Working in a large organization with over 100+ employees? Discover how Dovetail can scale your ability to keep the customer at the center of every decision. Contact sales.
An engaged workforce is critical to the success of any organization. Ensuring a happy workforce requires a business to place special value on its staff and their wellness in the organization.
Listening to employees and allowing them to voice their opinions on business decisions is vital to creating an environment with high morale and low turnover.
Let’s dive into employee listening tools, strategies, and everything else you need to know.
Employee listening is when an organization actively tries to better understand employees by engaging with them and getting real-time feedback about their concerns and motivations.
The organization uses employee listening to take a holistic approach to understanding, improving, and enhancing the employee experience.
The process helps organizations discover knowledge gaps, avoiding speculation on what their employees feel and want.
Effective employee listening provides the data necessary to make informed, targeted decisions about the workforce and business.
Employee listening is key to good leadership.
Workers like an open-door policy to discuss needs and issues directly with their leader. It increases trust between managers and workers, potentially improving performance and loyalty.
Employee listening helps develop an agreement on accomplishing tasks, creating a faster work rate. This improves clarity and keeps employees focused.
Employee listening can increase employee retention rate.
Perceptyx's State of Employee Listening report revealed that listening to and acting on employee feedback boosted the chance of retaining talent by 11 times.
The study interviewed HR officials from 600 companies with 1,000 employees and above. It found that 94% of the organizations already had a formal listening policy.
Employee listening makes workers feel like the employer cares about their needs and desires. Employers can jeopardize their working relationship with employees when they don't listen or seek feedback.
Everyone wants to feel seen, recognized, heard, and understood. When workers don't feel heard, their sense of worth in the organization decreases, and they may look for opportunities elsewhere.
Leaders must acknowledge their employees’ needs and wants, or they risk:
Low commitment
Burnout
Decreased productivity
Job dissatisfaction.
Employees seeking roles with organizations that appreciate them
That’s why organizations must listen to their employees and act on their feedback by:
Embracing a continuous listening strategy
Developing methods for processing the results
Communicating the resulting actions with the workers
Surveys collect feedback on employees' thoughts about their job, the team, its leaders, and the overall organization. They can also pinpoint issues, enabling employers to address them.
Employees get a chance to make their voices heard and feel like they have a say in the organization’s culture and direction.
Employers can use the feedback to introduce changes to ensure employee satisfaction and engagement. Effective employee engagement surveys can be a powerful tool for improving a workplace.
An open-door policy is about direct access to leadership and two-way communication.
When employers have their doors open, employees can walk in and voice their concerns freely and immediately. The employer can also go to the employees to see if any issues need addressing, increasing trust, transparency, and productivity.
Employers who implement an open-door policy show genuine care for their workers and interest in hearing them out. It gives employees a sense of ownership, improves their morale, and makes them feel valued.
The workforce is the biggest, most valuable asset for any organization. Employees have diverse skills, knowledge, and experiences, offering a wealth of innovative ideas.
Employers who invite workers to share their ideas show they value their input. The open exchange of ideas allows for two-way communication, building trust and respect.
Creating room for a better understanding of employees' needs and concerns improves employee satisfaction and retention rates.
Active listening goes beyond what someone says and tries to understand what they are truly communicating. Employers get a better understanding of employees’ desires, needs, and concerns when they actively listen.
Organizations might consider having a dedicated email address for employees to share ideas and concerns. Some organizations deploy a “concern” hotline to capture this information. A dedicated line of communication reduces the risk of missing crucial messages or notifications.
Another idea is a mailbox where employees can submit ideas for improvement, demonstrating the employer’s commitment to listening and acting accordingly.
Listening to your employees isn’t everything: You must act on their suggestions to show that you pay attention to what they say.
This builds a positive feedback loop between the workforce and management. Employees want an organization to value and act upon their input, which can inspire continuous honest feedback.
Here's how to develop an employee listening strategy:
Understanding where your business is and where it needs to go is the first step in building an employee listening strategy. You also need to:
Review your business goals and collect appropriate feedback.
Examine the data and determine improvements to achieve these goals.
Assess your people strategy and create a plan to align the two.
An engaged workforce will achieve more, and that’s where the employee listening strategy comes into play.
It’s imperative to understand your workforce’s motivations, expectations, and willingness to go the extra mile to achieve business goals.
Support from key stakeholders increases the chances of success in your employee listening strategy. Bring them on board before starting your strategy development.
The HR department typically spearheads the employee listening strategy, but you’ll also need to involve other stakeholders, such as the:
Organization's leadership so they endorse the strategy
IT department for tech support
Line management to encourage participation
Corporate communications to track employee insights
Legal department to offer guidance on data privacy and protection issues
Marketing department to work with HR on branding for external candidates
Some organizations may have more stakeholders than these.
