MIT Sloan Management Review Article on Toxic Culture Is Driving the Great Resignation

  • 14m
  • Ben Zweig, Charles Sull, Donald Sull
  • MIT Sloan Management Review
  • 2022

More than 40% of all employees were thinking about leaving their jobs at the beginning of 2021, and as the year went on, workers quit in unprecedented numbers.1 Between April and September 2021, more than 24 million American employees left their jobs, an all-time record.2 As the Great Resignation rolls on, business leaders are struggling to make sense of the factors driving the mass exodus. More importantly, they are looking for ways to hold on to valued employees.

To better understand the sources of the Great Resignation and help leaders respond effectively, we analyzed 34 million online employee profiles to identify U.S. workers who left their employer for any reason (including quitting, retiring, or being laid off) between April and September 2021.3 The data, from Revelio Labs, where one of us (Ben) is the CEO, enabled us to estimate company-level attrition rates for the Culture 500, a sample of large, mainly for-profit companies that together employ nearly one-quarter of the private-sector workforce in the United States.

About the Author

Donald Sull is a senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management and a cofounder of CultureX. Charles Sull is a cofounder of CultureX. Ben Zweigis the CEO of Revelio Labs and an adjunct professor of economics at New York University’s Stern School of Business.

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  • MIT Sloan Management Review Article on Toxic Culture Is Driving the Great Resignation