Want Employees to Speak Up? Show Them What the Team Stands to Lose
🔑 The Bottom Line
- Employees are significantly more likely to raise concerns when workplace problems are framed around potential losses—not potential gains.
- The strongest motivation comes when those losses are presented as shared risks to the entire team, not just individual consequences.
- Across three real-world studies in healthcare, consulting, and auditing, supervisors rated employees as more vocal when managers used loss-framed language.
- Practical takeaway: Instead of saying, "Fixing this could improve morale," try: "If we ignore this, the whole team risks losing client trust."
The Silence Problem—And a Surprisingly Simple Solution
Most people who've worked a standard 9-to-5 know the hesitation: You see a problem, but speaking up feels risky. Will your manager dismiss you? Will colleagues label you difficult? Often, silence feels safer.
New research offers a straightforward way to break that silence—and it has nothing to do with changing company culture or personality training. It's about how you frame the problem.
When employees consider what the team stands to lose if an issue goes unaddressed—rather than what they might personally gain from a solution—they become far more willing to voice concerns. This finding challenges a common assumption in organizational psychology: that fear of personal repercussions is the primary barrier to speaking up. Instead, emphasizing shared losses appears to recalibrate how employees weigh risk and responsibility.
Published in the Journal of Applied Psychology, the study was led by Jeffrey P. Thomas and Jonathan E. Booth of the London School of Economics, with collaborators from Virginia Tech and the University of Oklahoma. Across three distinct workplace settings, loss-framed messaging consistently produced the strongest effect on employee voice—outperforming traditional "opportunity-focused" communication.
Why Losses Motivate More Than Gains: The Psychology
The research builds on prospect theory, the Nobel Prize-winning framework developed by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. Its core insight is simple but powerful: People feel the pain of losing something more intensely than the pleasure of gaining something of equal value. A $100 loss stings more than a $100 bonus delights.
Applied to workplace communication, this means:
- Speaking up is inherently risky—it can invite pushback, social friction, or career consequences.
- But when an employee focuses on what the team could lose by staying silent—revenue, reputation, operational stability—the mental calculus shifts.
- The weight of collective loss begins to outweigh the perceived personal risk of raising a concern.
Testing the Theory: From Lab to Real Workplaces
Study 1: The Power of Framing
Researchers asked 1,531 working adults to reflect on a real workplace challenge. Participants were randomly assigned to write about either:
- The losses that could result if the problem went unsolved, or
- The gains achievable by fixing it.
Result: Those focused on potential losses reported significantly greater willingness to speak up to a supervisor.
Study 2: Personal vs. Shared Stakes
In a follow-up with 516 working MBA students, participants reviewed a scenario about a manager named "Alex" receiving performance feedback. They were placed into one of four conditions:
- Personal gain (individual bonus)
- Personal loss (individual penalty)
- Collective gain (team-wide bonus)
- Collective loss (team-wide penalty)
The standout finding: Employees told their entire department stood to lose money if the problem persisted showed the highest willingness to speak up—surpassing all other groups, including those motivated by personal stakes.
Study 3: Real Organizations, Real Results
To test ecological validity, researchers collected matched employee-supervisor data from three U.S. firms: healthcare (n=127 pairs), consulting (n=275), and auditing (n=359).
Finding: Supervisors who framed challenges in terms of potential losses rated their direct reports as significantly more vocal. Gain-framed messaging showed weaker, inconsistent effects across all three settings.
Rethinking "Positive" Leadership
Many leadership philosophies emphasize optimism—framing challenges as opportunities for growth. While valuable in many contexts, this research suggests that when the goal is surfacing problems, upbeat framing may inadvertently mute valuable feedback.
Loss-framing isn't about fearmongering or negativity. It's about aligning communication with a deeply rooted human tendency: we fight harder to protect what we have than to acquire something new. When employees see that silence threatens something the team collectively values, they're more likely to act.
How Managers Can Apply This Tomorrow
You don't need a culture overhaul to use this insight. Try shifting your language in everyday conversations:
❌ Instead of:
"If we streamline this process, we could save time and boost morale."
"If we streamline this process, we could save time and boost morale."
✅ Try:
"If we don't address this bottleneck, the whole team risks missing deadlines and losing client confidence."
"If we don't address this bottleneck, the whole team risks missing deadlines and losing client confidence."
❌ Instead of:
"Adopting this tool might help us innovate."
"Adopting this tool might help us innovate."
✅ Try:
"Without this update, we risk falling behind competitors and losing market share."
"Without this update, we risk falling behind competitors and losing market share."
Key principles:
- Make losses concrete: Tie risks to tangible outcomes—revenue, reputation, workload, trust.
- Emphasize shared stakes: Use "we," "the team," or "the department"—not just "you."
- Stay credible: Frame losses realistically, not catastrophically. Authenticity matters.
Final Thought
In workplaces where silence can enable inefficiency, errors, or even crises, empowering employees to speak up isn't just nice to have—it's essential. This research offers a low-cost, high-impact tool: reframe the conversation around what's at risk, not just what's possible. Sometimes, the most motivating message isn't "Here's what we could gain"—it's "Here's what we can't afford to lose."
