Workplace culture is no longer defined by where people work. It’s defined by how people feel at work.
As organizations navigate generational shifts, hybrid operations, and rising employee expectations around purpose and belonging, engagement has become a strategic imperative, not an HR initiative. Employees today expect real-time feedback, visible appreciation, and meaningful connection to their organization’s values. And organizations that fail to deliver on those expectations are paying the price in turnover, disengagement, and lost productivity.
According to Gallup’s ongoing workplace research, only about one-third of U.S. employees describe themselves as engaged at work. This figure has remained stubbornly low for years. Their research also shows that doubling weekly recognition can increase productivity by up to 9%, reduce absenteeism by 22%, and significantly improve retention.
Few organizations illustrate this transformation better than Gables Residential, a privately held apartment management company overseeing tens of thousands of apartment homes across the United States. What began as a traditional recognition program evolved into a company-wide culture engine that now fuels engagement, performance, retention, and pride at scale.
This case study explores how Gables modernized recognition as a business strategy, and what HR and business leaders can learn as they design the workplace of the future.
The New Reality of Employee Engagement
The modern workforce spans five generations. Employees expect feedback instantly, growth continuously, and recognition authentically. The employee experience is no longer transactional, it’s relational.
Recent industry research continues to confirm what many leaders feel intuitively:
- Employees who receive frequent recognition are significantly more likely to be engaged and committed.
- Recognition is consistently ranked as one of the top drivers of employee satisfaction and retention.
- Organizations with strong cultures of appreciation outperform competitors on productivity, customer experience, and profitability.
In fact, a NetSuite article highlights that employees who feel regularly appreciated are up to 31% less likely to voluntarily leave their organization.
Yet despite the evidence, many companies still rely on outdated recognition models:
- Annual awards ceremonies
- Manager-only nominations
- Limited visibility
- Disconnected reward systems
These approaches don’t scale, and they don’t shape behavior.
Gables Residential recognized this early. Instead of asking, “How do we reward performance?” leadership asked a more strategic question:
“How do we build the culture we want people to experience every day?”
That mindset shift changed everything.

The Business Challenge: From Recognition Program to Culture Strategy
Before modernizing its approach, Gables Residential operated a traditional recognition model, which was manager-driven, infrequent, and disconnected from daily work. While well-intentioned, the system struggled with familiar challenges:
- Low participation
- Inconsistent recognition across teams
- Minimal alignment to company values
- Limited impact on engagement or retention
In fact, only about 140 employees were recognized annually across the organization despite being a workforce numbering in the thousands.
Leadership wasn’t reacting to a crisis. Engagement scores weren’t failing. Performance wasn’t collapsing. Instead, the organization was growing and expanding markets, onboarding talent, and navigating an increasingly competitive labor landscape. Leaders understood that scale demanded something more intentional than sporadic recognition moments.
They didn’t want a bigger awards program. They wanted a culture of appreciation. One that reinforced behaviors, values, and performance in real time.
A Strategic Shift: Designing Recognition as Infrastructure
Rather than layering on another HR tool, Gables partnered with WorkProud to design recognition as an organizational infrastructure that was truly embedded into how people lead, collaborate, communicate, and succeed.
The goal wasn’t to increase thank-you notes. It was to:
- Reinforce company values through visible behavior modeling
- Enable peer-to-peer appreciation across locations and roles
- Increase transparency around performance excellence
- Strengthen cross-functional connection
- Align recognition with engagement, growth, and business outcomes
According to Philip Altschuler, Senior Vice President of Human Resources and Learning & Development at Gables Residential:
“The biggest shift wasn’t technological — it was cultural. We moved from managers looking for what’s wrong to leaders and peers actively looking for what’s right. That change fundamentally reshaped how people experienced work at Gables.”
This shift aligns closely with modern engagement research. Many studies show that recognition is most effective when it is frequent, peer-enabled, and tied to organizational values. Not reserved for management approval or annual cycles.

Building a Recognition Ecosystem. Not a Program.
With WorkProud, Gables launched a company-wide recognition ecosystem built around five core design principles:
Peer-to-Peer Recognition
Recognition became everyone’s responsibility, not just leadership’s. Associates could recognize colleagues across departments, regions, and roles, increasing inclusion, visibility, and shared ownership of culture.
Real-Time Appreciation
Instead of waiting for performance reviews or annual milestones, recognition happened in the moment, which reinforced behaviors while they were fresh, relevant, and meaningful.
Values-Based Recognition
Every recognition moment was tied directly to Gables’ core values, helping employees understand not just what excellence looked like, but why it mattered.
This alignment mirrors best practices cited by NetSuite, which emphasize that recognition programs tied to organizational purpose outperform transactional rewards in driving long-term engagement.
Integrated Rewards
Recognition included flexible reward options, spanning digital incentives, experiences, and personalized acknowledgments, without adding administrative complexity.
Data-Driven Culture Insights
Leadership gained real-time visibility into participation, recognition trends, and sentiment patterns, allowing culture to be managed with the same rigor as operations.
This wasn’t about adding noise. It was about creating clarity around what excellence looks like and how it’s celebrated.
The Results: Recognition at Scale
The impact was transformational. Within the first year of launching the modern recognition platform:
- Annual recognitions increased from 140 to over 11,000
- 95% of employees actively participated
- Recognition became a daily behavior
But the most important outcome wasn’t volume. It was engagement quality.
Employees weren’t just receiving recognition, they were giving it, reading it, sharing it, and internalizing what success looked like at Gables.
Recognition became:
- A communication channel
- A leadership development tool
- A cultural mirror
- A retention strategy
At Gables, recognition stopped being a program. It became how work got done.

