Healthcare is the largest driver of U.S. job growth — and one of the hardest industries in which to keep that workforce stable. The sector added roughly 31,000 jobs per month by mid-2025, below the prior 12-month average of 42,000. Hospital RN turnover averaged 16.4% in 2024. HRSA projects a national shortage of 141,160 physicians by 2038, with rural areas hit hardest.
Against that backdrop, the 2026 State of Employee Listening study surveyed 146 healthcare HR leaders across the U.S. and Europe to examine how listening maturity connects to engagement, organizational performance, and the ability to act on feedback. The findings are consistent: organizations that listen more maturely report stronger outcomes across every metric measured — but many still struggle to convert feedback into visible change.
Healthcare organizations distribute across all four stages of the Perceptyx listening maturity model, tracking closely to the overall sample. 23% operate at Stage 4 (Strategic Listening), three points above the all-organization average of 20%. Most respondents report defined outcomes for their listening programs (79%), established success metrics (77%), and strategies that have evolved over the past year (82%).
The distribution suggests a sector that is broadly invested in listening infrastructure but still working to close the gap between data collection and operational impact — a pattern consistent with what prior Perceptyx research on healthcare employee experience has documented.
The most striking finding in the healthcare data is the relationship between listening maturity and leader engagement. Across the sample, 71% of respondents were fully engaged (agreeing or strongly agreeing with all four core engagement indicators: pride, accomplishment, willingness to recommend, and intent to stay).
But maturity stage matters enormously. At Stage 1, only 37% of healthcare leaders are fully engaged. At Stage 4, 88% are — a 51-point gap. Most of that gain occurs between Stage 1 and Stage 2 (37% to 66%), suggesting that even early investments in structured listening produce measurable returns on leader confidence.
Because this study surveyed leaders responsible for listening and EX initiatives, engagement here signals more than general sentiment. It also reflects confidence in organizational direction and willingness to advocate for the workplace. In healthcare, where leadership stability directly affects clinical operations and staff retention, that signal carries operational weight.
Yes, consistently. Compared with Stage 1 organizations, Stage 4 healthcare organizations are:
These comparisons are associational (the study design does not support causal claims), but the consistency across multiple outcomes is worth noting. Organizations investing in listening maturity are not seeing gains in one dimension; they report stronger perceived performance across the board.
Healthcare leaders identified employee performance and productivity (18%) as the top focus area for their listening programs, followed by retention (13%) and employee well-being (12%). Career progression and profitability tied at 7%.
When asked where engagement creates the most business value, innovation led at 36%, followed by retention at 27%. That innovation emphasis may reflect healthcare's constant need for care delivery adaptation — environments where employees closest to patient care identify process improvements faster than centralized planning can.
Three barriers surfaced at nearly identical rates: culture-strategy misalignment (24%), the data-to-action gap (23%), and lack of leadership buy-in (23%). Change fatigue (17%) and unclear ROI (10%) rounded out the top five.
The barrier mix shifts with maturity. Early-stage organizations tend to struggle with leadership alignment and cultural challenges. As programs advance, the constraint moves toward operational execution — getting feedback translated into visible improvements that frontline populations can actually see. Among the most mature organizations, the data-to-action gap was the single most-cited barrier.
Traditional employee experience surveys remain the most common method (66%), but healthcare organizations are layering additional channels: lifecycle surveys (45%), crowdsourcing (40%), and behavioral measurement tools like 360 feedback (33%). These channels capture feedback during onboarding, career transitions, and leadership development moments that a single annual survey would miss.
Most respondents report that employees begin experiencing noticeable changes 3–4 weeks after a listening event. Senior leaders receive data fastest, followed by managers, then employees. Accelerating that loop — particularly for frontline staff who are difficult to reach and have limited margin for additional meetings — remains the highest-leverage improvement available at every maturity level.
The data points in a consistent direction: organizations that invest in listening maturity and in the capacity to act on what they hear report better outcomes for leaders, employees, and the organization. The specific priorities depend on where an organization sits on the maturity curve:
For a deeper look at how healthcare systems like Sharp HealthCare, Norton Healthcare, Children's Nebraska, and the University of Miami are using listening data to drive measurable improvements in retention, safety, and engagement, download the full report.