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How to engage and retain offline workers
Shrink the online-offline belonging gap
Updated on July 27, 2023
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Frontline and deskless workers
One-third of employees say their work must be done on site. These workers are often overlooked for key engagement and retention programmes, despite being in high demand — HR leaders in offline industries such as retail, healthcare, and education are more likely to say the labor shortage is getting worse.
How can HR better engage this crucial workforce?
Belonging for offline workers
Offline workers are less likely to say they feel a strong sense of belonging at work and are less likely to say that belonging at work matters to them, compared to online workers.
However, when offline workers report a strong sense of belonging, we see the same positive correlations as for online workers. This is a group that is often overlooked when it comes to belonging at work, but when we can foster that throughout the workforce, it drives business results.
Why does belonging matter for offline workers?
Belonging matters for offline workers because it increases engagement, retention, and productivity. Offline workers with a strong sense of belonging are almost 3x more likely to have high job commitment and are 2x more likely to say they are productive at work.
In fact, for offline workers who said they would not job hunt in the next 12 months, the number one reason for staying in their current role was feeling a strong sense of belonging.
Offline workers are less likely to feel a strong sense of belonging
The Achievers Workforce Institute Belonging ModelTM identifies five actionable pillars that drive belonging. According to the AWI research, offline workers lag online workers for every pillar.
Online workers | Offline workers | |
---|---|---|
I feel warmly welcomed at my company | 38% | 27% |
I feel known as an individual at my company | 31% | 28% |
I feel included at work | 32% | 25% |
I am supported at work in achieving my personal and professional development goals | 29% | 22% |
I feel a strong connection with peers and colleagues | 29% | 24% |
*Source: AWI HR Preparedness Report
HR action
Focus on one pillar at a time. If possible, survey employees about how they feel and focus on the pillar that has the most opportunity for improvement.
How can I increase belonging for offline workers?
Increase belonging for offline workers with three data-driven principles from Achievers Workforce Institute.
1. Recognition
Aim for at least monthly meaningful recognition for every worker. Offline workers recognised monthly are 33% more likely to have a strong sense of belonging compared to those recognised quarterly.
2. Flexibility
Offline employees who strongly agree with the statement “I am allowed to work in the way I prefer” are almost three times more likely to feel a strong sense of belonging and are 66% less likely to say they will job hunt in 2023.
3. Feedback
Employees at companies that gather feedback at least three times a year are 44% more likely to have a strong sense of belonging compared to those surveyed once or less than once a year. In fact, most employees wish their company gathered feedback more often and three-quarters (77%) say they’re more honest in an anonymous survey than in conversation with their manager.
Read The Ultimate Guide to Engaging and Retaining Offline Workers report for actions you can take today to improve engagement, retention, and productivity for your offline workforce.
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