As quoted by Doug Conant, “To win in the marketplace, you must first win in the workplace.”
For many years, I treated this quote as motivational wall art, a nice sentiment, but not exactly a business strategy. Employee engagement for me was always an HR checkbox, which is important but ultimately unimportant to revenue and growth.
Old me always felt that EX (employee experience) was a “nice to have,” not something that could move the financial needle.
But now this perspective has fundamentally changed.
With years of experience, I now understand that motivated and empowered employees don’t just perform better, they directly impact the bottom line, i.e., your overall revenue.
I have seen that engaged employees innovate faster. They are experienced enough to resolve customer issues in half the time and create the kind of brand loyalty that turns customers into advocates.
Organizations that invest strategically in employee experience are seeing measurable returns: Gallup’s research shows that highly engaged teams achieve 23% greater profitability.
Based on this experience, I thought I must pen down my learning with my fellow leaders on how this realization reshaped my perspective.
What once seemed secondary is now a core business driver, changing how priorities are set, how teams are led and how performance is measured.
The turning point
The shift wasn’t gradual. As a matter of fact, it was fast and has changed everything.
We’ve been consistently hitting our numbers.
Revenue targets? Met.
Quarterly projections? On track.
But still something felt fundamentally off.
The warning signs were everywhere, hiding in plain sight. But it was I who was unaware of them.
Let’s go through some of them:
- High-performing employees were leaving without clear reasons (three senior engineers in four months, two mobile app developers in a quarter).
- Teams that once moved with vision, speed and ownership have started showing signs of fatigue.
- Communication across teams started to weaken, leading to misalignment.
On paper, everything looked healthy and stable, but…When we ran the numbers, the financial reality became impossible to ignore.
Replacing each departing senior employee costs us between 70%, including recruitment fees, onboarding, lost productivity during the ramp period and the knowledge gap left behind.
Can you imagine we had spent a significant portion of our overall hiring budget in just 9 months backfilling roles?
On the other hand, the hidden costs were even more alarming:
- Lost revenue from disrupted client relationships: When our customer success lead left mid-cycle, we experienced gaps in follow-ups, overscheduling of client calls and changing points of contact, resulting in the account not being renewed.
- Delayed product launches: Our new product version release was delayed by 2 quarters. The reason behind this was that the original technical lead left and the replacement needed 5 months just to understand the workflows.
- Declining win rates: A lack of team alignment, untimely responses and frequent task rescheduling disrupted workflows, making it harder for teams to deliver the new product version on time.
Finding all these hidden costs, I was staring at an invisible tax on every business outcome.
We analyzed that if this continued for another year, we would be looking at a 42% decline in our expected revenue. This cost is equivalent to losing nearly half of our annual growth target, not from market forces or competitive pressure, but from internal attrition.
The hidden mechanics: 4 pathways from employee experience to revenue
After finding the challenges, I focused on understanding its structure, not just that employee experience mattered, but also how EX impacted each part of the business.
What I discovered wasn’t a simple cause-and-effect relationship. It was an interconnected system in which employee experience served as the underlying operating system for every revenue-generating function.
In my discovery, I found four distinct pathways, each either accelerating growth or quietly reducing it.
Pathway 1: Retention = institutional knowledge = execution velocity
When an employee leaves, they are not just walking out the door but taking their skills and your company’s accumulated intelligence.
I can relate to this fact, when our lead developer left, she didn’t just take her coding ability. She took:
- The unwritten knowledge of why certain architectural decisions were made a few months ago
- Relationships with the internal team who trusted her skills
- The shortcuts and workarounds that made our deployment process 40% faster
- The ability to look at a bug and immediately spot the integration issues that our documentation never covered
The revenue impact was surgical and devastating: New hires require 3-4 months to reach full productivity in any complex or executive roles, which means everything moves more slowly during that entire ramp period.
Deal cycles that took 60 days stretched to 90. Strategic decisions made in real time now needed additional review layers because the new person didn’t have the context to move with confidence.
We measured the delta: Employees with over two years of experience delivered 34% better customer retention and 28% more contracts than newer joinees. But the gap wasn’t just about skill, it was about trust velocity.
Experienced employees operated with well-established client trust and there was flawless cross-functional collaboration between them.
But now, with new employees, this had to be recreated from scratch.
What fundamentally changed my thinking: I had always budgeted for direct replacement costs, 14% for recruiting, the 15% for onboarding and training. What I never budgeted for was the invisible tax of having B-level productivity in A-level seats for 3-4 months while new hires ramped.
