Close Menu
Gossips Today
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Healthcare
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Business
  • Recipes
What's Hot

Fired CDC director says RFK Jr. aims to change childhood vaccine schedule

Why You Should Never Use the Kettle in Your Hotel Room, According to Travelers

How deeply will the Fed cut rates in the rest of 2025? Here’s what economists are expecting

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Wednesday, September 17
Gossips Today
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Tech & Innovation

    Groww, backed by Satya Nadella, set to become first Indian startup to go public after U.S.-to-India move

    September 17, 2025

    Rivian breaks ground on $5B Georgia factory ahead of construction in 2026

    September 16, 2025

    Nothing closes $200M Series C led by Tiger Global, plans AI-first device launch

    September 16, 2025

    Apple’s iOS 26 with the new Liquid Glass design is now available to everyone

    September 15, 2025

    Vibe coding has turned senior devs into ‘AI babysitters,’ but they say it’s worth it

    September 15, 2025
  • Healthcare

    Fired CDC director says RFK Jr. aims to change childhood vaccine schedule

    September 17, 2025

    Doctors slam specialty cuts in 2026 Medicare pay proposal

    September 17, 2025

    More than half of healthcare workers are considering taking new jobs next year: survey

    September 16, 2025

    The best AI models for behavioral health will ultimately be owned by health plans, not vendors

    September 16, 2025

    A key CDC panel meets this week to discuss vaccines. Here’s what to know.

    September 15, 2025
  • Personal Finance

    How to Stop Living Paycheck to Paycheck

    September 10, 2025

    Real Estate Report 2024 – Ramsey

    September 9, 2025

    How Much Car Can I Afford?

    September 9, 2025

    21 Cheap Beach Vacations for 2025

    August 5, 2025

    Car Depreciation: How Much Is Your Car Worth?

    August 4, 2025
  • Lifestyle

    Why Some Linen Sucks

    September 4, 2025

    We Dug Through the Labor Day Sales So You Don’t Have To

    September 3, 2025

    What Terms on Alcohol Labels Really Mean: The Words You Trust and the Tricks You Miss

    August 28, 2025

    18 Higher-Quality Sale Finds at Lower Prices from Todd Snyder, Madewell, and L.L. Bean

    August 24, 2025

    The Late Summer Weekend Uniform That Works Inside and Out

    August 22, 2025
  • Travel

    Why You Should Never Use the Kettle in Your Hotel Room, According to Travelers

    September 17, 2025

    Utah’s Largest Resort Just Opened in Greater Zion With 7 Bars and Restaurants—Here's a First Look Inside

    September 17, 2025

    7 Charming U.S. Small Towns That Are Perfect for a Fall Getaway

    September 16, 2025

    This Luxe New Spa in Canada's Banff National Park Lets You Soak in Glacier-fed Waters With Views of Lake Louise

    September 16, 2025

    American Express Just Made It Easier to Plan and Book Trips With Its New Travel App

    September 15, 2025
  • Business

    How deeply will the Fed cut rates in the rest of 2025? Here’s what economists are expecting

    September 17, 2025

    Oracle, Andreessen Horowitz consortium will control 80% of TikTok in U.S.: Report

    September 17, 2025

    Markets rally as the Fed meets to decide on what could be 2025’s first interest rate cut

    September 16, 2025

    Corporate social impact is experiencing a market correction

    September 16, 2025

    The Federal Reserve faces these 3 unknowns ahead of its September meeting

    September 15, 2025
  • Recipes

    cabbage and halloumi skewers

    September 10, 2025

    double chocolate zucchini bread

    August 21, 2025

    grilled chicken salad with cilantro-lime dressing

    August 7, 2025

    chipwich ice cream cake

    July 26, 2025

    focaccia with zucchini and potatoes

    July 12, 2025
Gossips Today
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Healthcare
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Business
  • Recipes
Business & Entrepreneurship

How leaders can change the ‘mattering deficit’ at work

gossipstodayBy gossipstodayJune 21, 2025No Comments9 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
How leaders can change the ‘mattering deficit’ at work
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Zach Mercurio is a researcher who specializes in purposeful leadership, mattering, meaningful work, and positive organizational psychology. He works with hundreds of organizations worldwide, and some of his clients include the U.S. Army, USA Wrestling, J.P. Morgan, Delta Air Lines, Marriott International, the government of Canada, and the National Park Service. He also serves as one of motivational speaker, author, and business consultant Simon Sinek’s “optimist instructors.”

What’s the big idea?

