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    Home»Business»Why 2026 will be the year companies finally start to take worker well-being seriously
    Business 7 Mins Read

    Why 2026 will be the year companies finally start to take worker well-being seriously

    Business 7 Mins Read
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    Throughout 2025, we’ve watched companies treat employees with a stunning disregard: rolling layoffs (with thousands let go at a time), unchecked workloads, turning a blind eye to burnout—with 76% of U.S. workers reporting at least one health condition today—and a near-gleeful rush to replace people with AI.

    Over 200,000 American women quit their jobs this year, many citing inflexible policies and lack of support for balancing work and life. Relentless rounds of cuts have destabilized employee trust and left employees uncertain and questioning leadership at every level. Across industries, leaders have routinely prioritized short-term efficiency over human impacts, sending a clear signal that employee well-being is treated as irrelevant to how most CEOs define organizational success.

    Despite a year in which many companies acted as if they were actively anti employee well-being, there’s clear evidence that 2026 will be the year everything changes. This isn’t wishful thinking or naivete. It’s grounded in hard business realities that CEOs can no longer afford to ignore.

    First, investors—the same ones who have historically applauded employee layoffs—are beginning to reward companies that prioritize employee flourishing because multiple years of research show that firms with high well-being scores consistently outperform peers in stock performance, profitability, and innovation.
    Second, the talent market is unforgiving—top performers now demand workplaces that offer trust, growth, and the conditions to thrive; ignoring this risks losing the very people who drive competitive advantage. Additionally, we’ve reached a point of destabilization—a crisis—where people are hitting a “no more” moment and simply won’t continue in the old way any longer. This will be a major catalyst for change.
    Third, the AI-driven transformation of work depends on human adaptability; organizations that fail to foster well-being, learning, and resilience will sabotage their own investments in technology. Finally, the reputational and financial costs of ignoring well-being are increasingly visible, from mass departures of key employees to heightened public scrutiny. Taken together, these forces create a perfect storm: 2026 is the year CEOs will have both the incentive and the imperative to finally make employee well-being a central strategic priority.

    The Reckoning Arrives

    If 2025 will be remembered for the callousness and disregard organizations showed their people, 2026 will be remembered as the year CEOs felt the consequences of those decisions and were forced to pivot. And this shift won’t happen because leaders suddenly became more empathetic. It will happen because the data is now unequivocal: employee well-being isn’t a “soft” idea—it’s a hard, proven driver of performance, retention, customer experience, innovation, and long-term value creation. When people feel genuinely valued, respected, supported, treated humanely, and that they truly belong, they don’t just perform more optimally—they think more clearly, solve problems more creatively, and bring far greater energy and commitment to their work. Research from leading business schools and global workplace studies demonstrates this; 2026 is simply the year the evidence becomes impossible for CEOs to dismiss.

    The Well-Being–Performance Link Is No Longer Debatable

    For years, employee well-being was treated as a feel-good afterthought—something leaders knew mattered but never put on the same level as profits and shareholder returns. That era is over. Rigorous, multiyear research from investment firm Irrational Capital—analyzing thousands of public companies, including the entire S&P 500 and Russell 1000—shows that organizations in the top 20% for employee well-being have outperformed the market by hundreds of basis points. Oxford research finds that a single-point increase in employee happiness correlates with billions in additional annual profit for large enterprises. McKinsey on burnout, Deloitte on retention, Gallup’s global workplace data—all of it points to the same conclusion: when people feel genuinely supported, productivity, profitability, innovation, and customer loyalty surge. Harvard leadership professor Arthur C. Brooks puts it bluntly: “Happier employees are more profitable, more productive employees. That’s just the way it is.” Investors are now baking these realities into their models. The gap between human flourishing and financial flourishing isn’t philosophical anymore—it’s mathematical.

    Where Companies Have Gone Wrong

    Most organizations spent the past decade conflating well-being with wellness programs. They handed out meditation apps, gym stipends, and yoga classes while ignoring the root causes of poor well-being: uncaring and untrustworthy managers, a lack of connection and belonging, expectations of always being on—and feeling unappreciated for one’s hard work. The result was predictable—burnout soared, engagement flat-lined, and the best people walked away. The damage is undeniable in 2025’s data. Trust in senior leadership has fallen to its lowest point in years. Employees are using words like “disconnect,” “misalignment,” “distrust,” and “hypocrisy” in record numbers. The power shift back to employers has been used to push return-to-office mandates, endless restructurings, and the “forever layoff”—small, rolling terminations that keep everyone fearing they’ll be next, exhausted, and diminished in what they can contribute.

    Why 2026 Changes Everything

    2025 exposed the cost of treating people as expendable. 2026 will reveal the cost of continuing to do so. The forces now converging leave CEOs no room to hide:

    • Investors have begun rewarding cultures of genuine care. The same financial logic that once justified layoffs now proves that sustained well-being creates superior performance. Boards are asking hard questions about turnover, culture risk, and the long-term sustainability of workforce models built on burnout.
    • The cost of neglect is now impossible to hide. The U.S. Surgeon General has warned that workplaces are a major driver of the nation’s mental health crisis. The result is spiking turnover, steep drops in productivity, skyrocketing medical claims, and a workforce whose resilience has been systematically eroded—losses that dwarf the cost of actually supporting people.
    • Young talent is reshaping the expectations of work. Gen Z and millennials, who will soon be the majority of the workforce, refuse to accept fear, overwork, or indifference as normal. They demand growth, stability, and humane leadership—and they walk quickly when they don’t get it. The mistake leaders continue to make is by framing this attitude as entitlement. It’s not. It’s clarity. Younger generations simply refuse to tolerate what older generations accepted as normal. The battle for talent has become a battle for well-being.
    • AI is accelerating—not reducing—the need for well-being. The belief that technology could replace people and eliminate the need for authentically supportive leadership has been proven wrong. AI demands adaptability, creativity, emotional intelligence, and resilience—capacities that collapse under chronic stress. Organizations that want their people to master the tools of the future must first keep them energized and trusted today.
    • A new leadership mandate is forming. This is the shift Deloitte calls “human sustainability:” the deliberate choice to build organizations where people can thrive for the long haul, not just survive to the next quarter. It means embedding respect, growth, and genuine care into every system—hiring, development, compensation, communication, and even the way difficult decisions are handled. Most importantly, well-being must become a leadership competency. Leaders must learn the importance of trust, how team cohesion gets built, how psychological safety is created, how meaningful work is designed, and how human energy is sustained. Leaders must embrace new practices known to support human thriving.
    • The companies that make this pivot in 2026 won’t just repair the damage of 2025. They’ll dominate the decade. They’ll keep their best people and attract everyone else’s. They’ll turn AI from a source of fear into the greatest amplifier of human potential we’ve ever seen. They’ll build resilience that no disruption can break.

    In my new book, The Power of Employee Well-Being, I lay out exactly how this transformation happens and why it’s the single greatest untapped performance lever left in most organizations. The evidence is settled. The investors are watching. The talent is voting with their feet. And 2026 is the year the old excuses finally die. Leaders who still treat people as costs to be managed will be left behind. The rest of us will be building the future—and it’s one where people are flourishing, trusted, and bringing everything they have to work every single day.

    Happy New Year!



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