy in any talent playbook.
A Final Thought for Senior Leaders
When you pause to recognize the progress your people are making—not just their results—you signal that who they are becoming matters just as much as what they are doing. This shift fosters a deeper sense of ownership, pride, and engagement.
Ask yourself: What might become possible in your organization if celebration were the norm, not the exception?
Because when people feel proud of who they’re becoming, they show up with more energy, more creativity, and more commitment. That’s a win worth celebrating—and a culture worth building.