How to build employee resilience and reduce burnout

A company that waits for a crisis to start recognizing people is trying to fill the tank with the engine already redlining

Key Takeaways: How to build resilience into your workplace

  • Resilience is a cultural habit, not a trait. It is not an inherent personality characteristic you can hire for, but something built into a team through consistent, small signals that employee work is seen and valued.
  • Recognition prevents burnout. Research shows that employees who feel they receive fair and frequent recognition are up to 90% less likely to report burnout and significantly more likely to remain engaged.
  • Fairness is the hinge. The goal is equitable recognition that reaches every team member, not just the usual few, as perceived unfairness in recognition makes employees 2.5 times more likely to experience frequent burnout.
  • Visibility serves as connective tissue. Public, peer-driven recognition creates a shared sense of value, which is vital for maintaining team cohesion during stressful periods or organizational changes.
  • Data makes resilience measurable. Centralizing recognition in one system allows leadership to track engagement patterns and identify teams heading toward disengagement before it leads to turnover.

Every HR leader has watched this happen. A reorg gets announced, or a merger closes, or a quarter arrives where the targets move twice. Some teams absorb the hit and keep going. Others quietly come apart  the strongest people start taking recruiter calls, the energy leaks out of meetings, and work that used to feel shared starts to feel lonely.

We tend to call the difference between those two teams “resilience,” and we tend to treat it like a personality trait, something you screen for in interviews. It isn’t. Resilience is built into a team, or worn out of it, by hundreds of small signals about whether the work people do is seen and whether it counts. Most of those signals are recognition, or the lack of it.

That’s the piece leaders underrate. You can’t hire your way to a resilient culture. You build it in the ordinary weeks so it holds up in the hard ones.

What actually wears resilience down

Resilience rarely breaks from one dramatic event. It erodes from the steady experience of doing real work that nobody notices. The frontline employee who keeps the operation running and never hears a word about it. The analyst two time zones from headquarters whose late nights show up in someone else’s deck. WorkProud clients have a name for these people: the “hidden warriors.” They carry a lot, and they carry it unseen.

When recognition is rare, late, or reserved for the same few names every quarter, people absorb a quiet lesson: effort here is invisible. That lesson is corrosive on a good day. During a stressful stretch, it is the thing that tips someone from tired to done.

The research most leaders never act on

The evidence here is blunt. Gallup and Workhuman studied more than 12,000 employees across 12 countries and found that people who receive the right recognition are up to 90% less likely to report being burned out “always” or “very often.” In their workplace-culture research, employees who strongly agree that recognition is part of how their company operates are about half as likely to experience frequent burnout, and 3.7 times as likely to be engaged.

One finding matters more than the rest for resilience: fairness is the hinge. When employees believe recognition is given out equitably, Gallup and Workhuman found they are measurably more resilient and far less likely to burn out. When they believe it is unfair, they are up to 2.5 times as likely to say they are burned out always or very often. So the goal is not just more recognition. It is recognition that reaches everyone, not only the usual names.

You cannot fake this with an annual survey or a single appreciation week. Resilience comes from recognition that happens often, reaches everyone, and stays where people can see it  and that is what WorkProud is built to run. See how peer recognition works on the platform.

How recognition builds resilience, one week at a time

Resilience compounds the same way trust does, in small and frequent deposits. That is exactly what peer recognition is built to do.

On WorkProud, anyone can recognize anyone, tie the recognition to a company value, and post it to a feed the whole organization sees. A teammate notices someone cover a hard shift, or steady a panicked customer, or quietly mentor a new hire, and says so in a way that lasts and that everyone can see. The hidden warriors stop being hidden. Over a quarter, those moments add up to a team that knows its effort registers, which is the raw material of resilience.

The feed matters as much as the act. It is the connective tissue a distributed or stressed team loses first. When recognition is public and frequent, people see their colleagues being valued even on the weeks they feel stretched thin themselves, and that shared visibility is what keeps a team feeling like a team.

Resilience gets tested during change, and that is when most programs go quiet

Here is the cruel irony of recognition. The moment a team needs it most is the moment most programs fall silent. During a merger or a restructure, leadership goes heads-down, managers get overloaded, and the appreciation that holds people together dries up right when the stress peaks. ROI-Focused Rachel knows this pattern well: recognition programs tend to collapse during the exact events that put culture at risk.

A program built into the daily flow of work behaves differently. At Webster Bank, recognition became part of how the company absorbed acquisitions. As newly acquired employees came on board, a shared recognition feed replaced the inconsistent, manual processes they would otherwise have faced, and people who could have felt like outsiders during a disruptive transition instead felt welcomed and part of the culture from day one. WorkProud’s own description of the outcome is plain: what could have felt like a disruption became a smooth and motivating transition.