The main gap between what an experienced, old employee produces and what a new joiner (with 10% of product knowledge) produces was costing us 15–20% of potential output across affected teams.
Retention wasn’t an HR metric. It was a margin protection strategy.
Pathway 2: Engagement = innovation = competitive differentiation
The truth I took too long to accept is that “disengaged employees still do their jobs, but engaged employees improve their jobs.”
This difference is everywhere, especially in renovation, where small, regular improvements add up to a big competitive edge.
The innovation gap emerged in our product roadmap: I asked our development team to trace the origins of our new versions over the past two years.
The results were unexpected: 73% ideas originated from developers who felt psychologically safe enough to propose ideas outside their sprint commitments.
In a nutshell, most creative ideas didn’t come from structured sessions. They mainly came from casual internal chat where people felt confident that their ideas would be heard.
The remaining 27% came from leadership demands, customer problems, driven by urgency.
The customer-facing gap was the most painful: The support team had been highly proactive, often resolving issues before they arose. During the disengagement period, that proactive momentum dropped significantly, leading to growing misalignment among team members.
What fundamentally changed my thinking: Old me believed that a strong resume drove creation, but my experience taught me otherwise. My best hire was a self-taught developer who transformed our CI/CD pipelines not just through skills, but because she could experiment freely without waiting for approval.
Pathway 3: Disengagement = lost upsell opportunity = revenue left on the table
In my experience, this pathway has been one of the trickiest and, frankly, the one that took the longest to identify.
Disengaged employees don’t just underperform; they stop seeing opportunities altogether.
I’ll share one experience that I only fully understood later. One of our disengaged employees was running a renewal drip email campaign for a key customer. On the surface, everything looked fine: emails were going out on time, reminders were sent and the process was being followed. But the employee in question never went beyond the script and never asked about the client’s growth plans, changing needs, or future direction.
The breaking point came during a customer email when we lost one of our major customers, not through churn, but through a missed opportunity. They moved to a competitor offering a more comprehensive solution.
The real issue surfaced during the account exit discussion. One of their C-level leaders wrote something that made the gap painfully clear. He said:
“We would have upgraded to your ultimate control plan months ago if someone had consistently followed up or even asked about our growth plans. We assumed you weren’t interested in expanding with us because every interaction felt limited to renewal emails.”
We left significant revenue on the table, not due to product limitations. Because of our overwhelmed and disengaged team, which simply missed discussing or asking follow-up questions over emails and didn’t ask the right questions to surface the opportunity.
After this, we decided to track “missed expansion opportunities,” and the numbers were brutal:
- Customer success teams reported that a substantial portion of churned customers had expressed needs during support calls that our premium features could have addressed, but nobody connected those dots or escalated them as expansion opportunities
- In account reviews, we found multiple instances where customers were building workarounds or buying complementary tools from other vendors to solve problems our existing product could handle, but we just never offered them.
What fundamentally changed my thinking: I had always viewed the customer success team as a retention function that helps organizations keep customers happy, renew contracts and avoid customer churn. That separation was strategically flawed.
Retention without expansion is defensive. Expansion is how you turn customers into compounding revenue streams.
But expansion requires two things disengagement destroys:
- Deep product and customer knowledge (which walks out the door when experienced people leave)
- Proactive energy and investment (which evaporates when people are overwhelmed and checked out)
The new joiners can reach this point yet, as they are new to the product and still need a lot of knowledge to acknowledge clients’ needs.
As a result, expansion opportunities slowed and revenue from existing accounts remained untapped.
Pathway 4: Attrition = talent scarcity = higher acquisition costs
When experienced employees leave, you don’t just lose their output; you reset the talent bar for every future hire.
When we lost senior engineers and account managers, we didn’t just need “replacements,” we needed people with specific technical expertise. People who deeply understand how product companies operate and have the ability to hit the ground running in complex environments.
The talent acquisition challenge compounded quickly: Our recruiters had to dig much deeper to find candidates who met our requirements. We needed engineers proficient in specific technology, familiar with our industry’s norms and experienced enough to navigate difficult problems without constant hand-holding.
The challenge: those candidates are rare, expensive and have multiple offers.
The margin erosion was measurable:
- Cost-per-hire increased dramatically as we competed for scarce specialized talent
- Time-to-fill stretched as we rejected underqualified candidates, leaving revenue-generating roles empty longer
- Recruiting resources shifted from growth hiring to backfilling attrition
The compounding effect: Poor retention → higher talent requirements → longer searches → more expensive offers → pressure to lower standards → weaker hires → worse outcomes → more attrition → repeat.
