One in four employees still don’t feel a sense of belonging. Retaining talent and driving peak performance has never been more difficult. How, when, and where we work is still evolving.
Since the start of the pandemic, we’ve tracked over 10,000 BetterUp Members engaged in our 1:1 personalized coaching.
These members represent a cross-section of the workforce and provide a window into the unique differences, challenges, and needs of populations impacted by the pandemic.
Against the backdrop of a “war for talent” and record-high quit rate, employees now demand flexibility, space, support, and trust from their organizations. And they want to work with a diverse, inclusive team where they can be their authentic selves.
Leading into the mass exodus of talent in April 2021, the aggregate sense of belonging among workers recently dipped to its lowest levels since the pandemic began.
To succeed in the future, organizations must abandon pre-pandemic thinking. Balancing new and existing employee expectations, along with the pressures to innovate, be agile, and cultivate deep customer loyalty requires a new approach.
No group can create a more sustained and immediate impact on inclusion for your employees than frontline managers. But, to now support their teams, managers need to re-learn how to lead people under new and evolving conditions.
When managers are viewed as inclusive, employees experience:
The pandemic has disproportionately affected underrepresented groups in a variety of ways, and managers must understand that the workplace is no exception. Our research found that URMs (underrepresented minorities) are 1.6X more likely to have low belonging than their peers in other groups, a leading indicator of intent to stay.
During the pandemic, women tended to have statistically significantly lower well-being — by 3%. But when women feel supported by their leaders? They see a 17% boost in well-being, and parents experience a 28% boost in well-being.
An employee’s ability to perform their best work will be hampered if basic needs are not met. You can see the difference between those who are languishing and those who are thriving in what they discuss with their Coach.
When employees are thriving and experiencing well-being, they can open themselves up to focus on other areas, like communication, career development, and leading others. But when we’re struggling, getting back to well-being is a top priority.
With dynamic and hybrid forms of work on the rise, we found that there are both short- and long-term impacts to changing working arrangements. Those who are coming out of remote work and back into office full time appear to reap a resilience advantage, whereas hybrid workers have a well-being advantage.
The hybrid workforce introduces a new form of diversity for managers — work arrangement — that requires unique forms of support.