Staff Engagement & Satisfaction Measurement
Measures how the organization embodies Shūrā (mutual consultation) and Raḥmah (compassion) by anonymously surveying staff satisfaction. By actively seeking employee feedback, leadership fulfills the Islamic mandate of collaborative decision-making and honors the Amanah (trust) placed in them by their workforce. Rooted in the higher objectives (Maqasid) of preserving human dignity, this consultative process fosters Ukhuwwah (brotherhood) and drives Iḥsān (excellence), leading to a healthier culture, improved retention, and enhanced service delivery for all stakeholders.
| Metric | Engagement Index & Action Closure |
|---|---|
| Target | Staff response ≥80%, eNPS ≥+20, Action Closure ≥80% within 90 days |
| Frequency | Annual plus quarterly pulses |
| Method | Validated survey instrument + Action Tracker |
| Unit | Index score, %, rate |
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc
Staff feedback is gathered informally and inconsistently (e.g., through casual conversations). There is no structured or anonymous process. No DPIA/privacy notice; no sharing of findings; no action tracking.
Level 2: Developing
A basic, anonymous staff satisfaction survey is conducted on an ad-hoc or infrequent basis. Results are reviewed by senior leadership, but follow-up actions are not systematic. Privacy notice issued but anonymity controls are weak (e.g., small groups exposed).
Level 3: Established
A standardized, anonymous survey is conducted regularly using a validated tool. Results are analyzed, and a summary is shared with staff within 45 days. An action plan addresses critical issues. GDPR compliance is documented (DPIA, lawful basis). Subgroup suppression (N<5) is applied.
Level 4: Advanced
Comprehensive survey with results benchmarked. Cross-functional teams own prioritized action plans. Progress is reported to the Board via a dashboard. Stress risks are fed into MHSWR assessments. Staff response ≥70%.
Level 5: Optimizing
Staff engagement is a strategic priority with continuous feedback (pulses) and a 'Shūrā Loop' culture. Top quartile benchmarks OR statistically significant YoY improvement. Action closure ≥80%. Deep embodiment of Satr (anonymity) and Raḥmah (psychological safety) evidenced in retention and culture.
Organisation Types
By Organisation Size
| Size | Applicability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micro | exempt | Anonymity is impossible with 0-2 personnel; formal surveys, vendor DPAs, and dashboards are entirely disproportionate. |
| Small | exempt | Anonymity remains highly difficult with 0-5 staff; informal feedback mechanisms and regular check-ins are more appropriate than formal validated instruments. |
| Medium | partial | Should conduct simplified annual surveys and action plans, but formal validated instruments, third-party vendor DPAs, and complex dashboards may be scaled down. |
| Large | full | Standard HR practice at this size to use formal anonymous surveys, dashboards, and structured board reporting. |
| Major | full | Essential for large workforces to utilize validated instruments, strict data protection (DPIAs), and formal board-level dashboards. |
Applicable When
- The organization has employees
- The organization utilizes volunteers
Not Applicable When
- The organization has no employees and no volunteers
Related Criteria
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
Sign in to post a comment.