The People-led Newsletter

Your manager experience is failing. Here’s how you can fix it.

Written by Roshan Nair | May 22, 2024 11:06:52 AM

A few months back, our People Science team took a deep dive into manager data at a financial services company. The findings painted a clear picture of the gaps in their manager experience.

This prompted us to expand our research to a broader data set.

The second time around, we went through data for 800K+ employees across 200+ organizations and identified one universal truth across the board.

For a long time now, managers have been superheroes, minus the fame.

They juggle a bunch of challenges right from navigating hybrid teams and fostering workplace flexibility to prioritizing employee well-being. At the same time, they're still expected to ace the traditional responsibilities – managing changes, hiring critical talent, and driving productivity.

In fact, data even suggests that managers are the real MVPs and make a big impact on both business and employees.

Despite all this, managers are treated like another cog in the wheel.

And all of this is hurting their effectiveness - significantly!

Why are managers struggling to stay engaged?

Higher tenure = lower engagement

While the general understanding is that an increase in tenure means an increase in engagement, that’s not the case with managers. Our research showed that manager engagement decreases with increasing tenure.

This happens because managers feel overworked, undervalued, and lose a sense of purpose over time. Duri Arisandi, the Chief People Officer at tiket.com, shared his thoughts on how to fix this.

Gender disparity continues to widen among managers

Amber data reveals a decline in women in managerial positions, falling from 24% in 2021 to 19% in 2023. On top of this, employees with longer job tenure (and hence, experience at the company) are less likely to have a female manager. This highlights a systemic bias favoring men in career advancement.

Amber data suggests women managers have shown lower satisfaction with compensation, career development, recognition, opportunities to connect with leadership, and work-life balance. The Forbes Business Development Council suggests actionable steps to address these issues.

Gen Z managers are less engaged compared to Gen X & Gen Y

And finally, it looks like there's more to leadership effectiveness than just tenure and gender. Generation plays a big role too, especially as we're seeing Gen Z stepping into managerial roles.

Here are some early findings from Amber's data:

  1. Gen Z managers are less engaged compared to Gen X.
  2. They tend to stay silent more often.
  3. Unlike Gen X, they're not big promoters, scoring lower on eNPS.

Amber's data uncovers 5 key insights that highlight why this could be happening.

Considering that Gen Z is set to be nearly 30% of the workforce soon, these insights are like a glaring preview of what's coming down the pipeline. And it might be time to take notice of it before it’s too late.

Make your managers cornerstones for organizational success

From boosting their support systems to enhancing their decision-making arsenal, it’s on us to ensure our managers are thriving. Because when they win, we all do.

A well-supported manager leads to a happy team. And a happy team leads to outstanding results.

For more actionable insights on how to enable your managers, check out our Manager Effectiveness 2024 Report.