Two out of three women say their manager is not adaptable
6 min read
| Published onNew York, New York, December 2, 2022 — A Catalyst survey of 5,494 employees in 11 countries across the globe reveals that adaptability is a necessary leadership skill to retain employees and for businesses to thrive now and into the future of work. But nearly seven out of ten employees (69%) say their manager fails to adapt. Two-thirds of women (67%) agree, and the numbers are even higher for people with caregiving responsibilities, with nearly three-quarters (72%) saying their managers are not adaptable.
The report, Adapt or Fail: How Managers Can Enable Everyone to Thrive at Work, shows that the numbers increase for employees with disabilities (77%), and lesbian, gay, bisexual, queer, or asexual employees (74%). Employees from marginalized racial and ethnic groups (66%) were more likely than White employees (58%) to report that their managers were not adaptable.
Adaptability is broadly defined as the ability to adjust effectively ability to effectively adjust to new circumstances and comprises three components: cognitive flexibility, ambiguity tolerance, and openness to change. In the workplace, adaptability can look like learning new skills because of a change in personal responsibilities or considering a different approach to solving a challenging problem—circumstances that have been ever-present for employers and exacerbated since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Managers With High Adaptability and High Empathy Could Stem Employee Withdrawal, or “Quiet Quitting”
When managers have high empathy and high adaptability skills, employees tend to have more positive experiences compared to employees with managers who are low in both skills. They have increased:
- Experiences of inclusion at work (twice as likely).
- Well-being (four times as likely).
- Intent to stay in their workplace (twice as likely).
- General work, Covid-19, and personal burnout (43%, 49%, and 42% less likely, respectively).