Study: Disengaged employees can cost companies up to $550B a year (original) (raw)

Dive Brief:

Dive Insight:

Employees must take some ownership of engagement for success and job satisfaction. The idea that certain personalities and perspectives might make some employees more inclined to engage themselves in their work is the subject of intense industry research.

Some of the employees who lack these traits and act passively, however, might work in top-down managed organizations where initiatives always come from leadership. Employees in low-paying jobs, in which turnover is high, also tend to wait for management to act, rather than take the initiative.

Managers’ attitudes and behaviors might adversely affect employees’ level of engagement. HR should always monitor strained relationships between managers and workers and intervene, if necessary.

An overwhelming percentage of survey respondents said they know when they’re becoming disengaged. Disengagement often leads to overall job dissatisfaction, which is a powerful sentiment not to recognize. Employers and workers might need to decide whether re-engagement is possible or if workers need to look elsewhere for job satisfaction.