When we think about what makes an impressive leader, we often color it in terms like inspiring, courageous, or even heroic. But research shows that, when asked about great leaders in their own lives, people don’t talk about grand actions or noble qualities. More likely than not, people point out small interactions—moments—when a leader helped them feel seen or heard, illuminated gifts they didn’t know they had, or provided affirmation. Psychologists call this sense of significance mattering, and the best leaders have trained in and practice the skill of showing people their value.

Below, Zach shares five key insights from his new book, The Power of Mattering: How Leaders Can Create a Culture of Significance. Listen to the audio version—read by Zach himself—in the Next Big Idea App.

1. We’re facing a mattering deficit.

Let me take you back 10 years to a hospital room. I was meeting my newborn son. I remember looking down at this tiny crying human, and he tilted his head, locked eyes with mine, and reached his arms out frantically. When I reached back, he gripped my index finger and wouldn’t let go. His crying stopped, and his whole body calmed.

I was experiencing 6 million years of fine-tuned programming. Scientists call that grip I felt the “grasp reflex”—an automatic action we take to secure our first caring relationship. From your first breath, survival depended on mattering to someone. None of us would be listening to or reading this if, at some point, we hadn’t mattered enough to someone so they’d keep us alive.

As we grow up and go to work, the survival instinct to matter evolves into the psychological need to feel seen, heard, valued, and needed. When this need is met, we experience mattering. Mattering is distinct from belonging or inclusion. Belonging is feeling part of and connected to a group. Inclusion is being able to contribute to a group. Mattering is knowing you’re significant to individual members of that group.

When we experience mattering, we flourish. We’re more motivated and grittier and experience greater well-being. But when we feel that we don’t matter, we languish and either act out in desperation or withdraw.

Imagine the absolute panic of a child reaching out and finding no one. In a way, that’s what’s happening today. Too many of us are experiencing the same stress of feeling insignificant. In January 2025, Gallup reported that employee engagement is at a 10-year low. If we were an organization, seven out of 10 of us would be emotionally uninvested in our work. That’s despite services to improve engagement becoming a $1 billion industry.

“The average adult sends 30 to 40 text-based messages daily and spends more time in meetings than ever—yet we’re still lonely.”

So, what’s going on? Two data points stand out: Just four out of every 10 employees in the Gallup sample group felt that someone at work cares about them as a person, and only 30% believe their potential is invested in. Last year, a different poll showed that 30% of people felt invisible at work, and repeated surveys reveal that six out of 10 people feel underappreciated.

We’re not facing a disengagement crisis. We’re facing a mattering deficit. The most glaring symptom of this deficit is loneliness. The advice to solve this has been to connect more. The result has been that we’re in more meetings and on more platforms. The average adult sends 30 to 40 text-based messages daily and spends more time in meetings than ever—yet we’re still lonely.

Research shows that the quantity of interactions doesn’t matter much when it comes to reducing loneliness. The quality does. To have a quality interaction, people need to experience what researchers call companionate love—receiving the interpersonal behaviors of attention, respect, and affirmation.

The opposite of loneliness isn’t having more people around you; it’s feeling like you matter to the people around you. That’s why just putting down our phones won’t reduce disconnection; what we do after we put down our phones will. The solution isn’t to connect more; it’s to relearn the skills to connect better by showing people they matter to us.

2. Mattering happens in moments.

Think about when you most feel that you matter to others. How many of you are thinking about getting your direct deposit, or when you won Employee of the Month? If you’re like most people we posed this question to, you’re thinking about small interactions. Mattering happens in moments.

Jane is a custodian at the university where I do research. She was part of a study we did on how frontline service workers experience meaning. She told me she only took the job because she was nearly homeless and needed to put food on the table. Her friends kept telling her cleaning was a “dirty job,” and she started internalizing that. She told me that during her first month, she would clock in, clock out, and continually think: Why couldn’t I have done something more with my life? She said, “I felt useless and worthless.”

But then, she described to me how a couple of minutes changed everything. A supervisor noticed she was struggling. He invited her into a training room, handed her a dictionary, and asked her to read the definition of custodian: “A person responsible for looking after a building and everyone in it.”

“That’s you,” he told her.

She looked at me and said, “That was the first time in my life someone made me feel worthy and important.” Realizing she was responsible for a building and its people changed her beliefs about herself and her job. She’s been there for 18 years. That’s the power of a moment of mattering. The best leaders tend to turn regular interactions into moments of mattering.

3. There’s a difference between knowing someone and noticing them.

There’s a difference between knowing someone and noticing them. You can know your best friend but not notice that they’re struggling. You can know a team member but not notice that they feel unheard. Jane’s supervisor noticed she was struggling and took action.

Noticing is the deliberate act of paying attention to the details, ebbs, and flows of others’ lives and offering an action to show them we’re thinking of them. Noticing takes time, attention, and practice.

