Why do people buy things they don’t need, do things they don’t want to do, or burn out doing work they’re good at? Based on the RISE framework, this article explores the hidden emotional drivers behind human behavior, drawing from psychology, behavioral science, marketing, leadership, and even intelligence tradecraft to uncover what people are really trying to protect, prove, pursue, and become.
I’ve become increasingly convinced that most organizations, and the humans in them, fundamentally misunderstand human beings.
We don’t understand ourselves, our employees, our coworkers, our clients, our consumers.
But, let’s just focus on the workplace for a moment. We’ve spent decades building systems to measure performance while barely understanding the psychology producing it. We track output, productivity, efficiency, revenue, engagement, retention, utilization, KPIs, and quarterly growth as though humans are predictable machines that simply require the right incentives and enough optimization — or the right kick in the ass — and then we act surprised when people burn out in jobs they’re objectively successful at.
We act surprised when talented people disengage after promotions they supposedly wanted. We act surprised when leaders create chaos while preaching culture. We act surprised when entire teams slowly drift into emotional numbness despite being well-paid, well-fed, and fully employed.
But the deeper I’ve studied psychology, leadership, behavioral science, and human motivation, the less surprising any of it becomes, because people are not rational systems. They’re emotional systems protecting invisible things. And once you understand what someone is protecting, their behavior suddenly starts making sense.
And that’s what we do around here — as leaders and as a behavioral intelligence agency. We try to understand why human beings do what they do, why they click, why they clique, why they break, why they buy, why they cling to certain identities, why they cling to certain brands, and why they feel alive in some environments and emotionally erased in others.
If leadership is truly about protecting joy while navigating chaos, as I like to believe, then leaders need to understand people at a far deeper level than most organizations currently allow.
Not demographics. Not job titles. Not personality stereotypes.
It’s about humans
Messy, contradictory, emotional, stupid humans.
And once you start pulling on that strange thread, you end up in some even stranger places, studying everything from mythology and religion to true crime, propaganda, and even cult dynamics, all just to make sense of your coworkers and their behavior, which sounds insane until you remember that every one of those fields is trying to answer some version of the same question: What actually moves people?
As marketers, that question matters more than almost anything else because we’re in the business of movement. We’re trying to move people from indifference to attention, attention to belief, belief to trust, trust to action, and from action to identity. We’re not simply making ads or campaigns; we’re trying to understand and influence the emotional architecture quietly shaping behavior beneath conscious awareness.
As leaders, the same thing is true. We’re trying to move our people from confusion to clarity, fear to confidence, compliance to commitment, burnout to belief, and from drifting to driving.
Here’s the overlap: Marketing and leadership both fail when they treat people as rational consumers of information, but they’re deeper and more complex than that, because they’re not just consciously processing information, they’re protecting themselves; protecting meaning, identity, status, stability, belonging, autonomy, safety, pride, purpose, dignity, and some secret version of themselves they may not even know how to name. And they don’t even realize it!
So, the work becomes less about asking, “What do people want?” and more about asking, “What does this person need to protect in order to get their butts moving?”
That’s a different question. A better one. A more dangerous one.
And oddly enough, some of the most fascinating work on that question did not come from business schools or leadership seminars. It came from people whose survival often depended on understanding human motivation with uncomfortable precision — interrogators, negotiators, propagandists, and intelligence officers.
Unexpectedly, they were all incredible marketers. They didn’t just get people to buy something. They got people to betray countries, leak classified information, abandon belief systems, defect ideologies, radicalize movements, and risk their lives for ideas. Absolute legends, honestly. Sit down, Ogilvy.
What spycraft reveals
Specifically, in the world of spies, behind the cinematic nonsense of spy thrillers, hidden briefcases, dead drops, trench coats, martinis, and coded messages was something far more psychologically interesting. Intelligence agencies had to understand why people cooperate, defect, resist, stay loyal, betray neighbors, fracture under pressure, or secretly align themselves with causes larger than themselves.
By studying spycraft, they were studying leverage. Human leverage! The emotional pressure points underneath behavior.
One of the frameworks often associated with that world is RICE, which stands for Reward, Ideology, Coercion, and Ego. It wasn’t built to help HR departments organize team-building exercises or make people feel seen during offsites. It exists because intelligence agencies needed to understand why human beings do extraordinary, irrational, dangerous, and seemingly contradictory things, like betraying your neighbor or buying Crocs.
If you’re trying to recruit a turncoat or predict whether someone will collapse under a bit of waterboarding, you very quickly realize people are not primarily rational creatures. They’re emotional creatures trying to protect things that matter deeply to them.
That’s what makes RICE so fascinating. It’s blunt, almost primitive. It strips away the polite, fictional belief that humans operate from some clean, conscious logic and instead asks a much more uncomfortable question: What’s this person’s real driving factor?
