Employee Engagement is Broken. Here’s How We Fix It.

For years, employee engagement has been HR’s holy grail—a measure that, if maximized, promises higher productivity, lower turnover, and happier employees. Billions have been spent on surveys, tools, and initiatives designed to “boost engagement.” And yet, engagement scores have barely budged.

We’ve been chasing the wrong thing.

Engagement, as it’s commonly understood today, is over-focused on the individual. We ask: How can we make employees feel more engaged? But real engagement isn’t about individual enthusiasm—it’s about alignment.

Engagement is not just about how an employee feels about their job. It’s about how well their purpose aligns with the company’s mission. This isn’t a new idea. William Kahn, the psychologist who coined the term employee engagement in 1990, defined it as the interplay between personal and organizational purpose.

Somewhere along the way, we forgot that part.

The Flawed Approach to Engagement

HR teams have treated engagement like an input, assuming that if we create the right conditions, engagement will follow. Free snacks, yoga sessions, and company retreats are all designed to make employees “feel” engaged.

But true engagement isn’t a perk. It’s a function of alignment—between the individual and their work, their manager, and the company’s larger mission.

Kahn identified three factors that drive engagement:

  1. Meaningfulness – Employees understand the value of their work and feel invested in it.
  2. Availability – Employees have the physical, emotional, and psychological capacity to engage.
  3. Involvement – Employees have a say in how their role evolves and how they contribute to company goals.

These are not just nice-to-haves. They are levers of alignment—connecting employees to the work, the team, and the organization.Work Has Always Been About More Than a PaycheckLong before engagement became an HR metric, work was naturally engaging.Before the Industrial Revolution, workers weren’t just employees—they were economic partners. Whether on family-owned farms or in local businesses, people understood the direct impact of their work on the business’s success. They weren’t just working for someone; they were working with them.Then came mass production and top-down management structures. Work became transactional. Employees were hired hands, disconnected from financial outcomes and business decisions. Alienation of labor set in, and work became something people did for a paycheck—not a purpose.The irony? We’re still dealing with that fallout today.Rebuilding Engagement Through AlignmentWe don’t need another engagement survey or another expensive perk. We need to rethink how engagement works.Companies that get engagement right don’t focus on keeping employees happy—they focus on making them owners of their work. They align personal and organizational success in a way that benefits both.This means:

  • Involving employees in business decisions. Engagement improves when people feel like they have a stake in the company’s success.
  • Creating economic transparency. Employees should understand how their work contributes to financial outcomes.
  • Prioritizing alignment over satisfaction. Engagement is not about making employees feel good—it’s about ensuring they see meaning in what they do.

The Future of Engagement is Shared SuccessThe best workplaces of the future won’t treat engagement as an HR initiative. They’ll see it as a core business strategy, one that ensures employees and organizations grow together.Because work isn’t just about the individual. It’s about contributing to something bigger than ourselves.It’s time to stop thinking about engagement as an employee problem—and start thinking about it as an alignment opportunity.

Employee Engagement is Broken. Here’s How We Fix It.
Photo by: Freepik
Jackson Simmer

Employee Engagement is Broken. Here’s How We Fix It.

For years, employee engagement has been HR’s holy grail—a measure that, if maximized, promises higher productivity, lower turnover, and happier employees. Billions have been spent on surveys, tools, and initiatives designed to “boost engagement.” And yet, engagement scores have barely budged.

We’ve been chasing the wrong thing.

Engagement, as it’s commonly understood today, is over-focused on the individual. We ask: How can we make employees feel more engaged? But real engagement isn’t about individual enthusiasm—it’s about alignment.

Engagement is not just about how an employee feels about their job. It’s about how well their purpose aligns with the company’s mission. This isn’t a new idea. William Kahn, the psychologist who coined the term employee engagement in 1990, defined it as the interplay between personal and organizational purpose.

Somewhere along the way, we forgot that part.

The Flawed Approach to Engagement

HR teams have treated engagement like an input, assuming that if we create the right conditions, engagement will follow. Free snacks, yoga sessions, and company retreats are all designed to make employees “feel” engaged.

But true engagement isn’t a perk. It’s a function of alignment—between the individual and their work, their manager, and the company’s larger mission.

Kahn identified three factors that drive engagement:

  1. Meaningfulness – Employees understand the value of their work and feel invested in it.
  2. Availability – Employees have the physical, emotional, and psychological capacity to engage.
  3. Involvement – Employees have a say in how their role evolves and how they contribute to company goals.

These are not just nice-to-haves. They are levers of alignment—connecting employees to the work, the team, and the organization.Work Has Always Been About More Than a PaycheckLong before engagement became an HR metric, work was naturally engaging.Before the Industrial Revolution, workers weren’t just employees—they were economic partners. Whether on family-owned farms or in local businesses, people understood the direct impact of their work on the business’s success. They weren’t just working for someone; they were working with them.Then came mass production and top-down management structures. Work became transactional. Employees were hired hands, disconnected from financial outcomes and business decisions. Alienation of labor set in, and work became something people did for a paycheck—not a purpose.The irony? We’re still dealing with that fallout today.Rebuilding Engagement Through AlignmentWe don’t need another engagement survey or another expensive perk. We need to rethink how engagement works.Companies that get engagement right don’t focus on keeping employees happy—they focus on making them owners of their work. They align personal and organizational success in a way that benefits both.This means:

  • Involving employees in business decisions. Engagement improves when people feel like they have a stake in the company’s success.
  • Creating economic transparency. Employees should understand how their work contributes to financial outcomes.
  • Prioritizing alignment over satisfaction. Engagement is not about making employees feel good—it’s about ensuring they see meaning in what they do.

The Future of Engagement is Shared SuccessThe best workplaces of the future won’t treat engagement as an HR initiative. They’ll see it as a core business strategy, one that ensures employees and organizations grow together.Because work isn’t just about the individual. It’s about contributing to something bigger than ourselves.It’s time to stop thinking about engagement as an employee problem—and start thinking about it as an alignment opportunity.

Article Written by: 
Nick Hobson
Behavioral Science Genius