BI Worldwide Study Finds Recognition's Greatest Value May Be Its Ability to Inspire Better Business Results
Global research suggests that recognition, belonging, feedback, and meaningful communication have a far greater impact on performance, retention, innovation, and customer service than compensation alone.The Shift From Activities to Outcomes
Recognition Drives More Than Engagement
Belonging Emerges as a Critical Driver
AI Raises the Value of Human Connection
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A new global study from BI Worldwide, The New Rules of Engagement® Global Employee Inspiration Research Report 2026, finds that organizations seeking stronger performance, retention, innovation, and customer outcomes should focus less on compensation alone and more on creating cultures of recognition, belonging, feedback, and inspiration. Based on surveys of 2,192 employees across 18 countries and 20 industries, the research was conducted by BI Worldwide in partnership with a US panel research firm and its global partners. The findings were presented by BI Worldwide executives Mark Hirschfeld, Vice President of Consulting and Strategic Partnerships, and Amy Stern, Vice President of Employee Performance.
The report examines 11 workplace trends shaping employee engagement and performance, including recognition, feedback, workplace change, artificial intelligence, deskless employees, communication, compensation, milestone celebrations, employee ideas, and business outcomes. Throughout the study, one theme consistently emerges: employees who feel recognized, heard, and connected are significantly more likely to be engaged, contribute ideas, serve customers, and remain committed to their employers.
The Shift From Activities to Outcomes
Perhaps the most important takeaway for recognition and rewards professionals is the report's focus on measurable business outcomes. Rather than measuring participation rates, logins, or reward redemptions, the research increasingly links employee experiences to outcomes such as productivity, retention, customer service, innovation, and organizational commitment. The findings reinforce a growing trend in the engagement field toward demonstrating the business value of recognition and culture investments rather than simply documenting program activity.
For the rewards and recognition industry, the message is that recognition programs create the greatest value when they are part of a broader strategy to foster belonging, encourage employee voice, strengthen communication, and inspire people to contribute their best work.
Recognition Drives More Than Engagement
Among the study's most striking findings is the connection between recognition and business outcomes. According to the research, employees who believe their good work will be recognized are 12.4 times more likely to describe their company culture as great. Employees who receive meaningful recognition are also far more likely to report commitment, discretionary effort, and inspiration at work. The study found that 87% of recognized employees say they are willing to work especially hard for customers, compared with 64% of employees who have not received recognition.
The report also highlights what BI Worldwide calls the "viral" nature of recognition. Employees who experience meaningful recognition are more likely to recognize others, creating a reinforcing cycle that strengthens culture and performance.
Belonging Emerges as a Critical Driver
The research suggests that belonging may be one of the most underappreciated drivers of performance. Across BI Worldwide's New Rules of Engagement framework, fostering belonging consistently showed strong relationships with commitment, effort, inspiration, retention, and sales performance. Employees who feel they belong are significantly more likely to remain with their organizations and contribute their best work.
The findings align with a growing body of research indicating that employees increasingly expect workplaces to provide not only compensation and career opportunities but also meaningful human connection and a sense of purpose.
AI Raises the Value of Human Connection
While artificial intelligence is reshaping the workplace, BI Worldwide concludes that AI's greatest value may be in creating more opportunities for meaningful human interaction rather than replacing it.
The report suggests that AI can help managers coach more effectively, automate administrative tasks, improve feedback analysis, and free employees to focus on higher-value work. However, the study emphasizes that inspiration, recognition, gratitude, and belonging remain fundamentally human experiences that technology can support but not replace.
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