Understanding the drivers
Reward is obvious. It’s money, recognition, advancement, access, luxury, and all that lovely stuff. It’s the proof that the effort actually mattered and that the person actually mattered. In espionage, Reward may look like someone selling secrets because they want wealth or status. In organizations, Reward may look like the person chasing promotions, titles, bonuses, awards, applause, or visibility. In marketing, Reward may show up when people buy products not simply for the product itself but for what ownership signals back to them.
We like to pretend Reward is shallow, but it isn’t. Reward is often about evidence. Evidence of progress. Evidence of worth. Evidence of differentiation. Evidence that the world noticed.
Ideology is different. Ideology is belief, purpose, meaning — a cause. The person driven by Ideology wants to feel aligned with something larger than themselves. In intelligence stories, this is the person who defects because they believe the system they serve has become corrupt or dangerous. In organizations, it’s the employee who will endure hardship if they believe the work matters; that they are part of something meaningful. In marketing, it’s the customer who buys because the brand reflects their values, worldview, ethics, tribe, or desired future.
Ideology is powerful because belief can outlast comfort. People will sacrifice money, ease, and sometimes even safety when they believe deeply enough in what they’re serving.
Then there’s Coercion, which is where I started to feel the model needed to evolve for everyday human understanding. In intelligence contexts, Coercion makes sense. Fear, blackmail, pressure, threat, debt, shame, exposure; these are the darker tools of human influence. But in ordinary life, most people are not walking around saying, “I am motivated by coercion.” They’re just trying to comfortably and reassuringly preserve something much more familiar: Structure.
Structure is routine, comfort, safety, predictability, reliability, and control. It’s the desire for life to feel emotionally manageable, the need to reduce chaos enough to function, the craving for clarity when ambiguity becomes too expensive.
This matters because a lot of what leaders call resistance is really a person trying to protect Structure. They’re not necessarily lazy, difficult, or anti-change; they may just be trying to survive the emotional cost of too much uncertainty. They may be trying to keep the floor from disappearing underneath them.
In marketing, Structure shows up everywhere. People buy products that simplify complexity, reduce risk, create predictability, or make the future feel slightly less terrifying. Insurance, banking, education, and healthcare, all often boring, but they feel like Structure. Even luxury brands sell Structure when they give people a sense of control over how they’re perceived.
And then there’s Ego, the most misunderstood driver of all.
Ego is not simply arrogance. Ego is identity protection. It’s the need to matter, to feel significant, competent, respected, seen, important. Some people fear failure. Others fear invisibility. Some people do not need to win as much as they need to not feel small.
This is where behavior gets really interesting, because Ego can disguise itself as leadership, expertise, taste, standards, ambition, confidence, and even morality. A person can claim they’re defending the work when they’re actually defending their identity. A customer can claim they’re choosing the “best” product when they’re really choosing the version of themselves that product allows them to be. A leader can claim they want excellence when what they really want is control over a world that keeps threatening their self-image.
Same behavior, different emotional rationales
But, hold up now, because what really fascinated me about all this was not the CIA stuff. It was the recognition that two people can perform the exact same behavior for completely different psychological reasons.
One leader micromanages because they genuinely care and want to protect the team from chaos. Another micromanages because losing control threatens their identity.
One employee stays late because they believe deeply in the mission. Another stays late because being perceived as unimportant feels emotionally unsafe.
One customer buys the expensive car because they love the engineering. Another buys it because they need the world to understand they’ve arrived.
Same behavior. Completely different emotional architecture underneath.
And once you see that, leadership, marketing, business, and being a human — and your perspective about them — all change forever.
When people make sense
It’s because people stop looking irrational and start looking like manageable, predictable patterns. And that’s the part everyone is missing. They obsess over what people did while barely understanding why they did it. They analyze the click, the conversion, the resignation, the missed deadline, the Slack tone, the sales objection, the disengagement score, the review, the meeting behavior, the purchase pattern, the churn. Then they build elaborate explanations around the visible behavior.
But visible behavior is often the least interesting part. They study the past and pray for repetition without understanding why. And when they do, they can finally predict, plan, even incite it. That’s because behavior is just smoke but motivation is the fire.
A customer didn’t choose the competitor because the landing page had a better button color. Maybe they chose the competitor because that brand made them feel smarter, safer, more ambitious, more responsible, less behind, more admired, more in control, or more like the person they secretly want to become.
An employee didn’t disengage because they suddenly stopped caring. Maybe they stopped seeing the connection between their effort and meaning; kept producing but stopped believing; were praised for output while starving for direction; were told they had autonomy when what they needed was Structure.
Maybe they were given a title when what they wanted was trust.
