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Manager Engagement at a 10-Year Low: What Strong Leaders Do

Team of professionals collaborating around a table in a modern office, representing leadership and team dynamics
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Manager Engagement at a 10-Year Low: What Strong Leaders Do

By Jonathan Justus | jonnynow.com | 18 May 2026

Global employee engagement has fallen to its lowest point in nearly a decade, according to Gallup's 2026 State of the Global Workplace report, which recorded a worldwide engagement rate of just 20 per cent — down from 23 per cent in 2022. The decline is sharpest among managers themselves, whose engagement has dropped nine points over the same period, raising urgent questions about what effective leadership looks like in the current environment.

The Engagement Collapse: By the Numbers

The Gallup data signals more than a post-pandemic correction. Organisations restructuring to become leaner — cutting management layers and broadening spans of control — have left many team leaders caught between competing pressures: delivering individual output while simultaneously developing and motivating their people.

DDI's 2026 Leadership Outlook research compounds the picture. Just 8 per cent of executives demonstrate strong capability in leading through change, while 71 per cent of leaders report operating under heightened stress, with 40 per cent actively considering leaving their roles. The proportion of leaders who feel prepared to manage change has fallen by nearly half over five years — from 25 per cent to 13 per cent — according to DDI's data.

📊 Key Statistic

70%

of the variance in team engagement is attributable to the manager — a figure consistent across two decades of Gallup research. No culture initiative or technology platform offsets poor management.

Why Managers Make or Break Team Performance

Gallup's long-running workplace research finds that managers account for up to 70 per cent of the variance in team engagement and wellbeing. That figure — consistent across two decades of data — underscores a structural reality: no culture programme, benefits package, or productivity platform compensates for an ineffective manager.

The most effective managers, Gallup's research shows, are those who spend no more than 40 per cent of their time on individual contributor work, devoting the majority of their attention to coaching, removing obstacles, and building psychological safety within their teams. When flattening structures force that balance to tip — as they increasingly do — both the manager and the team suffer measurable performance consequences.

DDI's analysis adds that leaders with access to high-quality assessment and development programmes are 5.6 times more likely to effectively anticipate and react to change. The gap separating high-performing leaders from struggling ones is not a gap of intent. It is a gap of investment.

Three Behaviours That Separate Effective Leaders from the Rest

Research from DDI and Gallup converges on three observable behaviours that distinguish high-performing leaders from their peers.

Consistent one-to-one conversations. Leaders who hold regular, structured check-ins — not status updates, but genuine developmental conversations — are significantly more likely to retain high performers and surface problems before they escalate. Gallup identifies the quality of manager-employee conversations as among the strongest predictors of engagement at team level.

Explicit role clarity. A 2026 McKinsey analysis found that employees spending more than 60 per cent of their working time navigating fragmented responsibilities and unclear ownership cited this as the primary driver of cognitive strain and burnout. Effective leaders remove ambiguity relentlessly — defining ownership, clarifying priorities, and revisiting both when the business environment shifts.

Change leadership as a core competency. DDI's research positions change leadership not as a specialist skill reserved for the C-suite, but as a baseline requirement for any team leader operating in 2026. Leaders who communicate the rationale behind decisions — not merely the directives — sustain trust even through difficult transitions. Those who do not are among the 40 per cent now considering leaving.

From Data to Practice

The message from the 2026 research is not simply that leadership has become harder — though it has. It is that the gap between leaders who invest in structured development and those who do not has widened measurably. Organisations that neglect manager development are not merely leaving performance on the table; they are accelerating the disengagement spiral that the Gallup data describes.

The answer is neither a one-day workshop nor an annual 360 review. It is a sustained, structured approach to building the specific skills — coaching, clarity-setting, change communication — that the evidence consistently links to high-performing teams.

🎬 Watch: Simon Sinek — "Why Good Leaders Make You Feel Safe" (TED Talk)

In this TED Talk, Simon Sinek explains why the best leaders prioritise the safety of their teams above all else — and why that single commitment drives performance, loyalty, and trust.

Build the Leadership Skills the Data Demands

Elevana's PRO Leader programme is built for managers and team leaders who want a structured, evidence-based path to higher performance. From coaching conversations to change communication and team alignment, PRO Leader equips practitioners with the behaviours that the 2026 research consistently links to engaged, high-performing teams.

Explore PRO Leader →

In 2026, the defining variable in team performance is not the strategy on the whiteboard — it is the leader in the room.

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