Employee Confidence Index up slightly

RP news wires
Tags: business management, talent management

The SFN Group Employee Confidence Index edged up 0.5 points to 48.7 in September, it was announced on October 8. The index, which measures workers' confidence in their personal employment situation and optimism in the economic environment, reveals that the same amount of workers are optimistic in the number of jobs available, despite a slight dip in the percentage believing the economy is getting stronger. At the same time, 35 percent of workers reported that they are likely to look for a new job.

"Our latest Employee Confidence Index shows nominal movement," said Roy Krause, president and CEO of SFN Group Inc. "Despite continued economic uncertainty, there is some good news to report. Temporary help services, a leading indicator of future growth in the overall job market, showed year-to-year performance up 23.4 percent from September 2009. Although many employers are riding the current economic situation out, we are seeing broad project-based hiring activity in accounting, finance, technology and manufacturing, as well as in administrative and clerical. Moreover, according to our latest report, workers seem to be very open to considering a job change. The reality is, once the economy pulls itself out of this, companies will need top talent to create and sustain growth. Not engaging and retaining talent may severely hamper their ability to compete now and when the economy makes a full recovery."

A Look Inside the Report:

Confidence in Overall Situation:

The SFN Group Employee Confidence Index edged up 0.5 points to 48.7 in September. The index, which measures workers' confidence in their personal employment situation and optimism in the economic environment, reveals that the same amount of workers are optimistic in the number of jobs available, despite a slight dip in the percentage believing the economy is getting stronger. At the same time, 35 percent of workers reported that they are likely to look for a new job.

Confidence in Macroeconomic Environment:

Confidence in Personal Employment Situation:

Job Security:

Job Transition:

Confidence by Gender:

Confidence by Age:

Confidence by Income: