Evidence suggests that improvements in people management practices, especially the development of supportive managers paired with time & place flexibility, contribute to increased well-being.
Work-life and well-being programs have been demonstrated to have an impact on employees in terms of recruitment, retention/turnover, commitment and satisfaction, absenteeism, productivity and accident rates.
Many organizations still seem focused on patching together short-term tactics to solve what has become a series of longer-term systemic truths regarding the future of work. Namely:
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Employees are people, not just workers.
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Work is a subset of life, not separate from it.
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Value comes through feelings, not just features.
Well-being by the Numbers:
An astounding 25% of employees are considering quitting and changing jobs in the coming years.
The Business Case: Mental/Emotional Health
- 19% of American workers rate their mental health as fair or poor.
- Employees with inadequate mental health miss 4X more work.
- 40% of U.S. workers report that their job has had a negative impact on their mental health in the prior six months, including 7% describing it as having an “extremely negative” impact.
- A recent Pew Research Center study that found that nearly 40% of employees want their employers to discuss mental health in the workplace.
- 81% of individuals said they will be looking for workplaces that support mental health when they seek future job opportunities. (APA 2022 Work and Well-being Report)
- Harm in the form of harassment, verbal abuse, or physical violence in the workplace—either by someone within their organization or outside of it—has been experienced by 3 in 10 workers (30%) within the last year. (APA 2022 Work and Well-being Report)
The Business Case: What people want...
- 97% of employees reported they want to expand or at least continue the amount of time they spend learning at work.
- LinkedIn research shows that working professionals now value flexibility over salary, benefits or culture.
- 88% of knowledge workers say that when searching for a new position, they will look for one that offers complete flexibility in their hours and location.
- 82% of employees say it’s important for their organization to see them as a person, not just an employee.
- A recent Employee Well-being Report by Glint found that belonging jumped up four positions year over year to become the second most important driver of a great work culture.
- Only 32% of U.S. workers are classified as engaged.
- 61% of employees believe that trust between managers and team members plays a significant role in job satisfaction. (SHRM)
People are continuing to ask themselves questions such as:
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What makes me happy and whole?
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What truly satisfies me?
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Where have I given away too much of myself for little return?
Employees want to know their employer cares about them as a person and that their work is going to help them thrive rather than burn out.