Article
From quiet quitting to soft quitting, what started as a TikTok video about doing the bare minimum at work quickly went viral. Though, this isn’t a new concept. In fact, it’s a telltale symptom of employee disengagement.
According to Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace: 2023 Report, 23% of employee’s are feeling engaged at work, compared to 59% categorised as disengaged “quiet quitting”.
An article from the Harvard Division of Continuing Education, noted that employee disengagement can occur for many reasons, although a lack of autonomy, purpose, and meaning and lack of growth opportunities are major causes. Look a little closer and you’ll see that those things all boil down to issues within a company’s culture. It’s a company’s job to define their standards from a cultural and performance standpoint. When these standards are clear, it’s easier to identify where disengagement is happening and come up with ways to solve it.
It would be an understatement to say that the last few years haven’t been easy. The sudden shift to remote and hybrid work paired with social unrest and uncertainty about the future forced many leaders to adopt an inward focus. As we emerge from the pandemic into a “new normal,” it’s clear that managers are still operating in a survival mindset.
Managers and others in leadership positions have a huge impact on employee engagement. In fact, A Gallup study showed that “70% of the variance in team engagement is determined solely by the manager.” To create connection, managers need to replace transactional engagement with transformational engagement. This means focusing on actions that can drive real, meaningful change within themselves, their employees and the entire organisation.
Employees in every industry expect transparency and leadership from those in management roles. If leaders don’t deliver, we can create an environment where disengagement and high employee turnover can take root.
Seeing disengagement in the workplace can be discouraging, but managers and leaders have the power to turn the tide. Establishing an upskilling strategy is key to combating employee disengagement. Traditionally, upskilling talent has meant identifying training or knowledge gaps and offering development opportunities for employees to learn new skills. This is a win-win for employers and employees alike — the employee finds opportunities for advancement while the company closes a skill gap.
Upskilling efforts need to go way beyond skill development, however. Employees need room to develop a growth mindset and to discover their unique purpose and identity. We must subscribe to the belief that upskilling is rooted in personal accountability and that it has the power to create positive, long-term effects on our employees’ lives.
There are a variety of ways to upskill employees and it’s important to understand that how learning opportunities are delivered is just as important as the content being delivered.
Blended and multimodal learning incorporates a variety of teaching and communication methodologies to support a holistic training programme. Blended learning combines traditional classroom-based teaching styles with digital learning tools whereas multimodal learning leverages a variety of resources that appeal to different learning preferences.
Offering a variety of upskilling strategies and methods not only increases engagement, but also creates an inclusive training programme.
Investing in upskilling can empower employees to feel in control of their career path and their life. A company that invests in whole-employee upskilling is one that’s committed to creating an environment where all employees can learn and grow. When employees feel that their goals are supported by their employers, they have more incentive to be engaged, productive team members.
Every employee has a personal responsibility to want to learn and better themselves. But organisations and leaders also have an obligation to create and sustain a learning culture that invests in and supports employees in the short and long term. When employees are offered a variety of learning and development opportunities, companies are more likely to make strides in reducing employee disengagement and putting the “quiet quitting” trend to rest.