Contents
The critical middle layer – line managers
What it looks like and what to do about it
The real test of listening
Take the Employee Listening Barometer
Of course all employee listening projects are built on the best of intentions. But not all of them deliver the value that’s been promised – over time participation falls and trust in the initiative is lost. Sound familiar? In this post we’re going to look at one of the most common traps we see organisations fall into when it comes to employee engagement – the performative listening trap.
When companies are showing the traits of performative listening, everything looks strong at a surface level. There’s a clear strategy, engagement metrics are defined and leaders speak passionately about culture and employee voice. But, when manager capability and action-taking lag behind, you may find your employee listening has fallen into the performative listening trap.
The performative listening trap is giving all the appearances of caring about employee voice- without the substance to deliver meaningful change. In many scenarios, this is actually more damaging than not listening at all.
The critical middle layer – line managers
Based on our work with hundreds of organisations, the performative listening trap typically occurs when strategy and leadership buy-in are strong, but the critical middle layer, line managers, lack the time, confidence or infrastructure to translate insights from listening priojects into action.
While leaders articulate a compelling vision and listening is positioned as a priority from the top, employees experience something different:
“Leadership talks about engagement constantly, but nothing changes in my team.”
Expectations have been raised, but when action doesn’t follow, cynicism deepens. The organisation has explicitly said it cares - and through inaction, appears not to! This disconnect between the vision and action harms credibility and undermines trust in leadership.
WorkBuzz’s People Priorities: Future of Work 2026 research reinforces this. Only 33% of organisations say engagement has improved year-on-year, while productivity pressures and change continue to increase. In this environment, listening without action actively erodes trust.
What it looks like and what to do about it
Organisations caught in this trap often have:
- Regular listening aligned to business strategy
- Clear engagement goals and metrics
- Visible leadership endorsement
But they lack:
- Structured support for managers
- Simple, consistent action-planning processes
- Transparent “you said, we did” communication
The solution isn’t more listening- it’s investment in action planning. Sometimes it is better to listen less often and act consistently than to survey frequently and fail to deliver. Our advice to these clients is:
- Pause additional strategic investment and concentrate on building manager capability.
- Provide ongoing coaching and practical tools, not just one-off training.
- Simplify action planning dramatically.
- Be transparent with employees about the gap between listening and acting and clearly communicate how you intend to close it.
The real test of listening
Employee listening isn’t about the volume of surveys, it’s about having reliable follow-up. So, if leadership commitment is strong but employee experience remains unchanged, it may be time to examine whether your listening is impactful or performative?
For a quick check on how well you’re listening, take the free WorkBuzz Employee Listening Barometer:
