Firms often face the challenge of motivating top performers when financial incentives are limited or costly. Research using data from German fighter pilots during World War II shows that a tiered system of status-based awards can drive repeated bursts of effort from high-ability individuals. Rather than relying on pay raises or safer assignments, the Luftwaffe designed a hierarchy of honors—the Knight’s Cross and its successive tiers—to stimulate competition and effort among pilots. As awards became more common, new, more exclusive tiers were introduced to maintain motivation.
The study highlights the “in-zone” effect, where pilots approaching the threshold for the next medal dramatically increased their performance, taking greater risks to achieve the award. Once the medal was earned, effort temporarily declined, but the introduction of a higher tier reignited effort. This cycle demonstrates that status incentives can sustain repeated high performance if the ladder of recognition is long enough.
The effectiveness of this system depended on the exclusivity and signalling value of the awards. As medals diffused to more recipients, their ability to distinguish top performers diminished, prompting the creation of new tiers. Pilots with alternative sources of status, such as aristocratic rank or other distinctions, were less influenced by the awards, confirming that these honors acted as substitutes for social recognition.
Overall, the Knight’s Cross system generated thousands of additional aerial victories, equivalent to deploying hundreds of extra pilots—an outcome the resource-constrained Luftwaffe could not have achieved otherwise. For modern organizations, the lesson is clear: status rewards can be powerful motivators, but their impact erodes over time. Firms must continually innovate recognition programs to maintain the engagement of top performers, effectively creating a “status treadmill” that keeps high achievers striving for the next milestone.