An employee listening strategy can only be successful if workers give genuine feedback. Getting genuine feedback requires workers to be comfortable sharing their opinions without fearing retaliation.
Ensuring privacy, data protection, and confidentiality reassures the workers and protects the organization legally.
An organization may need to add a few tools to conduct and analyze surveys.
The type of tools depends on the organization's needs and the employee listening strategy. Considering the features you’ll need can guide your search to the right tool.
Some helpful features include:
Survey options
Dashboards
Real-time capabilities
Examples of employee listening tools include Leapsome and Effectory.
Determine who should be part of the feedback group: Sometimes, you’ll focus on a particular department, project, or the entire organization.
Contingent workers, like independent contractors, may also have valuable insights to share. Including them in the strategy may improve the overall worker experience.
Consider the length and frequency of your survey approach.
Companies usually administer long surveys yearly, while pulse surveys are suitable for frequent check-ins.
Consider adding focus groups to gather more insight into survey feedback. This research method helps you collect qualitative feedback and opinions to complement survey data.
They also:
Let you dive deeper into the issues identified via surveys
Give insights to reveal workplace trends
Unearth the organization’s strengths and weaknesses
Provide a more comprehensive image of how the workforce feels about the organization
Focus groups offer an additional opportunity to show employees that you value their feedback.
A successful employee listening strategy hinges on openness and transparency. Be transparent and share the insights you get through employee listening efforts.
If you have an action plan, share that too. If you don't have an action plan, look into what you can do or ask for your employees’ input.
Determine the best ways to share ongoing information about employee listening activities.
For instance, you may want to look at how to communicate:
The survey results and resulting action plan
With employees about their privacy concerns
Success stories
The communication plan must consider all employees, whether they’re in the office or the field.
Converting employee feedback into meaningful action that positively changes the organization is the whole point of employee listening.
Promptly produce action plans after receiving feedback to show your workers that you are listening to their input.
Involving employees in your action plan is a great way to communicate that your organization cares about them and their opinions.
Consider forming action groups or teams that tackle specific issues or improvement ideas.
While it’s important to gather employee feedback on an ongoing basis, survey fatigue can be an issue if you request feedback too often.
Many organizations deploy a lengthy annual survey and supplement it with pulse surveys throughout the year.
These surveys are the foundation of the employee listening survey strategy. They offer the most widespread insight into the employee experience.
Companies send this type of survey annually to:
Get a meaningful baseline
Uncover employee perceptions
Develop an action plan
Deploy changes that move the engagement needle
While engagement surveys form the foundation of engagement, pulse surveys take it to the next level. Benefits of these surveys include:
Rapid, efficient opinion gathering
Flexibility, so you can use them regularly and at scale
Understanding the effect of a change on the employee base
Targeted feedback
You can use pulse surveys to measure the annual engagement survey’s resulting actions.
Lifecycle surveys differ from pulse surveys. They gather feedback from workers at particular milestones, such as after 30 days of employment and when an employee leaves the company.
They offer an opportunity to listen to workers during precise points in their tenure lifecycle. New hire surveys can obtain expectations at hire, while stay surveys can help understand employee job satisfaction.
Organizations can also administer exit surveys to understand why employees left and collect improvement suggestions.
Employees may only answer honestly if they know their responses are anonymous.
Since the whole point of employee listening is to get honest feedback, they need an environment where they feel comfortable expressing their views without fearing repercussions.
Do you want to discover previous employee research faster?
Do you share your employee research findings with others?
Do you do employee research?
Last updated: 20 December 2023
Last updated: 17 April 2024
Last updated: 13 May 2024
Last updated: 15 February 2024
Last updated: 3 May 2024
Last updated: 3 April 2024
Last updated: 23 November 2023
Last updated: 13 January 2024
Last updated: 29 November 2023
Last updated: 19 September 2023
Last updated: 13 May 2024
Last updated: 8 December 2023
Last updated: 14 November 2023
Last updated: 1 May 2024
Last updated: 13 May 2024
Last updated: 13 May 2024
Last updated: 3 May 2024
Last updated: 1 May 2024
Last updated: 17 April 2024
Last updated: 3 April 2024
Last updated: 15 February 2024
Last updated: 13 January 2024
Last updated: 20 December 2023
Last updated: 8 December 2023
Last updated: 29 November 2023
Last updated: 23 November 2023
Last updated: 14 November 2023
Last updated: 19 September 2023
Get started for free
or
By clicking “Continue with Google / Email” you agree to our User Terms of Service and Privacy Policy