
News releases
Downturn affects UK workers’ morale as job loss fears rise
London, 13 January 2009: Nearly four out of ten employees (37%) now fear they may lose their jobs, up by 10% in the last quarter of 2008 alone, according to data released today from the ETS Employee Survey (www.etsplc.com) of 150,000 UK employees (see table below).
Employees are now far less confident that their companies will meet their objectives – with numbers dropping to 57% in quarter four of 2008 from a steady 84% over the previous two years. Said John Southwell, Managing Director of employee survey specialists ETS plc.
Company management needs to restore trust among its employees if it is to meet the challenge of returning to corporate health. Employee belief that senior management will tell them everything they need to know about the company fell 28% in the fourth quarter. Employees are also less happy about how major changes, such as redundancies, are made and only 30% now feel involved, a drop of 22%. These numbers normally change very slowly over time.
Commenting on the latest figures, ETS Senior Consultant Betsy Travis, said:
Percentage of people who agree with the question | ||
2-year benchmark (Q4 06 - Q3 08) | Q4 08 | |
I feel that my job is secure | 73% | 63% |
I am confident that the company will meet its objectives for next year | 84% | 57% |
Employees are sufficiently involved when the company undertakes change | 49% | 30% |
Senior management communicates everything we need to know from them | 70% | 41% |
Overall I am satisfied working for the company | 87% | 83% |
Table 1: percentage of employees agreeing with survey questions in quarter four 2008 compared to the preceding two years.