Measurable Business Impact
Using engagement and performance analytics, Gables documented consistent improvements in key workforce indicators:
- Higher employee engagement scores
- Increased sentiment around belonging and appreciation
- Improved productivity measures
- Stronger retention patterns
- More consistent onboarding and ramp experiences
- Better alignment between leadership intent and employee behavior
Recognition wasn’t operating in isolation. It became the connective tissue between strategy and execution, linking culture to outcomes.
This aligns closely with Gallup’s long-standing findings that highly engaged organizations experience higher productivity, lower absenteeism, stronger customer loyalty, and improved profitability. Their research further demonstrates that organizations with robust recognition practices significantly outperform competitors in both employee experience and business performance.
Why Recognition Works (When Designed Correctly)
Recognition has always mattered, but its role has fundamentally evolved. In today’s workplace, recognition isn’t about morale boosts. It’s about:
- Behavioral reinforcement: What gets recognized gets repeated
- Cultural clarity: Employees understand what success looks like
- Connection: Recognition builds relationships across teams and locations
- Psychological safety: Appreciation increases trust, voice, and belonging
- Engagement velocity: Frequent recognition sustains momentum during change
Gables didn’t simply increase appreciation. They operationalized it. And that’s the difference between programs that fade and systems that scale.
As Gallup research continues to show, recognition that is frequent, peer-enabled, values-based, and visible has a disproportionately positive effect on engagement and retention, far more than rewards alone.
At Gables, recognition became a performance multiplier, not because it motivated through incentives alone, but because it strengthened meaning, visibility, and pride in work.
That distinction matters. Modern employees don’t want generic rewards.
Employees want:
- To be seen
- To be valued
- To feel connected to purpose
- To know their work matters
Recognition delivers that, when done intentionally.
Recognition as Change Management Infrastructure
One of the most powerful outcomes of Gables’ recognition transformation was how it supported organizational change.
As the business evolved, expanding markets, onboarding new talent, and modernizing operations, recognition provided:
- A consistent culture experience across locations
- Faster cultural onboarding for new hires
- Reinforcement of new behaviors during transformation initiatives
- A visible leadership commitment to people-first performance
Instead of culture being something discussed annually in engagement surveys, it became something experienced daily. This shift reduced friction, improved adoption, and increased trust during periods of growth and transformation.

What Other Organizations Can Takeaway
Gables Residential’s experience offers several powerful lessons for organizations modernizing engagement:
Recognition Is Strategy, Not Soft Skills
When aligned to values and outcomes, recognition becomes a growth lever, not a morale perk.
Frequency Beats Formality
Daily appreciation outperforms annual awards, every time.
Peer Recognition Drives Cultural Ownership
When everyone participates, culture becomes collective, not hierarchical.
Visibility Creates Alignment
Public social recognition clarifies expectations and reinforces behaviors faster than policies or training alone.
Technology Enables Scale — Design Enables Impact
Tools matter, but intention matters more. The most successful programs are built, not installed.
The Future of Employee Recognition
Looking ahead, recognition will only become more critical.
As organizations face:
- AI-driven job redesign
- Distributed and hybrid workforce complexity
- Ongoing skills shortages
- Burnout and disengagement risks
- Rising expectations around purpose and belonging
Recognition will evolve from “nice-to-have” to operational necessity.
But not all recognition strategies will succeed.
The organizations that win will be those that:
- Embed recognition into workflows
- Align appreciation to business values
- Make participation effortless
- Measure impact continuously
Treat culture as infrastructure, not an initiative. Gables Residential didn’t just implement recognition, they built a system of appreciation. A system that scales with growth, adapts to change, and strengthens performance year after year.
Why WorkProud Works
WorkProud’s platform was designed specifically for this next era of employee experience, where engagement, recognition, communications, and rewards operate as a unified ecosystem.
Unifying:
- Peer-to-peer social recognition
- Points-based rewards
- Service anniversaries and onboarding kits
- Real-time analytics
- Change management expertise
WorkProud helps organizations like Gables transform appreciation into measurable business impact.
Unlike fragmented point solutions, WorkProud integrates recognition into the broader employee experience, not as a layer, but as a foundation.
Final Thoughts: Recognition Isn’t Just About ‘Thank You’
The real story of Gables Residential isn’t about rewards points or platforms. It’s about identity.
They became an organization where:
- Appreciation is visible
- Values are lived, not laminated
- Performance is celebrated, not assumed
- Employees feel proud, not just productive
That’s the power of modern recognition. And in today’s world, culture isn’t what you say. It’s what you recognize.