What fundamentally changed my thinking: Retention isn’t an HR metric. It’s a talent acquisition cost-avoidance strategy. Every senior employee who stays is one fewer impossible-to-fill role your recruiters have to source in a competitive market.
The multiplier effect: Why small drops create cascading failures
What blindsided me was that these four pathways don’t operate independently. In fact, they amplify and accelerate each other.
When one senior engineer left, the damage didn’t stop:
- The replacement took 4 months to reach full productivity (Pathway 1: Retention = institutional knowledge = execution velocity)
- During that 3-4 month gap, the team experienced a 17% slowdown in development because we lost institutional knowledge and had to onboard a new person (Pathway 2: Innovation).
- Two customers cited concerns about account management in exit surveys because the new account manager couldn’t identify upsell opportunities the way the experienced manager had (Pathway 3: Disengagement = lost upsell opportunity)
- Three other team members saw the lack of backfill support, felt the increased workload and started interviewing elsewhere—making the already-difficult talent search even harder (Pathway 4: Attrition = talent scarcity = higher acquisition costs)
One departure accounted for 70% of the measurable cascading impact across all four pathways.
But here’s the insight that changed everything: Employee experience isn’t linear; it’s exponential.
- One toxic manager can infect three teams in a single quarter
- One great manager can elevate an entire division in six months
- One highly visible departure can trigger a race if people interpret it as “the best people are leaving.”
- One highly visible retention (turning down a competitor’s offer) can stabilize a nervous team
Employee Experience isn’t overhead. It’s a revenue multiplier with a 4-5 month lag, and most leaders never measure it until the damage is irreversible.
The results: What changed
Four months after we committed to treating employee experience as a revenue strategy, the data told a story that even the most skeptical members of our leadership team couldn’t dismiss.
But the journey wasn’t a smooth upward curve; it was messy, nonlinear and full of surprises.
The quantified outcomes: What the metrics actually showed
Here’s what changed across our core employee experience and business metrics:
Employee-side metrics:
- Voluntary turnover dropped from 18% to 9%, cutting our attrition rate in half
- Internal mobility doubled from 22% to 41%, meaning we were filling nearly half of open roles with internal candidates who already understood our culture and systems
- Time-to-productivity for new hires decreased from 5 months to 3 months, and people were ramping 32% faster because they had better onboarding and more engaged teams supporting them
Business-side metrics (the ones that actually matter to the board):
- Enterprise sales close rate recovered from 26% back to 33% (nearly returning to our pre-crisis levels).
- Average contract value increased by 19% (engaged customer success leads were upselling and expanding accounts instead of just managing renewals).
- Customer churn dropped from 8.2% to 5.1% (a direct result of more consistent, invested customer service).
Financial impact: The combined effect of reduced attrition, faster ramp times, improved sales performance and lower customer churn translated into an approximately 42% increase in the annual revenue run rate over 6 months.
What I wish I’d known going in
If I could go back to the beginning of this transformation, here’s what I’d tell myself:
- The first two months will test your commitment. Metrics will get worse as you expose hidden problems. Don’t panic. Don’t retreat. Trust the process.
- You’ll lose some people, and that’s okay. Some managers won’t adapt. Some employees thrived in the old dysfunction. Letting them go is part of the healing.
- The ROI is real, but it’s not immediate. Build a coalition of believers on your leadership team and board who understand that this is a 4-5-month investment, not a quick fix.
- Employees are watching for consistency, not perfection. You’ll make mistakes. What matters is whether you acknowledge them, adjust and keep moving forward.
- The moment you treat employee experience as optional, it becomes worthless. This only works if it’s a non-negotiable strategic priority, measured and managed like revenue.
Conclusion: Employee experience as infrastructure, not initiative
Doug Conant was right: to win in the marketplace, you must first win in the workplace. But I’d added a critical line to this: “your employees are your first customers and they’re either selling for you or quietly selling against you.”
Eighteen months into this transformation, employee experience moved from an HR metric to a core business driver in my organization. Leadership conversations, performance metrics and strategic decisions now reflect its impact. In a talent-driven environment, this shift created an advantage that competitors cannot easily replicate because culture requires sustained commitment, not just investment.
Neglect carries a real cost. Disengagement, attrition and broken trust compound quietly before showing up in revenue, customer relationships and execution speed.
A clear conclusion emerged from this journey. Investing in employee experience strengthens the business’s foundation, while ignoring it guarantees a far more expensive rebuild later.
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