The impact of poor employee experience
Time
The biggest impact of a bad employee experience is employees being blocked from doing their job effectively. The frustration starts to mount because they don’t have the right tools or because there are barriers in place. This can lead to time being wasted.
We recently studied the time it takes for employees to download a payslip. On average, it took people around seven minutes from beginning to end. We then extrapolated that it was roughly 907,200 hours per year that people in this company were spending downloading payslips. It’s a very small task that shouldn’t take this long. Managers are much more adversely affected because they have more of these admin tasks to complete.
Disengagement
If the systems in place are making it too hard for employees to do their jobs, it creates disengagement. This leads to reduced productivity, reduced energy levels and reduced morale. This can spread like wildfire across the team.
Exclusion
The tools and processes that an organisation has in place may not be accessible to all. Employees may have varying levels of digital literacy, access to different devices, differing levels of WiFi connectivity, or they may have accessibility issues.
If you have certain systems designed to be used in an office, you’re going to be excluding people who work remotely or in the field if they’re not accessible to all.
High turnover
If employees don’t feel trusted, don’t have the right tools or are not listened to, they will leave. The knock-on effect of this can be poor reviews on sites like Glassdoor or LinkedIn. CIPD estimates the average cost of filling a vacancy, including labour costs, is £6,125. For a manager role, these figures rise to £19,000.
Poor customer experience
Ultimately, poor employee experience leads to poor customer experience because employees are not empowered to do what they need to do to impact the customer experience.
For example, using a ResearchOps team to plan and recruit user research hugely streamlines the process, reduces cognitive effort on the UX team, and ultimately gives you more insights on the customer experience.