Connect with us

Organizational Culture

Why More Employees Are Asking for Values Over Perks

Published

on

Why More Employees Are Asking for Values Over Perks

Forget free snacks and ping-pong tables. In 2025, employees are asking bigger questions—about purpose, belonging, and whether their company stands for something that matters.

The shift isn’t subtle. Across industries, professionals—especially Gen Z and Millennials—are seeking workplaces that reflect their personal values. And when those values don’t align? They’re walking.

According to a recent Glassdoor study, 70% of job seekers said they would not work at a company if its values didn’t align with their own. And it’s not just talk—this year alone, we’ve seen multiple high-profile exits tied to employee pushback around company ethics, leadership decisions, and internal culture.

What’s Fueling the Shift?

It’s the cumulative effect of the last few years.

  • The pandemic made people reassess what truly matters.

  • Social and political unrest pushed conversations about equity and justice into the workplace.

  • And now, with economic uncertainty still looming, employees are placing even more weight on trust, transparency, and company integrity.

In short: people want to feel like the time they’re investing at work is part of something meaningful—and aligned with who they are.

Culture Is Showing Up in the Details

More companies are starting to get the message. Not by issuing new mission statements, but by embedding values into how they operate.

  • Team check-ins that prioritize psychological safety

  • Hiring practices that go beyond credentials and focus on fit and purpose

  • Managers being trained not just on performance metrics, but emotional intelligence and inclusive leadership

Still, there’s a gap. For some organizations, culture is still seen as an HR initiative. For others, it’s quietly evolving into their most valuable differentiator.

What Employees Really Want

Here’s what’s rising to the top of the culture wish list:

  • Clarity. What does the company stand for, and how does it show up in real decisions?

  • Consistency. Are the values talked about during onboarding still present a year in?

  • Courage. Does leadership listen and act when something’s not working?

  • Community. Do people feel seen, safe, and part of something beyond their to-do list?

Companies that can answer “yes” to those questions aren’t just surviving the talent shift—they’re thriving.


Final Thought:
Culture isn’t built in all-hands meetings or company slogans. It’s built in everyday decisions, honest conversations, and the quiet moments where employees feel valued—or don’t. And in 2025, the organizations that will lead are the ones that understand this: people aren’t asking for more perks. They’re asking for more purpose.

Stay with WORxK Global News for more on the future of work, leadership, and culture-driven strategy.

Advertisement

Our Newsletter

Subscribe Us To Receive Our Latest News Directly In Your Inbox!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

Trending