The Great Resignation forced leaders to prioritize connection between work and mission, provide clear career trajectories and upward mobility

“Great Resigners” are content with new roles offering upskilling


The Great Resignation was a wake-up call to leaders to prioritize a greater connection between work and mission, provide clear career trajectories and opportunities for upward mobility

Nearly two years after the term “The Great Resignation” was coined and millions of Americans quit their jobs, new research from Cengage Group reveals that 81 percent of Great Resigners have no regrets about quitting.

Their past employment is most certainly in the rearview, as 85 percent said they’re satisfied in their new role. Access to employer-sponsored training played a role in where workers decided to take their talents, with 66 percent saying it was an important factor in accepting their current job.

These findings were revealed in the “Where Are They Now? The Great Resigners, One Year Later” report, which serves as a sequel to Cengage Group’s 2021 Great Resigners Report by exposing the real motivations behind the Great Resignation and providing an update on Great Resigners’ new careers and overall job satisfaction.

The report found that while many early Great Resigners quit to pursue higher pay and greater flexibility, the biggest reasons employees left or quit their job from June 2021 to June 2022 stemmed from misalignment on values between employees and management and an unclear path to growth.

“The Great Resignation was a wake-up call to leaders that we must prioritize a greater connection between work and mission, provide clear career trajectories and opportunities for upward mobility to ensure our workers have the skills needed to sustain challenges and move into the future,” said Michael E. Hansen, CEO, Cengage Group. “Losing sight of these important employee priorities can have an impact on culture and the bottom line. As we continue to face economic uncertainties, businesses should be focused on growing and empowering top talent, including creating connections with local education institutions and other partners to further opportunities for current and prospective talent.”

Additional key survey findings include:

A misalignment on values and an unclear path to growth were key factors for talent attrition and acquisition

  • One-third of Great Resigners (34%) left their job because the company’s mission no longer aligned with their values.
  • Nearly one in four (24%) felt “stuck” in their role / industry with no growth opportunities.
  • When it came to accepting their new, current role, the majority of Great Resigners (30%) said the company had a clear path to growth and development, followed by 27% who said the company’s mission aligned with their values.

Many Great Resigners changed careers altogether

  • Great Resigners didn’t just leave their job, half (50%) switched industries they work in.
  • Despite recent tech layoffs and an upcoming (or quietly ongoing) recession, technology is still a key industry for job seekers with the greatest percentage of Great Resigners – nearly one in four (21%) – taking new roles in technology.

The Great Resignation led to the Great Re-training

  • The majority of Great Resigners (67%) took an online training course or certificate program to improve their standing in the job search, and 89% said the training positively influenced them to land their new job.  
  • Sixty-four percent of Great Resigners said their current employer offers employer-paid online training or upskilling opportunities. Of those Great Resigners whose employers offer employer-paid online training, nine in 10 (89%) plan to take advantage of the opportunity to further upskill.
  • When asked if access to employer-paid online training and upskilling opportunities were important factors in accepting their new job, two-thirds of Great Resigners (66%) said it was. Not surprisingly, 56% of Great Resigners said their prior employers didn’t offer those training opportunities.

Recession fears may influence the next workforce shift

  • Seventy-one percent of Great Resigners worry that a potential recession could impact their current employment status.
    • Ninety-percent of Great Resigners said they would switch industries if their job was eliminated
  • Three in four Great Resigners (76%) plan on taking an online training course or certificate program to broaden their skills and make them more marketable in order to avoid a potential layoff. 

Related:
College leaders look to flexible learning, microcredentials to boost enrollments

This press release originally appeared online.

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Laura Ascione

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