• Home
  • About
  • Contributors
  • Write for Us
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Women on Business

Business Women Expertise, Tips, Advice and More to Build Winning Careers and Brands

You are here: Home / Infographics / Business Leaders Strive to Combat Plummeting Employee Engagement Rates

Business Leaders Strive to Combat Plummeting Employee Engagement Rates

December 20, 2016 By Community Member

employee engagement rates

As a manager, you’ve most likely dealt with poor behavior from certain employees—and even your best behaved workers may have the occasional lapse in judgment. It could be something as simple as playing on their phone during a meeting or as serious as showing up late every day.

Large or small, these behaviors are signs of a deeper problem: disengagement.

Statistics show that 50% of all employees exhibit some sort of disengaged behavior, while another 20% are completely disconnected from their jobs. Worse, these statistical averages hold true across multiple salary levels—meaning you can’t buy a solution to this problem.

Disengagement is costing business leaders big time. U.S. companies lose an estimated $350 billion per year due to unengaged workers. These employees are also more likely to join the 2.7 million people who quit their jobs every month—forcing you to spend approximately 20% of their salary to find a replacement.

So what’s causing this catastrophic engagement crisis in the workplace?

According to workers, management isn’t offering them the fulfillment they need. 35% of employees say they participate in unrelated activities during work hours because their work isn’t satisfying. What’s more, 43% of people who quit their jobs do so because management doesn’t recognize their positive efforts.

Research has shown that companies with the highest engagement rates are those that offer challenging work, give employees flexibility to take ownership of that work, and exhibit gratitude for a job well done.

To help you create this type of positive environment, the team at Company Folders has put together all the facts you need to know about employee engagement—and four motivational tactics that will keep your team focused.

Employee Engagement Infographic

Community Member

Women on Business Community Member

More Posts

Filed Under: Infographics, Reader Submission Tagged With: employee engagement, infographics

Sponsors

Recommended Reading

ultimate guide to email marketing

Awards & Recognition

Categories

  • Board of Directors
  • Books for Businesswomen
  • Business Development
  • Business Executive Team
  • Business Travel
  • Businesswomen Bloggers
  • Businesswomen Interviews
  • Businesswomen Profiles
  • Career Development
  • Communications
  • Contests
  • Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)
  • Customer Service
  • Decision-making
  • Discounts & Offers
  • Education
  • Equality
  • Ethics
  • Female Entrepreneurs
  • Female Executives
  • Female Executives
  • Finance
  • Franchising
  • Freelancing & the Gig Economy
  • Global Perspectives
  • Health & Wellness
  • Human Resources Issues
  • Infographics
  • International Business
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Job Search
  • Leadership
  • Legal and Compliance Issues
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Networking
  • News and Insights
  • Non-profit
  • Online Business
  • Operations
  • Personal Development
  • Politics
  • Press Releases
  • Productivity
  • Project Management
  • Public Relations
  • Reader Submission
  • Recognition
  • Resources & Publications
  • Retirement and Savings
  • Reviews
  • Sales
  • Slideshow
  • Small Business
  • Social Media
  • Startups
  • Statistics, Facts & Research
  • Strategy
  • Success Stories
  • Team-Building
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized
  • Videos
  • Women Business Owners
  • Women On Business
  • Women On Business News
  • Women On Business Offers
  • Women On Business Partners
  • Women On Business Roundtable
  • Women on Business School
  • Work at Home/Telecommute
  • Work-Home Life
  • Workplace Issues

Authors

Quick Links

Home | About | Advertise | Write for Us | Contact

Search This Site

Follow Women on Business

  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 Women on Business · Privacy Policy · Comment Policy