|
The Herman Trend Alert February 2, 2011 IT Employees — Least Engaged...Again A recent global study found that only 26 percent of Information Technology (IT) employees in North America were fully engaged at work. Nearly as many, 22 percent, are actually disengaged. Those findings are substantially worse than the workforce overall, of which 33 percent were engaged and 18 percent disengaged. In their "Employee Engagement Report 2011" consulting firm BlessingWhite explored workplace attitudes among employees on four continents. Based on survey responses of nearly 11,000 individuals, the report found many organizations view IT workers, especially those at the helpdesk and maintenance levels, as necessary commodities that are not critical to the organization’s mission or strategy. In addition, they often overlook or underfund the development of technical leaders. Thus, it is not surprising that engagement levels are lower in IT departments than functions closer to strategic decision making and customers like Sales, Human Resources, and Marketing. Blessing White's study also found that 48 percent of IT employees trust their organization’s senior leaders, while 76 percent of non-IT employees trust their immediate manager. The top the drivers of satisfaction and contribution for IT employees are career development and training. Moreover, the study found that "Trust in executives can have more than twice the impact on engagement levels than trust in their immediate managers does. In spite of this fact, employees are more likely to trust their immediate supervisors (72 percent) than the executives (52 percent) in their organizations." The top reason Asian employees consider leaving is the lack of career opportunities (23 percent). The most vulnerable are, of those employees in Generation Y (25 percent) are "on the fence" and six percent are ready to leave now. Of those considering a move, IT employees are most likely to leave to pursue career advancement or more fulfilling work, two of the main drivers of employee engagement. A growing percentage of IT employees worldwide is ready to leave their companies. People will stay for the opportunity to meaningfully contribute. Armed with this information wise employers will find ways to support their employees in giving of themselves to their companies and communities. As qualified people become available, companies will offer disengaged employees "creative career redirection opportunities". © Copyright 1998- by The Herman Group, Inc. -- reproduction for publication is encouraged, with the following attribution: From "The Herman Trend Alert," by Joyce Gioia, Strategic Business Futurist. 1.336.210.3548 or https://hermangroup.com. To sign up, visit https://HermanTrendAlert.com. The Herman Trend Alert is a trademark of The Herman Group, Inc."
HEAR JOYCE SPEAK TOMORROW AT 11:30 AM EDT
GET COACHING FOR YOUR PEOPLE FOR LESS THAN $1/DAY!
JOYCE IS ON THE RADIO EVERYDAY NOW To read this Herman Trend Alert on the web: https://hermangroup.com/alert/archive_3-29-2023.html.
Herman Trend Alerts are produced by the Herman Group, strategic business futurists, Certified Management Consultants, authors, and professional speakers. New subscribers are always welcome. There is no charge for this public service. The Herman Trend Alert is read by over 30,000 people in 90 countries, including other websites and printed periodicals. Click here to sign up for the Herman Trend Alert. Do you enjoy receiving this weekly e-mail update? Contact us about our co-branded Herman Trend Alert service.
Subscribe or Unsubscribe to weekly Herman Trend Alert
|
7112 Viridian Lane |
Web site design by WebEditor Design Services, Inc.