Today’s social context is chaotic and everchanging. While this is due to sociopolitical issues outside of organization’s control, employees everywhere are impacted. Employees are often impacted by events happening outside of the organization, but they show up to work with these impacts. Chief among these impacts are changes in rights of under-represented groups. Even in companies with strong engagement scores, surveys may highlight a troubling theme: employees don’t always feel like they belong.
Belonging is Just as Critical as Engagement
We’ve long argued that if you’re measuring only engagement, you’re missing other equally important pieces of the entire organizational landscape. This isn’t to say that engagement isn’t a priority; of course everyone wants employees to be committed and enthusiastic. Yet we typically describe measuring only alignment as taking a car trip where you’re only focused on how much gas is in the tank. The car will go, but where is it headed, and how do you know if it’s going in the right direction?
[Read More: Exploring Beyond Engagement]
Measuring belonging has both the same importance and limitation as engagement. Merely having high scores on Belonging isn’t enough, but it’s also a very important piece of the puzzle. A person can be engaged with their work and still feel isolated from their team. Especially in a world of increased remote work, we want to make sure this dimension is getting attention.
What the Data Is Telling Us
In our work, a few clear patterns have emerged:
How to Encourage Belonging
When organizations listen intentionally and act on what they learn, it improves the workplace for everyone. Ready to get started? Book a free consulation today.