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One in three employers say employee morale is rising in lockdown
04 May 2020 Health and Wellbeing Retention Workplace Culture
One in three HR practitioners think that employee engagement has gone up with half reporting no change, despite heading into the seventh week of lockdown due to Covid-19, according to new research.
The report from employment specialists XpertHR, who surveyed 264 HR professionals up to last week, also found that fewer than one in five (18.6%) thought employee engagement had fallen.
The findings come as HR practitioners begin to report that less of their time is now spent purely on work driven by their organisation’s response to the coronavirus pandemic, and as the wide range of initiatives put in place by employers begin to bear fruit.
Just one in five HR professionals (20.8%) now say that all or almost all of their work is driven by the crisis – less than half the number (42.8%) saying this was the case in XpertHR’s first survey in this series on 2 April, and down from one in three (32.2%) on 16 April.
This reflects the end of the scramble facing many employers to furlough staff, send others home to work and make extensive arrangements to improve health and safety when the lockdown was first announced.
Since then, HR has led the way engaging employees, with widespread initiatives including providing regular business updates and messages from senior management, issue wellbeing and mental health guidance to those stuck at home and offer practical tips on homeworking as well as organise virtual social activities.
Asked how they would describe current levels of employee engagement in their organisations today:
- 21.2% said excellent;
- 57.6% said good;
- 18.9% said fair;
- 1.5% said poor; and
- 15.4% said very poor.
- The XpertHR survey found that HR professionals were working hard to promote engagement and recognise employees’ efforts as the lockdown continues. Approaches cited by participants in the research include:
- Saying thank-you – recognising employees through public “shout-outs”, mentions in CEO newsletters and directly by letter and in e-cards;
- Introducing a home working allowance – to ensure employees are not out of pocket with the move out of the office;
- Increase continued professional development – one of the permitted activities for those employees who have been furloughed;
- Asking employees how the organisation is doing – to discover whether or not it is doing the right thing and to show that the organisation is listening
- Sending a gift – including chocolate, flowers and “cream tea hampers”
XpertHR Content Director Mark Crail said: “Despite all the worry and uncertainty of the past few weeks, HR professionals can be proud of the job they have done. They put in place many of the systems and mechanisms that kept their organisations running when the crisis hit, and they have continued to support staff through a very difficult period. The results of their work can be seen in what are quite remarkable levels of continued employee engagement.”
Despite this, many HR professionals continue to report that they are struggling with inconsistent and changing government guidance, unrealistic expectations from within their own organisations, and the need to balance their own work and home lives.
As one survey respondent put it: “HR is having a nervous breakdown due to the absence of the crystal ball everyone thinks it possesses.