Search
Close this search box.

UK faces mass employee exodus post-pandemic

Beamery, the leading Talent Operating System, today released the results of its survey into the impact of COVID-19 on working life.  The Beamery Talent Index has found that bad leadership, poor employee support and stagnant growth opportunities during the pandemic is driving enormous employee churn in the UK workplace. According to the data, almost half (48 percent) of UK office workers have specified that they have either found a new role, are actively looking or will be leaving their jobs this year. 

Bad leadership, poor employee support and stagnant growth opportunities during the pandemic is driving enormous employee churn in the UK workplace. According to the data, almost half (48 percent) of UK office workers have specified that they have either found a new role, are actively looking or will be leaving their jobs this year.*

Career ‘regression
53 percent specifically cite working from home as having a significantly negative impact on their personal development and progression at work, with over a third (39%) of Brits stating that skills have grown stale or they have, in fact, regressed in their roles over the course of the pandemic. Alongside this, a further 43 percent of those surveyed believe that the lack of ‘face time’ or one-to-one engagement with managers has seriously hindered their promotion prospects. Almost half (48 percent) commented that their employer has not offered them any opportunities to learn or develop new skills since the globally enforced COVID-19 working from home patterns emerged.

Why aren’t we valued and where is the employer support?
The lack of contact has been cited as another key issue leading to the impending job departures, with 62 percent of office workers frustrated due to little or no support from their managers over the last year. A quarter (24 percent) also felt undervalued as employees. In many cases, progression and promotion were only discussed once in the last year, with 1 in 10 office workers stating this was the case.

“Now more than ever, if you want to ensure you attract and retain the best talent in your industry, employee communication is key,” said Abakar Saidov, Co-Founder and CEO at Beamery. “Workers want a clear, objective way of understanding the skills they need to learn to progress in their career, and employers must provide the right training and mentorship opportunities to help them improve.”

Saidov continued: “Employers need to embrace more efficient ways to track employee happiness to remain competitive in the hiring landscape and put specific markers across career journeys to ensure employees are consistently learning, progressing and, most importantly, enjoying the work they do. Adding efficiency to this process will in many cases transform the company’s approach to spotting, nurturing and retaining talent.”

A summary of key findings from The Beamery Talent Index:

  • Almost half (48%) of UK office workers are leaving or planning leaving their job this year
    • 12% have a new opportunity already
    • 24% actively looking
    • 12% plan to leave later this year
  • 63% say this is linked to bad leadership and lack of employer support during the pandemic
  • 43% believe that the lack of ‘face time’ or 1:1 engagement with managers has seriously hindered their promotion opportunities
  • 53% specifically cite working from home as having a significantly negative impact on personal development and progression at work
  • Over a third (39%) of Brits believe their skills have grown stale and they have, in fact, regressed in their role
  • 48% say their employer has not offered them the opportunity to learn new skills or develop since the pandemic
  • A quarter (24%) don’t feel they are valued employees
  • 1 in 10 office workers only discuss progression and promotion once a year
  • 82% of respondents believe that UK employers need to better address talent progression in the UK

18-34 year olds

  • 48% of felt isolated or undervalued by working from home (WFH)
  • 74% of respondents felt that WFH has hindered personal development and progression in the workplace
  • Over a quarter (26%) stated that their work skills have gone stale due to a WFH working environment
  • 27% believe they have in fact regressed rather than progressed in their role due to WFH and the pandemic
  • 84% are keen to return to the office or have the option of a physical office ready to return to
  • Only 13% of 18-34 year olds enjoy WFH and want to get rid of office
  • 48% of 18-34 year olds have felt that employers have lost focus on providing a sufficient level of employee engagement or support due to WFH
  • 51% have had little or inconsistent communication from senior leaders at work
  • 58% of 18-34 year old employees feel that a lack of ‘face time’ or one to one time with their employer has hindered their promotional opportunities at work

*Stats from The Beamery Talent Index

    Read more

    Latest News

    Read More

    How to avoid employee disengagement in the age of AI

    25 April 2024

    Newsletter

    Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

    Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

    Latest HR Jobs

    University of Warwick 8211 Human ResourcesSalary £33 966 to £44 263 per annum

    University of CambridgeSalary £37 099

    University of Cambridge 8211 Institute of Continuing Education Salary £32 332 to £38 205 pa

    Managing the compliance team and overseeing the function making sure all the necessary job sites are live any renewals such as DBS etc are kept

    Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

    Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE