The following is part 2 of a 2-part blog series on employee engagement surveys. Part 1 can be found linked here.
You've administered your engagement survey. Results are in. Employees have shared their feedback. Now comes the moment that determines whether your engagement efforts build trust or breed cynicism.
What you do next matters more than the survey itself.
How leaders communicate survey results is just as important as what the results show. Employees want to know that their feedback was heard and that it will be used to make their workplace better. When organizations are transparent about survey findings and next steps, it creates a culture of trust and improves future participation.
Here's your roadmap for the 95%.
Senior leaders should share high-level findings and commit to listening and acting. This isn't about spinning results - it's about modeling transparency and accountability.
What Senior Leaders Should Communicate:
Why This Matters: Be timely and transparent. Communicate results shortly after the survey closes, while feedback is still fresh and while employees are still watching. Silence after a survey signals that feedback doesn't matter. Speed signals seriousness.
Give team leaders access to their group's results and provide tools for leading meaningful conversations. Don't just hand managers a report and wish them luck. Most people leaders have no formal training on how to lead people. Make sure they have the training and resources to use these results responsibly and intentionally. Prepare them to lead productive dialogue.
What Managers Need:
How to Analyze Results:
Focus on the high scores, and look for recognition opportunities within the results. High scores indicate areas of strength. Take steps to ensure these items remain strengths. Managers should think about what they and the team are doing to contribute to these strengths.
Then, think about where the team might experience the biggest increase in engagement. While managers can do a lot to create a positive and productive environment, each employee needs to contribute to improving team engagement.
Managers should lead team conversations that focus on results, strengths and shared ownership of next steps. This isn't a presentation - it's a dialogue.
The Conversation Framework:
1. Share Results Transparently (10 minutes)
2. Explore Strengths (15 minutes)
3. Identify One or Two Focus Areas (20 minutes)
4. Co-Create Action Steps (15 minutes)
Outline clear, realistic next steps so employees know what to expect and what's expected of them.
Action Plan Template:
Share this plan with your team in writing. Post it where it's visible. Reference it regularly.
Action plans fail when they're created once and forgotten. Build rhythm into your follow-through.
Weekly/Bi-Weekly:
Monthly:
Quarterly:
While managers lead team-level action, senior leaders create the conditions for success:
1. Create Manager Support Systems
2. Remove Barriers
3. Model Accountability
4. Celebrate Progress
Engagement isn't a one-time event. It's a continuous cycle:
Measure → Communicate → Discuss → Act → Monitor → Measure Again
Each cycle builds on the last. Trust compounds when employees see their feedback lead to real change. Cynicism compounds when feedback disappears into silence.
The survey gave you data. Now you need dialogue, decisions, and discipline.
Your employees are watching. They want to know if their honesty mattered. They want to see if leadership will respond with transparency and action. They want to know if this time will be different.
Show them it is.
The work isn't finished when results arrive. It's just beginning.
Ready to dive deeper into a specific element or challenge? Let us know what would be most helpful for your team.