Every company says it cares about employee engagement. Far fewer have a clear picture of what building it actually requires.
The most common version of engagement in Indian organisations looks like this: an annual team outing, a Diwali celebration, a pizza Friday when the quarter has gone well, and an HR engagement score that gets tracked without anyone being entirely sure what to do with it. This is engagement as activity. And it almost never moves the numbers that actually matter retention rates, discretionary effort, or productivity when no one’s watching.
The problem with how most organisations measure it
The particular challenge for India's growth-stage companies
What genuine engagement requires
Genuine engagement isn’t an event. It’s a set of consistent practices that make people feel seen, treated fairly, and connected to the work they’re doing and the people around them. A few things that consistently make a difference:
- Manager quality matters more than almost anything else. People leave managers more often than they leave companies, and this holds true across Indian cities and industries alike. Investing in frontline and middle management capability is one of the highest-leverage decisions any growing organisation can make.
- Recognition needs to be real. A generic committee-selected award builds little loyalty. Specific, timely acknowledgement from someone whose opinion the employee genuinely values does. The difference between the two matters more than most leaders realise.
- Psychological safety underpins performance. Teams where people feel safe to flag a problem, push back respectfully, or admit they’re struggling consistently outperform teams where silence is the default. This requires consistent modelling from leadership over time it can’t be declared into existence.
• The working environment communicates something. Not about amenities, but about whether the organisation has genuinely thought about how people’s time and contributions are being used and respected.
Where engagement programmes actually fit in
Well designed engagement programmes team building events, leadership retreats, recognition initiatives, cross functional workshops are genuinely powerful when they’re part of a considered culture strategy. They’re far less effective when they are the entire strategy.
The programmes that work best are designed backwards from a specific outcome. Not ‘let’s organise a team outing’ but ‘communication between our sales and operations functions has broken down, and we want to design an experience that addresses that directly while giving leadership visibility into where the friction is coming from.’ That level of intention is rarer than it should be. It’s also what separates a programme that creates real momentum from one that generates good photos for the company’s social media page.