Dr. Natalie Luke The Trust Tax: Why High Performers Are Burning Out—and What’s Really Driving It
MAY 15, 202645 MIN
Dr. Natalie Luke The Trust Tax: Why High Performers Are Burning Out—and What’s Really Driving It
MAY 15, 202645 MIN
Description
Burnout among high performers has reached a critical
point.
The numbers you’re working with point to a clear and
uncomfortable pattern: burnout isn’t just widespread—it’s structurally
concentrated in the very people organizations rely on most.
The 66% overall burnout rate (as reported
by LinkedIn) already signals a systemic issue across the workforce. But the
more telling stat is the ~85% among top performers. That gap
matters. It suggests burnout isn’t evenly distributed—it disproportionately
affects those who are:
In other words, burnout at the top isn’t primarily about
volume of work—it’s about role creep without structural boundaries.
Dr. Natalie Luke’s framing of a “broken
responsibility structure” aligns with what these numbers imply. High
performers aren’t just doing more—they’re absorbing unassigned,
unowned, and often invisible work. Over time, this creates:
Her concept of the “Trust Tax” is a sharp
way to describe this: trust becomes a liability when it leads to unchecked
responsibility transfer. The story about producing 15 peer-reviewed papers
while managing a personal crisis illustrates the extreme version of what many
high performers experience in quieter ways—expectations expand to match
capability, not capacity.
The key insight from both the data and narrative:
Burnout in high performers is less about overwork and more
about unbounded ownership driven by trust and organizational gaps.
LinkedIn: @NatalieLukePhD
Listen: https://open.spotify.com/show/2lCQ5OC6kXFCXlHR1o2hkR
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