Resenteeism—The latest HR buzzword is really nothing new
First there was absenteeism. Then there was presenteeism. Next came quiet quitting.
Now, there’s resenteeism.
The term resenteeism was coined in the UK by a staff-management software company early this year, and the term seems to have crossed the ocean and spread like wildfire. It’s been written about in publications such as Forbes, Fortune, and Fast Company, as well as the less-business-like pub, Glamour.
But exactly what is it and is it something HR professionals should be concerned about?
Terminology
- Absenteeism refers to lost productivity when employees don’t report for work.
- Presenteeism refers to lost productivity due to illness, fatigue, or mental health conditions that keep employees from working at peak performance.
- Quiet quitting describes working but intentionally doing the bare minimum to get by without calling attention to it.
- Resenteeism describes the state of disliking a job but not quitting due to fears about job security.
How to reduce resenteeism
While there’s subtle differences in those four terms, the effects of each are similar: lower productivity.
In the case of resenteeism, there is overt employee dissatisfaction. Rebranding the condition doesn’t eliminate it, but long-term efforts to improve employee engagement can be an antidote.
8 ways to increase engagement and reduce resenteeism
- Start with the hiring and onboarding process. Encouraging employee engagement begins as early as the application process. Something as simple as arriving at an interview unprepared can set the tone for the entire employment relationship.
- Explain assignments clearly. Be clear about job duties and levels of performance that are expected. Employees also should be familiar with the goals of the organization and how individual success translates into success for the company.
- Give employees as much authority and flexibility as possible. Employees who feel empowered and have freedom to make decisions related to their jobs are more likely to be engaged. Individuals also may be willing to accept increased risk if they have control over decisions relating to that risk. On the other hand, requiring employees to constantly get approval for decisions slows efficiency and momentum and may hamper creativity.
- Provide equipment and training. Employees who aren’t given the resources needed to do their jobs may feel as though they have been set up to fail. If they don’t feel as if the organization will do whatever it takes to help them succeed, they probably won’t be motivated to help the organization prosper. Without the right equipment and training, they may not even be able to.
- Offer and promote benefits that allow employees to take care of their physical and mental health. Healthier employees are happier and more productive, and they may appreciate the employer’s concern for their well-being.
- Offer advancement opportunities. To become and stay engaged, employees need to not only know but see that going above and beyond is rewarded. Whether this is in the way they are treated (they are given more discretion or responsibility) or in an actual promotion, an organization must deliver when it says employees have opportunities for advancement.
- Encourage bonds with coworkers. The way individuals feel about their coworkers and the extent to which they belong within a community of people has considerable bearing on their levels of engagement.
- Show respect. A key driver of engagement is whether employees feel that they are cared about as people, not just as employees. While you don’t have to make friends with everyone, treat all employees with fairness, honesty, and respect.
Key to remember: Resenteeism may be a new term, but it describes the old problem of poor employee engagement. There are steps employers can take to increase engagement and reduce resentment.