October 9, 2025

Purpose Over Performance

Richard Blake had built ThriveWorks from scratch — a business born from purpose.He wanted to help companies grow through technology that made people’s work simpler, more human, more connected. But somewhere along the way, that light dimmed. Deadlines replaced dreams.KPIs replaced conversations.And the company that once pulsed with purpose began to run like a well-oiled […]

Richard Blake had built ThriveWorks from scratch — a business born from purpose.
He wanted to help companies grow through technology that made people’s work simpler, more human, more connected.

But somewhere along the way, that light dimmed.

Deadlines replaced dreams.
KPIs replaced conversations.
And the company that once pulsed with purpose began to run like a well-oiled machine… only without the heartbeat.

Richard still cared deeply about his business — but increasingly, it felt transactional.
He noticed his patience wearing thin with the team. Targets weren’t being met fast enough, ideas felt flat, and his once-constructive feedback had taken on a sharper edge.

Yet beneath the frustration was something quieter — and more confronting.
Through coaching, he began to see that what he was really angry at… was himself.

Somewhere along the way, he’d sold out on his purpose.
What began as a mission to make work more meaningful had become a chase for margins and monthly turnover.
Each financial milestone gave him a momentary rush — followed by a hollow sense that none of it truly mattered.

It wasn’t greed. It was drift.
He’d simply lost sight of the reason he began.


The Subtle Drift

It didn’t happen overnight.
The business had grown, targets had expanded, and the early days of “let’s make something meaningful” were replaced by “let’s make it work.”

At first, it seemed like maturity.
But over time, Richard noticed the telltale signs:

  • People were busy but uninspired.

  • The values on the wall no longer matched what was lived in meetings.

  • Once-creative minds were now careful minds — afraid to take risks or question direction.

  • Collaboration was thinning; conversations were shorter, sharper, and more transactional.

The team was working hard — but not together.

Patrick Lencioni once wrote that when trust breaks down, everything else soon follows. Richard could see it: not outright conflict, but a quiet erosion of belief.
People still performed… just without heart.


The Performance Trap

Through coaching, Richard began to trace the arc of ThriveWorks’ journey — from purpose-driven to performance-obsessed.

What began as a desire to serve clients had become a need to please them.
What started as a mission to solve problems had become a habit of chasing profit.

As Nikos Mourkogiannis reminds us in Purpose: The Starting Point of Great Companies, true purpose isn’t a slogan — it’s the energy that animates performance.
When purpose fades, performance becomes a treadmill: exhausting, measurable, and ultimately hollow.

Even Richard’s best people were showing signs of fatigue. They didn’t know why they were doing what they were doing anymore — only that it needed to be done.

And that’s the quiet cost of chasing performance: you might hit every target and still feel empty.


The Cultural Fallout

Brené Brown speaks of “armoured leadership” — when fear replaces curiosity and vulnerability disappears.
That armour had crept into ThriveWorks’ culture.

People guarded their ideas, deferred to authority, and stopped naming the tensions that needed to be surfaced.
The once-magnetic sense of belonging had thinned to polite professionalism.

When a business forgets its purpose, it loses more than clarity — it loses its soul.
It becomes a financial vehicle, not a living organism.
And without soul, no culture — however cleverly branded — can attract or retain the kind of people who build something extraordinary.


The Courage to Restore

Richard’s turning point didn’t come from a new strategy or off-site.
It came from a question:

“What if we stopped trying to grow, and started trying to matter again?”

Through coaching, he began to restore ThriveWorks’ original purpose — what Simon Sinek would call its “why.”
That simple but profound question — why do we exist? — had once been obvious.
Now, it had to be reclaimed.

Conversations shifted from targets to truths.
Team meetings began exploring what success feels like, not just what it measures.
People started remembering why they joined — and some, for the first time in years, found language for what they had lost.

Restoring purpose wasn’t about slowing down; it was about realigning energy.
As the team restored their shared sense of meaning, performance began to follow — not as the goal, but as the fruit.


A Quiet Invitation

If your team feels weary, divided, or transactional — these are not the final signs of decline.
They are warning lights on the dashboard.
Signals that it’s time to turn back toward purpose.

Because when purpose is restored, performance finds its rightful place again — not as the master, but as the measure of meaning.

At Aruka, we help leaders like Richard restore what made their business worth building in the first place.
One of the simplest ways to begin is by holding up a mirror — our Aruka Essentials Team Scan™ helps teams see where purpose has been replaced by pressure, and what it will take to bring alignment, trust, and energy back to life.

👉 Learn more about the Aruka Essentials Team Scan™ here.

It’s courageous work. But it’s the only kind that lasts.

Also available on: www.arukasolutions.co.za

Article written by Patrick Lawson

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