SOM-L’Actualité Survey : Goodbye Boss!
Are your employees jumping ship and you are wondering why? There is a strong likelihood that their relationship with management has something to do with it, reveals a SOM-L’Actualité survey conducted among Quebec workers. In this context, offering free coffee or other freebies is a shot in the dark.
The survey results are striking:
- Nearly 40 % of Quebec workers surveyed have already left a job because of a bad relationship with their boss;
- 27 % of Quebec workers surveyed have already considered leaving a job because of a bad relationship with their boss.
In this study, Quebec workers also expressed their opinion on the attributes of a good or bad boss.
THE BAD BOSS | THE GOOD BOSS |
Is incompetent | Is familiar with his field of activity |
Does not assume his responsibilities | Knows where he is going |
Acts only for his own interest | Takes care of the well-being of his employees |
Does not trust his employees | Delegates and believes in his team |
Micro-manages | Gives clear directions and achievable goals |
Does not consult his team | Listens to his team |
Abuses his power | Treats each of his employees fairly |
Criticizes instead of helping to succeed | Professionally stimulates his employees |
Only thinks of making profit | Promotes work-family balance |
Does not listen to the needs of his employees | Creates a healthy, pleasant and productive work environment |
Is incapable of recognition | Recognizes the skills and the achievements of his employees |
Puts his stress on others | Stands tall when there is adversity |
Learn more
Read the article on L’Actualité (in French only)
Methodology
This online survey was conducted from March 18th to 20th 2019 among 852 French-speaking adults workers from Quebec. The sample was taken from the SOM Gold Panel, which consists exclusively of randomly recruited Internet users on landlines and cell phones; it is therefore a probability sample. The data were weighted to best reflect the characteristics of the population. The maximum margin of error for all respondents is 3.9%, 19 times out of 20.