Let us take a moment to consider the global labor market and employee engagement. Current data suggests that employee engagement remains relatively low worldwide. While polling data may not fully explain the reasons behind this trend, there are likely many contributing factors, including concerns about compensation, workplace satisfaction, career opportunities, and whether employees feel their needs are being met.
From one perspective, disengagement may create opportunities for entrepreneurship and innovation as individuals seek alternative ways to find purpose and fulfillment. However, when only about one-fifth of employees are actively engaged at work, regardless of how the data is interpreted, it represents a significant loss of human potential and organizational effectiveness.
The challenge cannot be viewed solely through an economic lens. The goal should not simply be to increase engagement to improve profits. Most people are motivated by more than financial outcomes alone. A more sustainable approach is to foster meaningful connections between employees and their organizations. People are more likely to be engaged when they feel a sense of purpose, believe their work matters, have strong relationships with colleagues, receive fair compensation, and see opportunities for personal and professional growth.
This widespread disconnect may be as much a social and psychological issue as an economic one. When large numbers of people feel disconnected from their work, especially amid other societal challenges, organizations should pay close attention. For business leaders, the question becomes: How can we attract, retain, and engage talented people in ways that encourage innovation, creativity, and long-term success? Addressing that question may be one of the most important leadership challenges of our time. It may also require new ways of thinking of things, how society functions (it may be part of the same problem) and how to draw talent not only for the organization but for society's development as well. People are only partially motivated by money so low engagement has another root cause (s). Do you have an idea of what might be some of the contributing factors?
State of the Global Workplace: Employee Engagement, Wellbeing, and Organizational Performance
• Gallup's State of the Global Workplace report is based on one of the world's largest ongoing studies of employee experiences, examining engagement, wellbeing, workplace emotions, and job climate across more than 140 countries.
• Global employee engagement remains low, with only about one-fifth of employees reporting that they are engaged at work, while most employees are either not engaged or actively disengaged.
• Low employee engagement has substantial economic consequences, costing the global economy billions of dollars annually through lost productivity and reduced organizational performance.
• Employee wellbeing and engagement are closely connected. Workers who find their jobs meaningful, rewarding, and beneficial to others report higher levels of wellbeing and stronger workplace engagement.
• Managers play a critical role in organizational success, but declining manager engagement has emerged as a significant concern because manager engagement strongly influences the engagement and productivity of their teams.
Gallup. (2026). State of the global workplace: 2026 report. Gallup, Inc. https://www.gallup.com/workplace/349484/state-of-the-global-workplace.aspx