“You can know a team member but not notice that they feel unheard.”

In one distribution center where I worked, there were 20 teams that all scored low on employee engagement surveys, with one extreme outlier that consistently showed high engagement. When I met with that team, they all told me some version of: “It’s our supervisor. She just gets us. We’d do anything for her.” So, I asked her what she did. She pulled out a black Moleskine notebook. Every Friday, she wrote down one thing she noticed about each team member—nerves about a meeting, a struggle on a task, a child starting a new sport. Then on Monday, she reviewed her notes and scheduled micro-check-ins, starting with, “I remember last week. …” She said to me, “You know, Zach, there’s magic in being remembered.”

We’ve come to call it her “noticing notebook.” She also asked her team two questions every week: “What would you do if you were me?” and “What are you struggling with, and how can I help?”

Leaders who are great noticers tend to do these three things:

They have a process and practice for observing the details of people’s work and lives.

They note those details, which is a powerful way to retrain our attention.

They share back what they observed.

Noticing others creates understanding and understanding creates trust.

4. Affirmation can be more powerful than appreciation or recognition.

When Jane’s supervisor defined custodian, he provided her with indisputable evidence of her significance. That’s what makes affirmation different and more powerful than appreciation or recognition. Appreciation is a form of gratitude for who someone is. Recognition is a form of gratitude for what someone does. Affirmation reveals how someone’s uniqueness makes a unique difference.

One way to affirm someone is to give more meaningful gratitude. Any time you say, “Thank you” or “Good job,” go one step further and show people the difference they make and exactly how they make it.

First, name people’s unique gifts. Everyone offers us four unique gifts every day:

Strengths: what they love and they’re good at
Purpose: the impact they make
Perspective: how they see the world
Wisdom: what only they can teach us from living their life

Second, show them vividly the unique impact they make. For example, a facilities manager I worked with at the National Park Service would take photos of park visitors using projects his team worked on. He had a process of emailing them every Friday and attaching the pictures. He simply wrote: Look what you did. Thank you.

He gave them indisputable evidence of their significance.

5. When people feel replaceable, they will act replaceable.

To feel that we matter, we must feel needed. In 1913, the French agricultural engineer Max Ringelmann had groups of students pull on a rope as hard as possible. The rope was attached to a device called a dynamometer to measure force. Then, he had the same students pull the rope as hard as they could as individuals. He added up the force readings. Who do you think exerted the most total force: groups or individuals? It was the individuals. Why? Because they knew they and their effort were indispensable.

“To feel that we matter, we must feel needed.”

When people feel replaceable, they act replaceable. But when people feel irreplaceable, they tend to act irreplaceable. When I interviewed people and asked them when they most felt that they mattered, people frequently mentioned some version of these five words being said to them: “If it wasn’t for you …”

Think of someone you rely on. Now think of the last time you’ve told them, “If it wasn’t for you …” If you say these words to them, you’ll see and feel the power of mattering, and you’ll be putting into practice a skill that sets great leaders apart from the rest: showing people how they matter.

This article originally appeared in Next Big Idea Club magazine and is reprinted with permission.

change deficit leaders mattering work
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleRippling spy says men have been following him, and his wife is afraid
Next Article Nurses, Podiatrists, and Travelers Love These Comfy Sneakers That Are ‘Just as Good’ as Brooks—and They’re $50
admin
gossipstoday
  • Website

Related Posts

Fired CDC director says RFK Jr. aims to change childhood vaccine schedule

September 17, 2025

How deeply will the Fed cut rates in the rest of 2025? Here’s what economists are expecting

September 17, 2025

Oracle, Andreessen Horowitz consortium will control 80% of TikTok in U.S.: Report

September 17, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Trending Now

Fired CDC director says RFK Jr. aims to change childhood vaccine schedule

Why You Should Never Use the Kettle in Your Hotel Room, According to Travelers

How deeply will the Fed cut rates in the rest of 2025? Here’s what economists are expecting

Groww, backed by Satya Nadella, set to become first Indian startup to go public after U.S.-to-India move

Latest Posts

Fired CDC director says RFK Jr. aims to change childhood vaccine schedule

September 17, 2025

Why You Should Never Use the Kettle in Your Hotel Room, According to Travelers

September 17, 2025

How deeply will the Fed cut rates in the rest of 2025? Here’s what economists are expecting

September 17, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated with the latest news and exclusive offers.

Advertisement
Demo
Black And Beige Minimalist Elegant Cosmetics Logo (4) (1)
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

Categories

  • Tech & Innovation
  • Health & Wellness
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle & Productivity

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us

Services

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Subscribe to Updates

© 2025 Gossips Today. All Right Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.