Why the World Can’t Quit Quiet Quitting
“The dubious trend is officially over.”
Near the end of 2022,?The Guardian?pronounced the year’s most popular workplace trend -- “quiet quitting” -- dead. According to the obituary, the cause of death was the deteriorating economy. “Instead of quiet quitting, everyone is loudly laboring,” the newspaper said.
Executives may want to bury the term, but a recession won’t kill quiet quitting. That’s because the phenomenon isn’t new, even if the term is. In fact, almost four-fifths of the global workforce has either quietly or loudly quit, which costs the world's economy almost?$9 trillion per year .
New Words for an Old Concept
The concept of quiet quitting emerged last year as companies struggled to hire enough people to take on their rapidly increasing workloads. Existing employees went above and beyond to meet the needs of their organizations, and burnout ensued. Taking to TikTok, employees announced they would only do the minimum amount of work their job required. Ironically, they were doing it?quietly?on social media.
The TikTok videos resonated with millions. A warehouse employee in Wisconsin told?The New York Times?that when she heard about quiet quitting, she thought, “Oh God, that’s me. It’s been something I’ve been practicing, but I didn’t have a name for it up until now (2).” But notice why it resonated with her: The employee knew the feeling of emotionally detaching from work because of stress or burnout, but now she had a better way to describe the emotion.
The Real Recession
For months, economists have debated the kind of recession the U.S. would slide into after the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates. But what they missed is that the country is already in a recession -- not an economic recession, but an emotional one.
Coinciding with the rise of quiet quitting was a four-percentage-point decline in Gallup's measure of U.S. employee engagement . And declining engagement will have financial consequences. Organizations with declining engagement see decreases in productivity, customer loyalty and profitability; they also see higher absenteeism, turnover and shrinkage.
Is It the Work … Or The Boss?
When people complain about their job, what exactly do they complain about?
People rarely gripe about their actual work. In fact, most enjoy it. According to a 120-country study by the Wellbeing for Planet Earth Foundation and Gallup, more than 80% of the world’s workers enjoy their work (3). Apparently, people enjoy work so much that they would work even if they didn’t need the paycheck. When asked about winning a hypothetical mega-million-dollar lottery, most American and German workers say they would keep working.
If more than 80% people say they enjoy their work, then why are so many people quietly (or loudly) quitting?
The answer is this simple: Work doesn’t make people unhappy; the workplace does.
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For Gallup’s most recent?State of the Global Workplace report , we asked employees:?What would you change about your workplace to make it better?
Some wanted better pay. Others wanted longer breaks. But the most common answers concerned their direct manager or leadership:
In general, most people like the work they do, but they would like to change the way their manager treats them.
Building Thriving Workplaces
The truth is: Quiet quitting isn’t a long-term solution for employees. It’s a stop-gap measure for them to survive a workplace that they believe is unlikely to change. It’s not a solution for employers either. Employers need employees to go above and beyond to create exceptional customer experiences, generate new ideas and solve their organization’s most pressing problems.
Some organizations have spent years trying to figure out how to motivate their workforce. Some don’t even try. Yet some companies solved their quiet quitting problem even before the term was born. The world’s best organizations see 72% of their workforce engaged -- using the toughest engagement standard in the world. What if every organization followed in their footsteps?
In 2019, the largest companies in the U.S. came together and announced that they were no longer “shareholder capitalists,” but instead, “stakeholder?capitalists.” They want a kind of capitalism that works for a range of constituencies -- including employees and communities -- and not just shareholders and the super-rich.
What if instead, the CHROs of the largest companies in the world came together and agreed to build thriving workplaces? The announcement should please every kind of capitalist. Shareholder capitalists would see productivity and profits rise, and stakeholder capitalists would see better mental health outcomes for employees.
If quiet quitting does die, it will be because the term is no longer cool on TikTok. But the feeling behind the trend isn’t going anywhere until organizations hire and develop better managers.
(1) Mahdawi, A. (2022, November 2). With the global economy on the rocks, quiet quitting is no longer a thing.?The Guardian. Retrieved from https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/nov/02/with-the-global-economy-on-the-rocks-quiet-quitting-is-no-longer-a-thing
(2) Krueger, A. (2022, August 23). Who is quiet quitting for??The New York Times. Retrieved from https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/23/style/quiet-quitting-tiktok.html
(3) Clouet, B., & Lai, A. (2022, November 3). Global study reveals most workers enjoy what they do. Gallup. Retrieved from https://news.gallup.com/opinion/gallup/404495/global-study-reveals-workers-enjoy.aspx
Desktop Support Engineer | Telefónica Tech UK&I
5 个月I see employees "quiet quitting" as a last resort when they feel they are being ignored by their line management, they feel they've done everything possible to be heard and fail, and quiet quitting is the only option left for them, particularly by employees who are typically more engaged than others. It is fostered by management who are not willing to tune In to what their staff are trying to say to them to promote improvement in the workplace
Enterprise Sales Director at Zoho | Enabling Business Success with Scalable CRM & Digital Transformation Solutions
7 个月While job satisfaction is crucial, it's equally important to consider factors like workplace culture, growth opportunities, and work-life balance!
Technologies and design student | Denmark
1 年I have a few objections to your post. 1. People are more prone to say that they enjoy their work, when they don't, than they are to say they dislike it when they like it. Meaning this statistic is heavily weighted against people who dislike work. 2. 20% of people are not quiet quitting, but your wording would suggest that over 20% of people are quiet quitting. 3. Quiet quitting is just doing the work you need to do, and nothing more, or less. If people do less than what is in their contracts, that's not quiet quitting, it's not doing their job. However if they do quiet quit it should have no impact on your company seeing as they do the exact work, that was said to be expected. Quiet quitting therefore is only an issue if you want people to do more than what's in their contract, which is a manipulation method used to pay workers less. So in conclusion you are upset that your workers do their work, but they don't do more than that. If that is an issue, then put the extra tasks in your new contracts, it will do wonders for you. Of course that would bring less applicants, which I guess is why you didn't include the extra tasks to begin with.
Doctor of Medicine, Doctor of Law
1 年sorry, quiet quitting, as i understand it then, is just doing what you've been asked to do in your contract?