The Appreciation Deficit
When three in four employees feel invisible, the whole system fails.
This week’s edition began with a number — 56% of employees are considering leaving — and kept circling back to the same question: what would it take for them to stay? The answer, across every dataset we examined, was not compensation. It was appreciation. Being seen. Being heard. Being recognised for the work that fills Monday to Friday. The research is unambiguous: appreciation is the highest-leverage, lowest-cost intervention available to any organisation. And yet the appreciation deficit is growing, not shrinking. The organisations that resolve this contradiction will retain their best people, generate measurably better commercial outcomes, and build the kind of cultures that compound over time. The organisations that don’t will continue to wonder why nothing they do seems to move the needle.
Lead Story
Research Desk
AI-Driven Learning Culture: From Knowledge Orchestration to Innovation Performance
Servant Leadership and Team Innovation: Psychological Safety as the Missing Link
When Not Everyone Feels Safe: Why the Sharedness of Psychological Safety Matters More Than the Average
of culture initiatives led to no improvements, according to HBR research cited in O.C. Tanner’s 2026 Global Culture Report. Meanwhile, 57% of employees felt worse after a ‘culture-building perk’ was launched.
From the Field
The Return-to-Office Wars Escalate: What the 2026 RTO Tracker Reveals About Culture and Control
Grit, Grace, Growth, and Partnership: The Four Disciplines 2026 Leaders Cannot Afford to Ignore
Five Culture Trends That Will Define 2026: From Team-Led Inspiration to Process Over Programs
The Wider Lens
Culture Dissonance, Workslop, and the AI Reckoning: Gartner’s Nine Trends Decoded
The Future of DEI Is Systems, Not Slogans: Five Trends Reshaping Inclusion in 2026
Quick Reads
- SHRM Leadership and manager development is the #1 CHRO priority for 2026. shrm.org
- Work AI Institute More than 90% of organisations cite culture as the primary barrier to AI adoption — not technology. HBR
- Harvard Chan Psychological safety was protective against burnout during COVID — and employees reporting higher PS in 2019 were more likely to stay in 2021. Harvard T.H. Chan
- Archie / Gallup Fully remote employees report 29% engagement vs 20% for on-site workers; 70-80% of engagement variance is tied to the direct manager. archieapp.co
- BCG AI transformation is a workforce transformation — future-built companies upskill 50%+ on AI vs 20% for laggards. bcg.com
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Editorial Standards — The Culture Review is published by IV Talent. All editorial content is governed by five values: Evidence Over Ideology, Structural Thinking Over Individual Blame, Practitioner Utility Over Thought Leadership, Honest Measurement Over Comfortable Metrics, and Independence Over Access. We accept no vendor funding, sponsored content, or affiliate commissions. Sources are cited. Corrections are published promptly. Read our founding editorial →