Higher levels of wellbeing generally predict higher firm valuations, higher return on assets, higher gross profits.[1]
De Neve, J-E., Kaats, M., Ward, G. (2024). Workplace Wellbeing and Firm Performance. University of Oxford Wellbeing Research Centre
Data from 1.9 million employees, across 230 organisations, in 49 industries and 73 countries found that higher employee wellbeing was consistently associated with higher productivity and firm performance. [2]
Krekel, C., Ward, G. & De Neve, J-E. (2019) Employee Wellbeing, Productivity and Firm Performance. Centre for Economic Performance.
Enhanced employee health and well-being could generate up to $11.7 trillion in global economic value. [3]
McKinsey Health Institute (2025). Thriving workplaces: How employers can improve productivity and change lives.
Improving workplace wellbeing in the UK represents a £130-£370 billion opportunity, made up of the direct costs of poor wellbeing through employee turnover (£12-36bn) and absenteeism (£4bn) and the potential benefits of good wellbeing through reduced presenteeism and improved productivity (£85-288bn), retention (£15-24bn) and attraction (£13bn). [4]
Business in the Community (2023). Prioritise People: Unlock the value of a thriving workforce
Higher return on investment can be achieved by early interventions, such as organisation-wide culture change and education.[5]
Deloitte (2024). Mental health and employers, The case for employers to invest in supporting working parents and a mentally healthy workplace.
Individual level interventions such wellbeing apps or one-off sessions are not shown to provide benefits unless linked to preventative, structural change. [6]
Fleming (2024). Estimating effects of individual-level workplace mental wellbeing interventions: Cross-sectional evidence from the UK
Our own Robertson Cooper Good Day at Work 2025 research report[7], using cross-sectional data from over 70,000 workers, found that employees reporting the highest levels of wellbeing (top 20%) also experienced significantly better business outcomes compare to those with lowest levels of wellbeing (bottom 20%):
- 52% higher productivity
- 6.5x higher advocacy
- 6x lower intention to leave
- 33% lower presenteeism
- 50% lower sickness absence