Introduction
Employee engagement is often treated as an organisational outcome, measured through surveys, tracked over time, and addressed through broad initiatives.
However, research consistently points to a more concentrated driver: the direct manager.
According to Gallup, managers account for at least 70% of the variance in employee engagement (source).
This raises a critical question for HR and L&D: If engagement is largely shaped at the manager level, are current interventions focused in the right place?
What is the role of managers in employee engagement?
The role of managers in employee engagement refers to the direct influence managers have on employees’ day-to-day experience at work, through clarity, feedback, psychological safety, and support.
Rather than being driven primarily by company-wide initiatives, engagement is shaped in everyday interactions between managers and their teams.
The role of managers in employee engagement: what the data shows
The relationship between managers and employee engagement is one of the most consistent findings in workplace research.
Key insights include:
- 70% of engagement variance is linked to the manager (Gallup)
- Employees who feel supported by their manager are significantly more likely to be engaged, productive, and retained
- Poor management is one of the leading drivers of disengagement and turnover (Harvard Business Review)
This indicates that engagement is less about organisational messaging and more about day-to-day employee experience.
What manager impact looks like in practice
The influence of managers is rarely abstract. It shows up in daily interactions:
- How expectations are set
- The quality and frequency of feedback
- Whether employees feel safe to speak up
- How effort and progress are recognised
These micro-interactions accumulate over time, shaping how employees experience their work and their level of engagement.
How managers influence employee engagement on a daily basis
While engagement strategies are often designed at organisational level, their success depends on how consistently they are translated into daily behaviour.
Managers influence engagement through:
- Prioritising (or deprioritising) check-ins
- Responding to stress signals
- Creating clarity during uncertainty
- Handling performance conversations
This explains why engagement often varies significantly between teams within the same organisation.
Why this is often underestimated in L&D
Despite strong evidence, many L&D strategies remain focused on:
- Organisation-wide engagement programmes
- Generic leadership training
- One-off workshops
While valuable, these approaches often fail to influence day-to-day managerial behaviour. The result:
- Knowledge without sustained behaviour change
- Limited impact on engagement metrics
- Ongoing frustration about lack of progress
From training to behaviour: where engagement is won or lost
The core challenge is not awareness.
Most managers understand that they influence engagement.
The challenge is consistency under pressure. In fast-paced environments, managers often revert to default behaviours:
- Focusing on tasks over people
- Skipping meaningful check-ins
- Avoiding difficult conversations
This is where engagement is lost, not in strategy, but in execution.
What actually strengthens the manager–engagement link
Improving the role of managers in employee engagement requires more than traditional training.
Research and practice suggest the need for:
- Continuous support rather than one-time learning
- Space for reflection and real-time problem solving
- Reinforcement of behaviour over time
Coaching is particularly effective in this context, as it supports managers in applying skills within their daily reality.
Evidence from practice
Within Inuka’s coaching programmes: 81% of employees report improved well-being and resilience after five sessions
For managers, this translates into:
- More effective conversations
- Clearer expectations
- More consistent support for teams
More on supporting managers and employees: https://www.inukacoaching.com/for-organisations
What this means for L&D strategy
If managers drive the majority of engagement, L&D priorities need to reflect that reality.
This implies a shift:
From: broad engagement initiatives
To: targeted, continuous support for managers
From: knowledge transfer
To: behaviour change in context
Making manager impact measurable
One of the barriers to improving engagement is linking manager behaviour to business outcomes.
However, this connection becomes visible when combining:
- Engagement data
- Absenteeism trends
- Performance indicators
Calculate the impact of engagement and well-being in your organisation.
FAQ: Managers and employee engagement
How much do managers influence employee engagement?
Research from Gallup shows that managers account for up to 70% of the variance in employee engagement.
Why do managers have such a strong impact?
Because they shape the daily work experience through feedback, clarity, and support.
Can engagement improve without focusing on managers?
Improvements are typically limited. Sustainable engagement requires consistent manager behaviour.
Conclusion
The role of managers in employee engagement is not a secondary factor. It is the primary driver in most organisations.
Recognising this shifts the focus from broad initiatives to targeted action — where daily behaviour, not strategy, determines outcomes.
For HR and L&D, the implication is clear:
Improving engagement starts with supporting managers: consistently, practically, and at scale.






