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Mark Griffith

FourthWall

Founder & CEO

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Code red: What leaders can do about the great employee engagement crisis

With Gallup’s new research finding that employee engagement in the UK is at an all-time low of 10 per cent, Mark Griffith explores the employee engagement crisis and how strategies driving in-person experiences and connection could be the solution.
Code red: What leaders can do about the great employee engagement crisis

Summary: UK employee engagement has hit an all-time low and while hybrid working was introduced as a lifeline, it has quietly eroded the spontaneous conversations, the relationships, the human moments that make organisations work. The fix isn’t mandating people back to their desks. It’s about becoming more intentional about how and why we bring people together.


Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace 2026 report landed as a wake-up call for every HR leader in the UK. Global employee engagement has dropped to 20 per cent – its lowest level since 2020 – at a cost estimated at US$10 trillion in lost productivity last year alone. 

In the UK, the picture’s worse with just 10 per cent of employees saying they are engaged at work. When only one in 10 employees is engaged, re-evaluating the employee experience and where organisations are creating opportunities for their people to be engaged, connected and inspired has to become code red: action becomes urgent.

Earlier this year, FourthWall launched our white paper, Experience as a Culture Catalyst: Powering Organisational Change, drawing on insights from people leaders from organisations including DHL Group, Lloyds Banking Group, and CBRE. 

It’s clear that, in an age of perma-crisis and uncertainty, traditional engagement strategies are no longer keeping pace. Rather, employers need to look at creating purposeful, in-person employee experiences – moments that matter – to drive organisational performance, culture and resilience.

The great engagement crisis 

We know the engagement crisis is complex. Employees today aren’t just managing regular professional pressures but a profound sense of psychological uncertainty. 

AI is reshaping job roles and questioning skill relevance. Geopolitical instability has uprooted the workplace. Hybrid models brought in as a lifeline during the pandemic have – six years later – quietly eroded the informal connective tissue of culture: spontaneous conversations, mythical water cooler moments and, ultimately, relationships. 

Here’s the thing: the figures also tell me we have a connection problem as much as an engagement problem. We’ve forgotten that human connection isn’t just a perk or a preference. Rather it’s foundational to how organisations build culture, drive engagement and deliver on their purpose.

But, instead of mandating people back to their desks x times a week, how can organisations become more intentional about how they bring their people together?

Employers need to look at creating purposeful, in-person employee experiences

Redefining the engagement strategy

The organisations closing the engagement gap are those who see employee experiences as a strategic lever instead of a “nice-to-have”.

At FourthWall, we define these as high-impact, experiential moments aligned to specific business objectives that drive measurable outcomes across the employee lifecycle: onboarding programmes, recognition events, leadership activations, wellbeing and DEI initiatives, to name a few. These bring culture and EVP to life in ways that emails and video calls just can’t.

These experiences help achieve six distinct business outcomes that I’d encourage every people leader to map against their current strategy.

1. Deepen connection to purpose

When a leader stands in front of their people and articulates a vision with passion and conviction, employees don’t just hear the message, they feel it. And this inspires deeper connection and action.

2. Foster belonging and inclusion

In a period of restructuring and uncertainty, people want to feel part of something. You can introduce that concept virtually, but you can’t fully replicate the human experience or create deep emotional resonance through a screen.

3. Accelerate L&D

The most effective L&D goes beyond content delivery. It’s about the networks built while learning, the cross-functional conversations, the informal mentoring and connections that happen when people share a room. 

4. Attract top talent

From pre-application to the first interview through to onboarding and beyond, in-person experiences shape how candidates perceive, connect with and commit to an organisation over the long term.

5. Recognise and celebrate achievement

From large-scale flagship celebrations to local town halls, in-person recognition events create powerful moments where employees feel seen, valued and connected to something bigger than themselves.

6. Strengthen employer brand

Relevant, resonant and impactful employer brands are forged and amplified through in-person experiences that turn candidates into employees and employees into ambassadors.

The organisations closing the engagement gap are those who see employee experiences as a strategic lever

The architecture of engagement

Our research also identified the following critical success factors for in-person employee activations that deliver lasting impact:

Leadership visibility is non-negotiable

Employees need to see their leaders – not just on a screen or through a glass door. When senior leaders walk the floor, keep an open-door policy and attend team milestones, they signal that they care about their people, and they want to build a workplace that works for everyone.

Managers are the most under-leveraged driver of engagement in most organisations

As the saying goes: “People don’t leave organisations,  they leave managers.” The relationship between an employee and their direct manager shapes everything from daily motivation to long-term retention. Which is why equipping your managers to have meaningful, human conversations is so essential, especially in increasingly complex organisations.

Employee Resource Groups (ERGs) and employee networks are key to the infrastructure of belonging

ERGs help foster a diverse, inclusive workplace aligned with the organisations they serve and in turn develop a rich programme of in-person events and experiences to support colleagues, offering safe spaces where people can truly be themselves.

Designing workplaces that attract colleagues to the office, creating healthy environments and drawing people together: these are magnetic workplaces that activate connection and culture.

Technology should enable human connection, not replace it

AI and digital tools can personalise, scale and measure the employee experience in powerful ways, freeing employees for more meaningful interaction, not replace the value of face-to-face engagement. 

Managers are the most under-leveraged driver of engagement in most organisations

In-person experiences: A new strategic imperative

Organisations are managing change at an unprecedented level of scale, velocity and ambition. Gallup’s report  strongly indicates that we must not forget the business-critical role of in-person experiences and human connection.

For business and people leaders, this means doubling down on meaningful engagement strategies and integrating human experiences and ‘moments’ that build resilience, foster belonging and create the cultural foundation needed to navigate constant transformation and change. 

It’s about intentionally designing experiences that engage, inspire and connect, experiences that bring out the best in people and create environments where everyone can thrive. 

Actionable insights:

  1. Stop treating employee experiences as a nice-to-have: Onboarding programmes, recognition events, leadership activations are strategic levers not perks. Map them against specific business objectives and start measuring what they actually deliver.
  2. Equip managers to have meaningful, human conversations: People don’t leave organisations, they leave managers. The relationship between an employee and their direct manager shapes everything, from daily motivation to long-term retention, yet it remains the most under-leveraged driver of engagement in most organisations. 
  3. Make leadership visibility non-negotiable: Senior leaders need to be seen and not just on a screen or through a glass door. This visibility tells employees their organisation actually cares about them.
  4. Design your workplace to draw people together: Harness the link between physical environment and human connection is real. A workplace that attracts people rather than simply accommodates them is one that actively builds culture.

Did you enjoy this article? Read this one next: Gallup’s 2026 workplace report: How do we fix the manager engagement collapse?

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Mark Griffith

Founder & CEO

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