Employee Engagement & Culture Survey

Section A: Core Engagement

Scale: 1 = Strongly Disagree | 2 = Disagree | 3 = Neutral | 4 = Agree | 5 = Strongly Agree

Statement

Score (1-5)

I am proud to tell others that I work for this organization.
I see myself still working here in two years' time.
My work gives me a sense of personal accomplishment.
The organization’s mission and goals make me feel my job is important.
I am motivated to go above and beyond my basic job requirements.

Section B: Management & Leadership

Scale: 1 = Strongly Disagree | 2 = Disagree | 3 = Neutral | 4 = Agree | 5 = Strongly Agree

Statement

Score (1-5)

My immediate supervisor provides me with actionable feedback.
Leadership communicates a clear vision for the future of the company.
I feel supported by my manager to take risks and innovate.
Senior leaders act in alignment with the company’s core values.
Decisions that affect my work are explained clearly by management.

Section C: Operational Pulse

Do you have the tools and resources necessary to do your job effectively?

Have you received a formal performance review in the last 6 months?

Do you feel the current workload is sustainable for your well-being?

Would you recommend this company as a great place to work to a friend?

Do you feel that your opinions are heard and valued by your team?

Section D: Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion

Scale: 1 = Strongly Disagree | 2 = Disagree | 3 = Neutral | 4 = Agree | 5 = Strongly Agree

Statement

Score (1-5)

I feel a sense of belonging at this organization.
People from all backgrounds are treated fairly here.
The company demonstrates a true commitment to diversity.

Section E: Qualitative Insights

What is the one thing this organization should start doing to improve our culture?

Describe a specific instance where you felt most engaged or motivated in your role.

If you could change one aspect of your daily workflow, what would it be and why?

Survey Template Insights

Please remove this form template insights section before publishing.

Overall Survey Strengths

To get the most out of this template, it is important to understand the structural logic behind the questions. A well-designed survey doesn't just collect data; it identifies the specific levers you can pull to improve the organization.

1. The Logic of Question Sequencing

The survey follows a specific cognitive path to ensure high-quality responses:

  • The Hook (Core Engagement): We start with high-level sentiment. These questions act as the "North Star" for your data.
  • The Influence Factors (Management & Leadership): This section identifies if issues are systemic or localized to specific teams.
  • The Reality Check (Operational Pulse): Binary (Yes/No) questions reduce "survey fatigue" and provide clear, undeniable data points on resource availability.
  • The Safety Net (Open-Ended): Quantitative data tells you what is happening; qualitative data tells you why.

2. Interpreting the "Neutral" Response

In a 5-point rating scale, the "3" (Neutral) is often the most important data point.

  • The "Passive" Risk: A high volume of neutral scores suggests a workforce that is present but not inspired. This is often a precursor to "quiet quitting."
  • The Opportunity: It is much easier to move a "3" to a "4" than it is to move a "1" to a "5." Focus your cultural initiatives on the "Neutrals" to see the fastest ROI in engagement scores.

3. Using the Variance Formula

As noted in the statistical section, the Standard Deviation ($\sigma$) is your primary tool for identifying sub-cultures.

  • Low Variance: Everyone feels the same way. The culture is consistent (whether good or bad).
  • High Variance: There is a massive gap in experience. This usually indicates that one department is thriving while another is struggling, or that communication is failing to reach certain levels of the company.

4. Calculating the "Driver Impact"

To make this template truly "comprehensive," you should look for the Correlation Coefficient between Section B (Management) and Section A (Core Engagement).

If the correlation is high (above 0.7), it means your managers are the primary reason people stay or leave. If the correlation is low, the "brand" or "benefits" might be holding the team together regardless of who their boss is.

5. Identifying Sentiment Trends

When analyzing the long-answer questions, look for the frequency of specific nouns and verbs.

  • Positive Trends: If "autonomy," "growth," and "support" appear frequently, your culture is built on empowerment.
  • Negative Trends: If "bottleneck," "silo," or "confusion" appear, your issues are likely structural or related to how information moves through the company.

Mandatory Questions Recommendation

Please remove this mandatory questions recommendation section before publishing.

Mandatory Field Rationale

While every question provides a piece of the puzzle, a few act as the structural "load-bearers" of the entire dataset. If these are skipped, the statistical integrity of your report collapses.

Here are the mandatory questions for this template and the reasoning behind their status:

1. "I see myself still working here in two years' time."

Category: Retention Intent

  • The "Why": This is the ultimate barometer for organizational health. It moves beyond "Are you happy today?" and measures long-term commitment.
  • Analytical Value: This question is the primary variable used for Predictive Modeling. When you cross-reference this with other scores, you can identify exactly which frustrations lead to a high turnover risk.

2. "My immediate supervisor provides me with actionable feedback."

Category: Management Quality

  • The "Why": Research consistently shows that the relationship with a direct supervisor is the single greatest influencer of the daily employee experience.
  • Analytical Value: This allows you to differentiate between "Company Problems" (e.g., poor benefits) and "Local Problems" (e.g., a specific team leader). Without this, your data remains too broad to act upon.

3. "Do you have the tools and resources necessary to do your job effectively?"

Category: Operational Enablement

  • The "Why": This is a fundamental "hygiene factor." If an employee is motivated but lacks the basic tools to succeed, they will inevitably reach a state of burnout.
  • Analytical Value: This is a Binary Anchor. Because it is a simple Yes/No, it provides a clear percentage (e.g., "22% of staff lack necessary tools") that is impossible for leadership to misinterpret.

4. "Would you recommend this company as a great place to work to a friend?"

Category: eNPS (Employee Net Promoter Score)

  • The "Why": This measures "Social Capital." It asks the employee to put their personal reputation on the line for the organization.
  • Analytical Value: It is the standard industry metric for Brand Advocacy. It is the most common data point used to compare your company culture against competitors or industry averages.

5. "What is the one thing this organization should start doing to improve our culture?"

Category: Qualitative Growth

  • The "Why": Multiple-choice questions can only confirm what you already suspect. This open-ended question allows for the discovery of "Unknown Unknowns"—issues that leadership may not even be aware of.
  • Analytical Value: This provides the "Human Context" to the numbers. A low score in Management is just a number; a comment about "lack of communication during remote shifts" is a roadmap for a solution.

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