By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 25 June 2026
Most organisations have never listened harder. Pulse surveys, town halls, skip-levels, anonymous suggestion boxes — the channels are open and the data is flowing. Yet according to the fifth annual State of Employee Listening 2026 from Perceptyx, which drew on panel interviews with more than 750 senior HR leaders in early 2026, only 51% of employees report that any actual improvement resulted from the feedback they gave. The same study found that 71% say results are shared and 59% say action plans are created — leaving a stubborn 20-point gap between planning something and changing anything.
That gap is expensive, because being heard is one of the most powerful levers a leader has. Salesforce Research, surveying more than 1,500 professionals, found that employees who feel their voice is heard are 4.6 times more likely to feel empowered to do their best work. The lesson is uncomfortable but clear: collecting feedback is the easy part. Acting on it — visibly, promptly, repeatedly — is where almost everyone falls down.
Photo by Mapbox on Unsplash
Listening is not the same as hearing
We tend to treat listening as a soft, passive skill — something that happens automatically when we stop talking. In professional life it is neither soft nor passive. Listening is the work of suspending your own reply long enough to understand what is actually being said, and then doing something about it. An organisation can run a flawless survey programme and still fail this test entirely, because the survey measures whether you asked, not whether you understood. The Perceptyx data show that even mature listening organisations cite the data-to-action gap as their single biggest barrier. Hearing the words is cheap. Changing your behaviour in response is the part that costs effort, and it is the only part employees can actually see.
Silence after listening erodes trust faster than never asking
There is a counterintuitive trap here. Asking for feedback and then doing nothing is often worse than not asking at all, because it signals that the request was theatre. Perceptyx found that when employees do not see change at a local level after a listening event, they are 2.5 times as likely to disagree that their senior leaders' actions align with the organisation's stated values. Every unanswered survey quietly teaches people that speaking up is pointless — and that lesson, once learned, is hard to unteach. The credibility of leadership is not built on the quality of the questions you ask. It is built on what visibly happens next.
Key statistic: Only 51% of employees say real improvements resulted from their feedback, despite 71% saying results were shared — a 20-point gap between listening and acting. (Perceptyx, State of Employee Listening 2026)
How to close the gap in your own team
The fix is not another survey; it is a habit. The organisations that turn feedback into change tend to do three small things well. They narrow focus, picking one priority rather than promising to fix everything. They name two specific actions a manager can actually take, not a vague aspiration. And they schedule a follow-up conversation so progress stays visible. This is where you can practise as an individual long before your organisation catches up: when someone gives you input, reflect it back to confirm you understood, tell them plainly what you intend to do, and then close the loop when you have done it. That final step — reporting back — is the one almost everyone skips, and it is the one that builds the most trust.
Master Professional Communication with Elevana
Closing the listening-action gap is a learnable, practisable discipline — and it sits at the heart of Elevana's PRO Communicator programme. You will learn how to listen so people feel genuinely heard, how to respond in ways that build credibility, and how to turn what you hear into action others can see. Explore the Programme →
Anyone can ask the question. The professional is the one who does something with the answer.