Exhausted person at their desk

April 23, 2026


You’re not burned out... but you’re not energized either

Engagement is productive energy (and almost nobody is measuring it properly)

There are teams that are not in burnout.
But they are not thriving either.

And that gray zone costs millions in silent productivity.

What is engagement, really?

According to Wilmar Schaufeli, engagement is:

"A positive, work-related psychological state characterized by energy, dedication, and absorption".

It is not about being satisfied.
It is about being activated.

  • Energy (vigor): Vitality and resilience.
  • Dedication: Meaning, pride, involvement.
  • Absorption: Full concentration (time flies).

It is wellbeing in motion.
Not comfort. Not happy resignation.

Is it the opposite of burnout?

Conceptually: yes.
Empirically: not entirely.

Burnout implies exhaustion and cynicism.
Engagement implies vitality and connection.

But beware:

You may not be burned out…
and still not be engaged.

The absence of illness is not health.

In People Analytics, this is key: measuring only strain is looking in the rearview mirror.

Engagement vs satisfaction

Satisfaction Engagement
Passive state Activated state
Feeling content Feeling energized
Enjoying Investing energy

Satisfaction stabilizes.
Engagement mobilizes.

If your survey only measures satisfaction, you are measuring temperature, not power.

The model behind it: JD-R (Job Demands–Resources)

Engagement is explained through the Job Demands–Resources (JD-R) model.

It increases when there are:

Job resources

  • Autonomy
  • Feedback
  • Social support
  • Development

Personal resources

  • Self-efficacy
  • Optimism
  • Psychological capital

More pressure without resources does not generate commitment. It generates strain.

This is where People Analytics stops being “cool” and starts being strategic:

  • Analyze engagement by indicator.
  • View percentiles against normal or gamma distribution.
  • Filter by role, department, or tenure.
  • Detect teams with low energy but high dedication (silent alert).
  • Cross perceived resources with real vigor.

The question is no longer “how are we?”
It is “where are we losing energy and why?”.

Engagement vs work addiction

Engagement Work addiction
Intrinsic motivation Compulsion
Can disconnect Cannot stop
Enjoys other areas Feels guilty when not working
Healthy Potentially harmful

Working long hours is not the problem.
Motivation is.

Without psychological context, the “hours worked” metric means nothing.

Paradigm shift

Traditional occupational health focused on:

  • Stress
  • Burnout
  • Conflicts

Engagement changes the approach:

From avoiding harm
to building positive human capital.

It means moving from a medical model to a continuous improvement model.
And that connects directly with strategic HR.

The real challenge

Asking questions like:

  • Which resources are truly correlated with energy?
  • In which teams does vigor fall below the 40th percentile?
  • Which managers drive higher dedication according to data?
  • Which departments sustain high energy under high demand?

Without deep analysis, engagement is motivational PowerPoint.
With well-interpreted data, it becomes a sustainable competitive advantage.

The uncomfortable idea

Maybe your organization does not have a burnout problem.
It has an energy problem.

And that is not fixed with fruit on Fridays.

It is solved by modeling resources, intervening with evidence, and understanding that culture can be measured without killing its soul.

The question is:

Are you redistributing energy with data… or just confirming intuitions?