Employee burnout is at a crisis point. 61% of HR leaders say mental health leave has increased in the past year, and the usual fixes aren’t working. Free wellness apps, EAPs, and mental health days can’t solve the problem because burnout isn’t a wellness issue. It’s a work design issue.
Key takeaways Burnout is a work design problem, not a wellness problem. Benefits packages can’t fix a structural issue. Most employees start motivated. The workplace is what breaks that down over time. Unclear priorities, fragmented attention, and unproductive manager relationships are the top drivers of disengagement. Younger workers are increasingly turning to AI for support that should be coming from their manager. The manager relationship is the single biggest lever for improving motivation and preventing burnout. Behavioral insights give managers a science-backed foundation for understanding what drives each person before disengagement becomes a pattern.
Our recent Motivation at Work survey finds that only 16% of employees say their work feels regularly meaningful. When meaning breaks down at that scale, no benefits package fixes it. The problem is structural, rooted in how work is designed and how managers lead. That’s also where the fix has to start.
Why employees
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