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Addressing Burnout Risk in 2022-Workday

Workday

Workday (NASDAQ:WDAY), a leader in enterprise cloud applications for finance and human resources, today published a new report – Addressing Burnout Risk in 2022 – powered by employee engagement solution Workday Peakon Employee Voice. The report finds that, of the 10 industries tracked year-over-year, frontline industries such as transportation, healthcare, and government demonstrated increases in the levels of higher burnout risk, with the transportation industry showing the steepest rise of 16% since 2021. In addition, of the 10 geographies tracked year-over-year, the UK has become the country with the highest proportion of organizations (41%) in the higher burnout risk category. Meanwhile, the proportion of U.S.-headquartered companies with higher burnout risk remained at 17%.

The report, launched at Workday Rising, the company’s annual customer conference, measures how burnout risk has evolved since 2021 across different industries and geographies, based on an analysis of de-identified employee survey data from 1.5 million employees from more than 600 companies around the world. Burnout risk is assessed using employee survey scores relating to connectedness, energy levels, and fulfillment, and then categorized as higher, medium, or lower risk.

Burnout Risk by Industry
The study found that the majority of surveyed industries saw greater or sustained levels of higher burnout risk in 2022, compared to 2021. Industries that operated on the front lines of the pandemic, such as transportation, government, and healthcare, saw the steepest increases year-over-year, whereas manufacturing, professional and business services, and financial services saw reduced levels of higher burnout risk.

Burnout Risk by Geography
The report found global variation among the 10 geographies tracked year-over-year, with six seeing either increased or sustained levels of higher burnout risk, and four showing improvements.

The issue of employee burnout is increasingly prevalent, with a 2021 survey, conducted by the American Psychological Association, finding that three in five employees reported negative impacts of work-related stress. However, as the Workday report explores, there are key actions employers can take, powered by intelligent listening, to help mitigate the risk of employee burnout. These include:

Comment On The News
“The increasing levels of higher burnout risk in frontline industries like government, healthcare, and transportation reflects an urgent need to address the energy, connectedness, and fulfillment levels of employees,” said Phil Chambers, general manager, of Workday Peakon Employee Voice, Workday. “From the Great Resignation to the more recent wave of quiet quitting, it is vital that leaders understand employees’ evolving needs and take positive action to help keep them engaged, motivated, and meet them in the moment.”

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