I Stopped Trusting the Annual Engagement Survey
The most dangerous data point in your entire organization is a high engagement score. We have been conditioned to treat a “green” dashboard as a victory lap, a digital high-five from the rank-and-file that says everything is fine, keep doing what you’re doing.
But in my years of stepping into the wreckage of “high-performing” cultures as a mediator, I have learned a chilling counter-truth: a perfect score is often just the sound of people who have done the math and decided that honesty is a luxury they cannot afford.
The Architecture of Fear
The annual survey arrives like a seasonal flu. It promises total anonymity, a safe harbor for the truth, and a chance to “shape the future of our culture.” And then there is Ben. Ben is sitting at his kitchen table, a half-eaten sandwich nearby, looking at Question 9: “I feel able to raise concerns with my manager without fear of reprisal.”
Ben doesn’t look at the question; he looks at the architecture of his life. He is one of four people in his sub-team. Two of them started last month and haven’t seen enough to have an opinion. The third is the manager’s golf partner. That leaves Ben.
If the report gets sliced by department-which it always does-and
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