The survey results are in. The data is in front of you. Next is the tricky bit: utilizing that data to benefit your organization. We laid out the five steps you should take next:
- Analyze and interpret results
- Present your data with a report
- Respond to your employees’ input
- Create an employee engagement action plan
- Schedule further feedback
We’ll guide you through each step below.
Step 1: Analyze and interpret the results
If you’re not a data enthusiast, working out what to do with your employee engagement survey results can be overwhelming. Ideally, we’d recommend using online employee engagement solutions to collect and analyze your data for you. But since you’re here, we’re guessing you’ve already got the data to work with. Here’s what to do with it:
- Quantify the data - This means turning your results into measurable and comparable data (learn more about types of data here)..
- Segment your data - Different teams will have different experiences, so you must be able to look at employee engagement by departments and demographics. Cross sections to consider include age, department, gender, ethnicity, job commitment (full-time, part-time, contractor), office location, and salary.
- Identify patterns and trends - What patterns can you spot within your results? Are leaders more engaged than lower-level employees? Is a specific team showing discontent with the tasks they’re assigned? The only way to take appropriate action is to identify the trends that need addressing.
- Work out overall engagement rate - How to calculate your overall employee engagement rate will depend on the questions you’ve asked in your survey. This article from Kona provides more details and equations to use.
- Check benchmarks - If you’ve completed employee engagement survey results analysis before, revisit your benchmarks and see how things look compared to historical data. What other trends do you notice? Consider that results can reflect seasonality and compare like for like. Ie, don’t compare engagement during a summer period with a previous winter.
- Read the comments and try sentiment analysis - Look closely at personal comments to find patterns (issues or successes brought up often) and explain negative/positive trends. E.g. productivity scores are low, and comments repeatedly say teams are experiencing frequent technical difficulties. You can also try using sentiment analysis software to help gather an overall understanding of what’s being said.
- Don’t take responses personally - Keep an open mind and remember that the results you discover are an opportunity to develop. While reviewing data, look to understand why people might feel this way rather than seeking to find out exactly ‘who said what’.
To compare how your organization is fairing regarding wider employee engagement, look at this article on 2022/2023 employee engagement statistics.
Step 2: Present your data with a report
Figuring out how to present employee satisfaction survey results in a way all stakeholders can understand is crucial to using your data company-wide. A thorough report should look to
- Position the survey - Explain why it was conducted and what you hoped to learn.
- Note respondent demographic - What percentage of employees responded to your survey (the response rate), and what demographics were they from (see ‘segmenting data’ above).
- Overall engagement - Using your results, start the report presenting overall employee engagement rates.
- Breakdown top strengths & weaknesses - Next present the key takeaways from your results. Which areas of your employee experience are thriving and where are employees reporting most discontent?
- Summarize changes - This is where to show your latest data against company benchmarks. How are things looking since your last survey?
- Bring in comments - Here’s where to show specific feedback or share your sentiment analysis.
As you’re creating a report, keep a few things in mind:
- Be as objective as possible - Your role is that of a scientist, researching engagement and sharing insights to improve the business.
- Less is more - Share the findings that matter most (good or bad) and dive deeper into those. If someone asks for more data, consider providing the dataset or an appendix with more information.
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Take a look at this example employee engagement survey report from Custom Insight to get an idea of what this might look like.