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Classified in: Business
Subjects: SVY, SBS

Employees and Managers Are Burned Out and Checked Out: New Research Points to What They Need to Thrive


CHICAGO, April 16, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- The constant pace of change and a variety of new demands are contributing to widespread burnout among employees and managers today, according to new research from a Harris Poll survey done on behalf of The Grossman Group.  The survey of 2,086 employees, conducted over two waves in January 2024, was designed to gauge the extent to which American workers are thriving, burned out, or ambivalent, as well as what drives those emotional states. The survey also considered how to help move more employees from a burned-out or ambivalent state to a thriving one. More than 75% of employees and 63% of managers report feeling burned out or ambivalent in their current position. Yet managers aren't recognizing just how overwhelmed their employees feel, with 89% saying their employees are thriving compared to the actual thriving figure of 24%. That's more than a 3-to-1 discrepancy.

The research finds the biggest driver of burnout for both groups is "a great deal of constant change." Other factors include unnecessary work from senior leadership, employees frequently having to shift focus throughout the day, and high turnover rates that often lead to even more work for those left behind.

"These findings are a wake-up call. Clearly, employees are not okay and yet that's often not recognized by senior leadership or the frontline leaders whose job it is to support and engage their teams," said David Grossman, founder and CEO of The Grossman Group, a prominent Chicago-based leadership and communications consultancy.

The research underscores what many workplace experts have already observed about the workforce. While the descriptors vary ? burned out, checked out, ambivalent, languishing, quiet quitting ? they all point to employees wanting and needing more from leadership.

Meanwhile, managers are struggling to respond to this major shift in employee needs and expectations and they deserve more support, Grossman said.

"Managers have been asked to lead employees through this permacrisis we find ourselves in today with empathy, and yet they still face greater responsibilities and heightened productivity pressure, often with fewer resources and smaller teams," Grossman said. "All of this is happening without the personal support and flexibility they need to thrive."

Highlights of the findings include:

A notable nuance is that what drives thriving for managers and employees is slightly different. For employees, the number one factor is quite personal, feeling that their manager is genuinely invested in their success and leads with empathy. When looking at ambivalent employees, the largest opportunity or gap to fill was around managers demonstrating personal investment in those employees.   

While managers want to see a personal investment from leadership as well, the even bigger factor for managers is feeling that their leader does a good job translating business strategy into the work they do, as well as clear and authentic communication from leadership.  

The findings point to the great potential to turn more ambivalent and burned-out employees to the thriving side, and there are important clues for leaders in how to accomplish this. The biggest indicators of thriving for employees and managers are feeling proud of their work, respected at work, motivated to go to work, and feeling supported by senior leadership.

"The responses of employees and managers demonstrate that leaders at all levels have a role to play in creating a stronger culture of thriving. Starting from the top and moving down through the ranks of managers, a focus on well-being should be purposeful and intentional, not left to chance," Grossman said.

Grossman emphasized that it's no longer enough to simply mitigate burnout. "The new north star for organizations needs to be building a thriving workforce," he said.

He added that there are important bright spots in the data, especially the fact that even many burned-out managers report relatively positive feelings about their work overall. For instance, only 36% of burned-out employees feel proud of the work they're doing, yet 50% of burned-out managers feel pride in their work. Furthermore, 46% of burned-out managers still feel respected at work and 39% feel they are reaching their potential.

"This signals to me that burned-out managers want their organizations to do well and feel that they are growing personally, yet they are exhausted and pushed to their limits," Grossman said. "There's opportunity there. When burned-out managers get more support, a more reasonable workload, and more flexibility, they can be re-energized and move from burned out to thriving."

The Bottom Line

The Grossman Group/The Harris Poll research provides important insights into the troubling emotional state of today's employees and managers, confirming what's been widely understood as a crisis of disengagement in much of today's workforce.

Still, the research underscores that there are proven tactics for moving many employees from disengaged to thriving, with the keys being stronger manager/employee communication and relationships, and a healthy respect for employee well-being. When employees aren't feeling supported, they not only become a turnover risk; they drag down the overall company culture, and a positive culture is essential for any successful organization.

To access the report, click here.

About The Grossman Group
The Grossman Group is an award-winning Chicago-based leadership and communications consultancy focusing on organizational consulting, strategic leadership development, and internal communication. A certified diversity supplier, The Grossman Group works closely with Fortune 500 companies and other organizations, including Abbott, Blue Cross Blue Shield, General Mills, Kaiser Permanente, Stanley Black & Decker, and Lockheed Martin, among others.

About David Grossman
A leading consultant, speaker, and author, David Grossman ABC, APR, Fellow PRSA, CSP is one of America's foremost authorities on communication and leadership inside organizations. He is Founder and CEO of The Grossman Group, an award-winning Chicago-based leadership and communications consultancy that focuses on organizational consulting, strategic leadership development, and internal communications for Fortune 500 clients.

A frequent media source, David provides expert commentary and analysis on employee and leadership issues. He's been featured on "NBC Nightly News," WSJ.com, Today.com, in the Chicago Tribune, Forbes, Fortune, the World Economic Forum, LA Times, and CBS MoneyWatch, among others. David's is the author of the award-winning book, "Heart First: Lasting Leader Lessons from a Year that Changed Everything" features interviews with 30+ leaders inside a variety of organizations, each of whom share extraordinarily candid insights and unique leadership lessons. And it's follow up, "Heart First for Emerging Leaders: What Exceptional Leaders Do in Extraordinary Times." His leadercommunicator blog has been ranked the #1 blog on communication by Feedspot eight years in a row.

About The Harris Poll 
The Harris Poll is a global public opinion, analytics, and market research consultancy that strives to reveal society's authentic values to inspire leaders to create a better tomorrow. With a global research reach of more than ninety countries, Harris offers advisory services across sectors to world leaders, CEOs, and business decision-makers with state-of-the-art analytics, real-time software services, and practitioners in marketing, reputation, customer experience, trends, futures, and thought leadership/research-for-public release. The Harris Poll translates shifting social sentiment into a competitive marketplace advantage. Harris is a Stagwell company. www.theharrispoll.com.

Press Contact:                                                                       
Kayla Ellsworth
The Grossman Group
312.927.4588
[email protected]

SOURCE The Grossman Group and The Harris Poll


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