This is why so many marketing strategies feel dead on arrival. They rely on demographics when the real action is psychographic. They say “women 35-54,” “working professionals,” “busy parents,” or “college-bound students” as though those labels explain anything meaningful about human motivation. They don’t. They tell us who someone is on paper. They do not tell us what they are trying to protect, become, escape, prove, repair, or believe.
It’s also why so many leadership systems fail. They focus on behavior before understanding motivation. They create competency models, performance rubrics, communication norms, review cycles, and accountability structures while missing the emotional logic underneath the people they’re trying to lead.
They try to solve burnout with perks, disengagement with demands, anxiety with initiatives, cultural distrust with values statements, poor collaboration with process, lack of passion with more directions.
But humans are not machines
You cannot KPI your way out of emotional and motivational misalignment.
A person driven heavily by Ideology will eventually suffocate inside meaningless work, regardless of compensation. A person driven heavily by Reward may slowly disengage in environments where excellence disappears into anonymity. A person driven heavily by Structure may struggle in chaotic environments because ambiguity consumes cognitive bandwidth and emotional energy. A person driven heavily by Ego may resist feedback because criticism feels existential rather than instructional.
None of this means people are trapped inside one driver forever. That would be too simple, and humans are almost never simple. We are blends. We are contradictions. We are contextual. We are influenced by our age, our upbringing, our wounds, our ambitions, our family systems, our work environments, our financial realities, our identities, our fears, and the story we’re trying to prove true about ourselves.
But patterns exist and they matter.
That’s where RISE assessments come in.
Reward. Ideology. Structure. Ego. RISE is not a personality gimmick (it kind of is). It’s not a corporate horoscope (it kind of is). It’s not another polished assessment pretending humans fit neatly into a quadrant with a cute icon and a downloadable report (it kind of is, but it’s more like multiple quadrants layered to reflect human archetypal dimensionality patterns, including both intrinsic and extrensic factors, using plotting points to link them together with each thread — based on the specific connected plotting points — representing a different human motivational persona, which were inspired by Jungian psychology and then assessed cumulatively to create a unique, personalized motivation assessment, but that’s obvious, right?).
RISE is an attempt to make motivation visible, to spark self-awareness, and to start conversations.
It takes the practical insight of RICE, moves it out of the darker world of leverage and prediction, and reframes it for self-understanding, leadership, marketing, and human alignment. It asks what drives a person when they’re energized, what they protect when they’re stressed, what they seek from environments, what they need from leaders, what they unconsciously chase, and what kind of work makes them feel alive rather than merely useful.
That last distinction matters, because usefulness is not the same as aliveness.
Plenty of people are useful in environments that are killing them slowly. They perform. They deliver. They respond. They attend the meetings. They smile through the call. They answer the Slack. They keep the machine fed. Then, one day, everyone is shocked to learn they’ve been internally and emotionally gone for months while still technically employed.
This is the quiet tragedy of modern work
We’ve built organizations capable of measuring activity while missing aliveness. RISE is designed to help recover that signal.
For leaders, that means understanding that motivation is not a soft thing. It’s an operating system. If you misunderstand the driver, you misread the person. If you misread the person, you mislead them. And if you mislead enough people for long enough, culture starts to rot while the dashboard still looks fine.
For marketers, it means understanding that people do not buy based only on need. They buy based on identity, fear, aspiration, belonging, status, meaning, safety, and the emotional promise hidden inside the decision. The product may be rational, but the decision rarely is.
This is why behavioral intelligence matters. It lets us move past what people say they want and get closer to what they are actually trying to solve, not just functionally but emotionally and socially.
Someone choosing a university is not simply buying a degree. They may be searching for reinvention, confidence, escape, status, belonging, proof, stability, or a future self they can finally believe in.
Someone choosing a healthcare provider is not simply choosing a service. They may be seeking safety, dignity, control, relief, trust, or the feeling that someone competent finally has them.
Someone choosing an agency is not simply buying strategy, creative, media, or execution. They may be trying to reduce risk, create momentum, look smart internally, challenge a stale organization, protect their job, or feel like someone else finally sees the problem clearly.
The stated need is rarely the whole need.
Breaking RISE down
Strip away the personality tests, the labels, and the corporate jargon, and most human behavior starts to trace back to four fundamental motivational forces.
A Reward-driven person needs momentum, recognition, progress, and evidence of achievement. When healthy, they bring ambition, energy, competitiveness, and drive. When unhealthy, they can become addicted to external validation, chasing the next marker of success without ever feeling full.
An Ideology-driven person needs meaning, belief, integrity, and alignment. When healthy, they bring conviction, loyalty, creativity, and moral energy. When unhealthy, they can become rigid, disappointed, self-sacrificing, or resentful when reality fails to match the mission.
