265. Miserable Employees
At The Table with Patrick Lencioni
Patrick Lencioni
4.8 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 31 March 2026
⏱️ 30 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
How would your team’s culture shift if you started catching people doing their jobs well and celebrating those moments publicly?
In episode 265 of At The Table, Pat Lencioni and Cody Thompson revisit Pat’s book The Truth About Employee Engagement, arguing its lessons are crucial now. They unpack the three root causes of employee misery - anonymity, irrelevance, and immeasurement - and show how any manager can improve work experience by addressing these human needs. Through stories and takeaways, they emphasize that making employees feel known, valued, and empowered to measure success requires only intentional, consistent attention.
Topics explored in this episode:
(00:06:46) Why the Solution Works Everywhere
- Cody reflects on how remarkable it is that the book’s solution applies equally to an airport fast-food worker and a Fortune 100 executive.
- Pat introduces the first sign of a miserable job, anonymity, explaining that employees who feel unseen and unknown by their managers simply cannot love coming to work, no matter how much they earn.
(00:12:25) Retention, Counterculture & Practical Advice
- Pat and Cody discuss how knowing employees personally is a powerful and often overlooked retention strategy, noting that people rarely leave workplaces where they feel genuinely cared for as human beings.
- Why leaders should be vulnerable, admit the lapse openly, and invite employees to “catch you up” on their lives, then share what’s going on in your own.
(00:16:42) Why Every Job Must Matter to Someone
- Pat introduces the second sign of a miserable job, irrelevance, and illustrates it vividly by describing how a manager at the airport restaurant could tell that young employee his real purpose: to introduce a moment of joy and kindness into otherwise stressed travelers’ days.
- Cody and Pat agree that the manager’s responsibility is not only to articulate why a job matters, but to actively “catch” employees making a difference and celebrate those moments, because what gets celebrated gets repeated.
(00:23:25) Immeasurement, the One-Minute Manager Demo & Closing
- Pat introduces the third sign, immeasurement, arguing that every employee needs a way to assess their own performance that doesn’t depend solely on a manager’s subjective opinion.
- Pat is challenging listeners to immediately improve in one area of knowing their people, reminding them why their work matters, and helping them measure their success.
This episode of At The Table with Patrick Lencioni is brought to you by The Table Group: https://www.tablegroup.com. We teach leaders how to make work more effective and less dysfunctional. We also help their employees be more fulfilled and less miserable.
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At The Table with Patrick Lencioni
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This episode was produced by Story On Media: https://www.storyon.co.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Human beings want to be known and seen by their leaders. |
| 0:04.0 | If people feel like they're anonymous at work, there is no way they're going to love going to work. People don't want to leave a job where they feel like they matter to other people, like that they're known. So when companies are like, gosh, we lose our good employees, what should we do? It's like, how about taking an interest in them as a human being? human being. And the truth is the world is full of really successful companies. |
| 0:22.4 | And people wonder, why are they so successful? |
| 0:24.3 | And a big part of it is because people go to work and they actually feel like somebody cares |
| 0:28.0 | about who they are. |
| 0:29.9 | Welcome to At the Table, the podcast that lives at the intersection of teamwork, leadership, |
| 0:34.4 | culture, and organizational health. |
| 0:36.3 | I'm your host, Pat Lanchone, joined by my regular co-host Cody Thompson. |
| 0:40.3 | How you doing, Cody? |
| 0:41.3 | Doing great, Pat. |
| 0:43.3 | You just gave me some counsel, let's make these people's day as if we have, |
| 0:47.3 | as if that's our, within our realm of possibilities. |
| 0:51.3 | That was sarcastic. |
| 0:53.3 | Maybe we'll make somebody's day. Yeah. Realm of Possibilities. That was sarcastic. |
| 0:56.8 | Maybe we'll make somebody's day. |
| 0:57.4 | Yeah. |
| 0:59.6 | In fact, maybe we'll make an employee's day. |
| 1:01.0 | What's the title of today's podcast? |
| 1:02.3 | Miserable employees. |
| 1:03.1 | That's right. |
| 1:06.1 | Does that mean employees are miserable when you're a manager? |
| 1:08.5 | No, it means sometimes our employees do feel miserable. And what we're going to talk about today is a book of mine |
... |
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