Benefits and Compensation, Talent

Survey: Employees Are Pretty Happy—But Nearly Half Are Thinking About Looking Elsewhere

According to the annual Employee Job Satisfaction and Engagement Survey conducted by the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), job satisfaction remains high, with 89% of surveyed employees saying they were satisfied overall with their jobs (38% reported being very satisfied, and 51% somewhat satisfied).Happy workers

Similar levels of employee job satisfaction have been observed in recent years, with a combined 86% of survey respondents reporting satisfaction in the survey released in 2015 and 88% in the report released in 2016.

For the third year in a row, the largest percentage of employees (65%) indicated that respectful treatment of all employees at all levels was a very important contributor to their job satisfaction.

However, this aspect reflected several differences among demographic groups in the workplace:

  • Female employees (72%) were more likely to report this aspect as a very important contributor to job satisfaction than male employees (57%).
  • A greater proportion of Millennials (45%) were very satisfied with this aspect compared with Generation Xers (31%).
  • Individual contributors (31%) were less likely to be very satisfied with the level of respect shown to all employees compared with executives (52%).

Other top contributors to job satisfaction were compensation/pay; trust between employees and senior management; job security; and opportunities to use skills and abilities.

“Fairness and transparency are significant themes that repeatedly appeared throughout the top job satisfaction contributors and employee engagement,” said Evren Esen, SHRM director of workforce analytics, quoted in a press release. “This indicates the importance of these concepts when creating a workplace culture that thrives and inspires continuous success.”

But even as overall satisfaction is high, there are gaps between what employees consider important and their levels of satisfaction.

The largest discrepancy between importance and satisfaction was found in compensation (35 percentage points), with survey findings indicating that raises given to employees were consistent with those in previous years.

The survey findings also indicate that while trust between employees and senior management is gaining importance (increasing 6 percentage points compared with percentages in 2015), there is a gap of 28 percentage points between importance and satisfaction. Sixty-one percent of employees rated trust between them and their senior management as very important to job satisfaction. However, only 33% were very satisfied with the level of trust in their organizations.

Finally, despite a relatively high level of job satisfaction, 40% of employees reported (to some degree) the possibility of seeking employment outside of their current organization within the next 12 months. The leading reason for employees looking for external positions was higher compensation/pay, followed by better benefits, more job security, and additional career advancement opportunities.

The SHRM Employee Job Satisfaction and Engagement Survey polled 600 randomly selected U.S. employees in December 2016. The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.

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