WalkMe saw a version of the same thing. Across a stretch of real change, the company sustained recognition rather than pausing it, and engagement and eNPS climbed 130% between 2022 and 2025. Resilience was not a slogan on a values poster. It was a habit the platform kept alive when the calendar got hard.

You can watch resilience form, or crack, in the data

A VP of HR does not get budget for a feeling. The advantage of running recognition through one system is that resilience stops being invisible and starts being measurable.

Because every recognition is tagged to a value and a team, the analytics show where appreciation is flowing and, more usefully, where it has gone quiet. A team whose recognition activity drops off is often a team heading toward disengagement, and you can see it weeks before it shows up in a resignation. That early signal is the difference between a conversation and an exit interview. It also gives Rachel the board-ready story she needs: recognition behavior, engagement, and retention, connected, in numbers a CFO will accept.

A team that goes quiet on the feed is often a team heading toward burnout. You can see it early.

A team that goes quiet on the feed is often a team heading toward burnout. You can see it early.

Resilience is not a wellness webinar or a meditation-app subscription bolted onto a hard year. It is the steady, visible, fair recognition of real work, kept alive especially when work gets hard. WorkProud makes that recognition frequent, peer-driven, and measurable, for the people at headquarters and the ones who never set foot in it. See how it works across your teams.

Start in the calm, instead of the crisis

Resilience is a reserve. It gets drawn down in the hard quarters and topped back up in the ordinary ones, through small and regular signals that people’s work is seen and counts. A company that waits for a crisis to start recognizing people is trying to fill the tank with the engine already redlining. The teams that hold together are the ones that built the habit early, before anything forced them to.

You do not have to take this on faith. Fair, frequent recognition is what helped Webster Bank hold its culture through acquisitions, and what helped WalkMe lift engagement through years of change. See the results other teams have gotten, then bring us your own numbers when you are ready.


Join a Community of People-First Leaders

Building community at work? It’s lonely. Especially when you’re the only one in your organization who gets it.

That’s why we’re building TEECH! This is a community for HR leaders, Total Rewards professionals, and People ops folks who are tired of theory and want real execution.

You’ll find:

  • People who are actually doing this work (not consultants, not theorists, but people with skin in the game)
  • Honest conversations about what works and what doesn’t
  • Solutions to problems nobody talks about
  • Access to frameworks, templates, and real-world playbooks
  • A group that gets why this matters

We’re opening the waitlist now. Join here and be part of something built for people like you.Bu

POSTED

SHARE

GET THE INSPIRED WORKPLACE NEWSLETTER

WorkProud Bullhorn

Get The Inspired Workplace Monthly Newsletter

Ray-Ban Meta Wayfarer Smart Glasses Matte Black/Clear-Graphite Green Transitions

Product Details

An icon of style from Hollywood to hip-hop, the Wayfarer never stands still. Forever embraced by the next generation of culture makers, now its journey continues with AI-enhanced wearable tech. Ray-Ban Meta Wayfarer enables you to live in the moment and share how you see the world. Listen, call, capture and livestream features are seamlessly integrated within the classic frame. Eye size: 50; Frame: Matte Black; Lens: Clear/Graphite Green Transitions; Lens Material: Standard Plastic

Specifications

Color: Matte Black/Clear-Graphite Green Transitions

United States

A
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
Andorra
Angola
Antigua & Deps
Argentina
Armenia
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
B
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Brunei
Bulgaria
Burkina
Burundi
C
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cape Verde
Central African Rep
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Comoros
Congo
Congo {Democratic Rep}
Costa Rica
Croatia
Cuba
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
D
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic

E
East Timor
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia

F
Fiji
Finland
France

G
Gabon
Gambia
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Grenada
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana

H
Haiti
Honduras
Hungary

I
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland {Republic}
Israel
Italy
Ivory Coast

J
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan

K
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Korea North
Korea South
Kosovo
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan

L
Laos
Latvia
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg

M
Macedonia
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Micronesia
Moldova
Monaco
Mongolia
Montenegro
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar

M
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Norway

O
Oman

P
Pakistan
Palau
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal

Q
Qatar

R
Romania
Russian Federation
Rwanda

S
St Kitts & Nevis
St Lucia
Saint Vincent & the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome & Principe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Suriname
Swaziland
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria

T
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Thailand
Togo
Tonga
Trinidad & Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu

U
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Uruguay
Uzbekistan

V
Vanuatu
Vatican City
Venezuela
Vietnam

Y
Yemen

Z
Zambia
Zimbabwe

Please Fill Out the Form

Here you will find insights curated for leadership seeking in-depth industry knowledge. Explore comprehensive studies, helpful guides, and expert white papers.

*By selecting “VIEW RESOURCES,” you agree to WorkProud’s Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from our emails at any time. Please note when unsubscribing: it may take up to 10 business days for your request to take effect.