Rise in voluntary employee engagement scores despite prolonged job insecurity

-

Improved job satisfaction accompanied by improved bottom-up and top-down communications provides food for thought for public and private sectors
According to the CIPD’s Employee Engagement Index, more than half (55%) of employees in the voluntary sector feel engaged at work, compared with 41% last quarter, despite a backdrop of increasing redundancies (25% reporting planned redundancies ahead, a jump of 15 percentage points since last quarter). That’s compared with engagement levels of 37% in the private sector, where 8% of workers expect redundancies ahead, and 33% engagement levels in the public sector, where 28% of workers report plans for redundancies in their organisations.
The quarterly Employee Outlook, which surveyed employees across all sectors about their attitudes to working life, found that engagement in the voluntary sector is driven not only by an affinity to the organisation’s core purpose, but more importantly by open and honest management teams and cultures of mutual trust and respect.
The survey found that voluntary sector workers:

  • Enjoy the highest rating of job satisfaction (a net score of +52, compared with +25 in public sector and +45 in private sector)
  • Are aware of what is happening in their organisations (68% compared with 51% in public sector and 53% in private sector)
  • Are most likely to agree that their directors and senior managers treat them with respect (+31 net agreement, compared with +19 in private sector and -7 in public sector) and are most likely to have trust and confidence in their leaders (+19 and +23 compared with -25 and -22 in the public sector and +12 and +14 in the private sector).
  • Are the most attuned to their organisations’ core values and purpose (+40 compared with +1 in public sector and +32 in private sector)
  • Have the most confidence in their ability to feed their views upwards (50% compared with 36% in public sector and 45% in private sector).
  • Are most likely to achieve the right work-life balance (61% compared with 55% in public sector and 57% in the private sector).

Claire McCartney, research adviser at the CIPD, comments: “It would be easy to attribute strong engagement scores in the voluntary sector to employees’ affinity to their organisation’s charitable purpose, but our survey suggests that quality of management is a principal driving factor behind high levels of job satisfaction and employee engagement despite prolonged job insecurity.

“The data from the voluntary sector gives us some hints on how to engage staff through leadership – at all levels of the organisation – and provides some good practice that both the private and public sectors can learn from. More employees in the voluntary sector agree that they know clearly what the purpose of the organisation is, but also that they can feed their views upwards. Positive communication practices could explain why more employees in the voluntary sector understand the organisation’s core purpose, are motivated by it and are less likely to be looking for a different job.


“It is highly likely that the economic downturn will continue to shape organisational change at least for another year, so organisations will need to draw on their leadership capability to maintain employee engagement and job satisfaction. This highlights how important it is for private and public sector organisations to clearly articulate their purpose in terms other than shareholder value and cost-cutting.”

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

 

Further findings

  • The overall Engagement Index score (across sectors) has grown slightly to reach 37%, compared with 35% in the previous quarter (voluntary sector: 55%, public sector: 33%, private sector: 37%).
  • Employees feeling trust and confidence in their line managers are more likely to recommend their organisation as an employer (voluntary sector: 59%, public sector: 49% and private sector: 51%)
  • Employees who agreed or strongly agreed that their senior team has a clear vision of where the organisation is going were less likely to experience excessive pressure at work every day or once or twice a week (38%) compared with those respondents disagreeing or strongly disagreeing with the presence of clear vision among directors/senior managers (54%).

Latest news

Stephen Simpson: The first six months – why probation needs a rethink under the new unfair dismissal rules

Changes coming into effect through the Employment Rights Act in 2026 and 2027 mean that businesses will need to rethink how they recruit and manage employees.

City law firm faces claims of bullying and misconduct at senior level

Allegations at a major legal practice raise questions about leadership accountability and how workplace complaints are handled.

‘Work friends beat pay’ as top driver of employee happiness

Friendly teams, recognition and meaningful roles play a bigger role in how people feel day to day than salary, according to UK research.

Northern Ireland introduces paid miscarriage leave as workplace rights expand

New legislation grants staff immediate time off following pregnancy loss, setting a precedent for employer support across the UK.
- Advertisement -

AI jobs warning may be overstated as Google UK chief points to role of skills

Workers face growing pressure to build digital capability as AI adoption expands across roles and industries.

Eva-Maria Stegemann Moubray of RCK Partners

Moubray has built her career around challenging traditional approaches to people management, combining organisational psychology with a strong focus on data.

Must read

Deborah Lewis: Nature’s guide to business improvements

My friend and mentor Dean Van Leuuwen of consultancy...

Helena Parry: Diversity – What is Really Holding us back?

As the diversity debate continues to rage across the...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you