A Structure-driven person needs clarity, rhythm, stability, routine, and emotional manageability. When healthy, they bring reliability, consistency, process, calm, and operational strength. When unhealthy, they can become rigid, avoidant, overly cautious, or resistant to ambiguity.
An Ego-driven person needs significance, identity, respect, competence, and control over how they are perceived. When healthy, they bring confidence, presence, standards, boldness, and leadership gravity. When unhealthy, they can become defensive, territorial, performative, or allergic to feedback.
Again, this is not about labeling people. Labels are lazy. The goal is not to say, “You are Reward” or “You are Ego” as though human beings are cereal boxes with nutritional facts printed on the side. The goal is to help people recognize their own patterns.
Self-awareness changes everything
When people understand what fundamentally drives them, they begin to understand why certain environments energize them while others drain them. Why some feedback devastates them while other criticism barely registers. Why some people crave autonomy while others crave stability. Why some need recognition while others need meaning. Why some fear failure while others fear invisibility. Why some people feel alive in uncertainty while others experience the same uncertainty as psychological suffocation.
And once leaders understand those patterns, leadership itself changes.
A leader managing a Reward-driven person needs to make progress visible. They need to show momentum, acknowledge achievement, define what winning looks like, and prevent that person from turning life into an endless scoreboard.
A leader managing an Ideology-driven person needs to connect work to meaning. They need to explain why the work matters, where it fits, what it serves, and when compromise is necessary without making the person feel morally betrayed by reality.
A leader managing a Structure-driven person needs to reduce unnecessary ambiguity. They need to create clarity, rhythm, expectations, and psychological safety, while slowly building the person’s tolerance for uncertainty so Structure becomes a platform, not a prison.
A leader managing an Ego-driven person needs to respect identity while challenging defensiveness. They need to give that person significance without letting significance become entitlement. They need to make feedback feel like refinement of strength rather than annihilation of worth.
This is where leadership becomes far more precise, because leadership is not merely operational. Leadership is psychological.
The best leaders are not simply managing workflows
They’re managing emotional environments, protecting confidence, protecting meaning, protecting momentum, protecting dignity, protecting belief, protecting joy while navigating chaos.
That phrase matters deeply to me because it reframes leadership away from authority and toward stewardship. The role of a leader is not to eliminate difficulty, it’s to help people move through difficulty without losing themselves in the process.
And to do that well, you must understand what people value deeply enough to protect in the first place.
Most people don’t even understand that about themselves. That’s why RISE is valuable beyond the assessment itself. The assessment is the doorway. The deeper value is the conversation it creates. It gives people language for things they may have felt for years but never named. It helps leaders see that motivation is not a generic management concept. It’s the invisible architecture of performance.
And naming matters. Once you can name a pattern, you can work with it. You can lead it. You can design for it. You can protect it. You can challenge it. You can stop being unconsciously controlled by it.
It’s linguistic relativity; the theory that the language we use influences how we perceive, categorize, and interpret reality. In its strongest form, it suggests language determines thought; in its more widely accepted modern form, it suggests language shapes and nudges thought. The words available to us act like mental containers, making some distinctions easier to notice and remember than others.
For example, people tend to think more readily about concepts that have names, labels, and linguistic shortcuts. This is why naming matters so much in leadership, branding, and culture: when you give a recurring experience, behavior, or idea a name, you make it easier for people to recognize, discuss, teach, and ultimately believe in. Language does not create reality from nothing, but it often determines which parts of reality become visible, meaningful, and actionable.
Without language, people just feel things. They feel drained. Defensive. Restless. Invisible. Trapped. Unappreciated. Misunderstood. Bored. Overwhelmed. Underused. Unseen.
With language, those feelings become translatable, sharable signals, and signals can be interpreted.
That may be the real work underneath all of this
Interpretation.
In the age of artificial intelligence and infinite information, the rarest skill is no longer access to data. Everyone has data. Everyone has dashboards. Everyone has research. Everyone has tools. Everyone has noise pretending to be insight.
The advantage belongs to those who can interpret human beings.
For marketers, that means understanding the emotional and psychological truth behind the audience. For leaders, it means understanding the human being behind the performance. For individuals, it means understanding the self beneath the habits, reactions, ambitions, and fears.
RISE exists because most organizations have become very good at measuring what people do and dangerously bad at understanding why people do it.
And if we want better marketing, we need to understand what moves people.If we want better leadership, we need to understand what sustains people.If we want better work, we need to understand what makes people feel alive rather than merely productive.
That is the strange pursuit, because once people understand what they are protecting, what they are chasing, what they are avoiding, and what they are secretly trying to become, the work changes.
The leadership changes. The marketing changes. The person changes.
And maybe that is what this whole thing has been about from the beginning: helping people finally see the invisible systems they’ve been operating inside all along; to protect joy while navigating chaos.
To take your RISE assessment, click HERE.