Traditional employee engagement surveys offer useful snapshots, but they often miss the nuance and real-time insight needed to shape meaningful change. As workplaces evolve, HR teams and department leaders must find new, more dynamic ways to ensure unheard voices become central to decision-making. That means building intentional listening systems that foster trust, psychological safety and ongoing dialogue—not just periodic feedback.
Below, Forbes Human Resource Council members share innovative strategies for moving beyond surveys and creating channels where employees feel seen, heard and empowered to influence the future of work.
1. Identifying Trusted Influencers And Expanding Leadership Access
I use two effective strategies. The first is identifying influential employees in each department, regardless of hierarchy—these highly trusted peers provide candid insights that strengthen decisions and drive adoption. The second is creating effective access to leaders, formally through forums like “Breakfast with the CEO” and informally through an authentic, open-door policy by line managers to ensure everyone is heard. – Helal Hamdanieh, EY
2. Embedding Diverse Employee Voices In Leadership Forums
Invite new and diverse voices into the room by design, and not by exception. Create employee representation seats on leadership forums—rotating, frontline roles with real agenda-setting power—so decisions are shaped where the work actually happens. Pair this with small ongoing listening circles and shadowing, not one-off feedback exercises, to surface lived experiences in real time. – Anthony Cheong, Boston Consulting Group
3. Establishing A Diversity Representation Board
A new way of listening to employees could be through establishing a diversity representation board. Allow them to be a source of information for management and a source of support for employees like them. This board can convey and make recommendations to management in a collective way to ensure all employees are heard—and feel a sense of belonging they deserve. – Tiersa Smith-Hall, Impactful Imprints, Training & Consulting
4. Combining Shared-Experience Groups With Real-Time Feedback Tools
While surveys are a good tool, there is always a challenge of adoption and participation. Listening must be proactive and reactive. We’ve seen great insights from groups built around shared experiences, not labels. Pair anonymous digital channels and real-time feedback with programs like “mood-meters” and “one-question-a-day”—less noisy ways to truly hear employees. When employees see impact, trust grows. – Smiti Bhatt Deorah, AdvantageClub.ai
5. Create Rotating Employee Advisory Groups
Move beyond surveys by creating rotating employee advisory groups that meet directly with leaders to unpack challenges and test decisions before they’re finalized. When people have the chance to talk openly in real time, unheard voices become validated and strengthened collectively. Act on what you hear, and employees will see their input shaping real outcomes. – Kathy George, Spherion Staffing and Recruiting
6. Including Quietly Insightful Contributors In Ongoing Assessments
As part of an ongoing brand health assessment, regular one-on-one or small-group check-ins help ensure brand promises are being lived out inside and outside the company. As they perform these assessments, HR and marketing can work with department leaders to identify and include “quietly insightful” contributors to get the fullest picture. – Jill Shedek, Bank Iowa
7. Leveraging Peer Recognition As A Listening Signal
Employee recognition is an invaluable form of peer-validated feedback. It’s impossible for managers to see everything their people do to make a difference in the lives of customers and colleagues. Employee recognition that is personal, specific and impact-oriented sends a signal to employees and to the entire organization about what’s worth repeating and the gap between good and great. – David Bator, Achievers
8. Using Energy Checks To Surface Hidden Friction
Listening must move beyond periodic surveys to everyday signals. One powerful approach is “energy checks”—leaders routinely asking teams what is energizing or draining them in their work. Over time, these patterns reveal hidden friction, workload imbalances and leadership blind spots. Energy often signals organizational health earliest, turning employee voice into insight for better decisions. – Bernie Yong, Averis
9. Implementing Reverse Mentoring And Employee Councils
Create “reverse mentoring” programs where junior and underrepresented employees advise senior leaders. Establish rotating employee councils with decision-making authority on key issues. Host listening sessions in small groups where leaders only ask questions, not defend. Use anonymous idea platforms with transparent follow-up. Make skip-level conversations routine, not rare. – Jonathan Westover, Human Capital Innovations
10. Replacing Surveys With Structured Employee Panels
Replace surveys with structured employee panels. Invite frontline team members to respond to pre-shared questions from senior leaders in a facilitated forum. Preparation builds confidence; structure builds trust. When listening is intentional, voices move from anecdotal to influential. – Nicole Brown, Ask Nikki HR
11. Formalizing Informal Listening Loops And Theme Tracking
There are multiple ways to listen to employee voices beyond surveys, such as one-on-one check-ins, team chats, focus group summaries and informal listening loops that can provide valuable insights. It’s not always about finding new ways to listen, but using the channels you have now to identify and document themes, share insights across teams and ultimately as an input into decision-making. – Jennifer Rozon, McLean & Company
12. Embedding Employees Directly In Decision-Making Processes
The real shift is moving from collecting feedback to embedding employees in decision-making. Rotating advisory groups tied to real business issues, leader-led listening sessions and visible follow-through signal that voice equals influence—not just input. – Michelle Mahaffey, Community Health Network
13. Embedding Micro-Forums Into Daily Work
Create real-time listening by embedding “micro‑forums” into daily work: small, facilitated spaces where employees speak directly to decision‑makers without hierarchy. Paired with skip‑level dialogues and anonymized voice channels, these touchpoints surface unheard perspectives long before surveys ever do. – Britton Bloch, Navy Federal
14. Prioritizing Inverted Feedback Loops And Cross-Functional Circles
To modernize employee listening, HR teams should transition from static surveys to inverted feedback loops that prioritize the insights of those closest to the daily work. By replacing top-down town halls with small, cross-functional listening circles, leaders engage in active dialogue that uncovers specific friction points and innovations often hidden from high-level data for better decisions. – Sherry Martin
15. Integrating One-To-One Dialogue And Inclusive Data Practices
One-to-one or monthly meetings challenge leadership resistance to establishing effective listening systems that integrate employee voice into decision-making. Transitioning from surveys to shared platforms elevates previously unheard voices to a key role in organizational strategy and culture. Employing demographic HR data to ensure the inclusion of historically underrepresented groups is essential. – Dr. Nara Ringrose, Cyclife UK Limited
16. Building Continuous Dialogue Through Reverse Town Halls
Move from periodic surveys to continuous dialogue. Build structured listening forums, small group roundtables and reverse town halls where leaders listen more than they speak. Create safe, facilitated spaces where frontline and underrepresented voices shape real decisions. When feedback loops are visible and acted on, listening becomes power, not performance. – Nicole Cable, Blue Zones Health
17. Capturing Real-Time Feedback Through The Work Itself
An impactful new way to listen is through the work itself, not by launching another questionnaire. HR teams can create simple moments where employees react to real decisions, workflows or changes as they are happening. When feedback is grounded in lived experiences, quieter voices naturally emerge. Listening becomes impactful once people see what they say reflected in the decisions that follow. – Dr. Timothy J. Giardino, myWorkforceAgents.ai
18. Establishing A ‘Shadow Board’ For Inclusive Governance
Replace surveys with a “Shadow Board”: a diverse group of non-executives who review the same strategic data as the C-suite. Why? It injects fresh perspectives into high-stakes decisions and identifies blind spots leaders miss. By giving them the “Board Deck” to review and provide formal inputs, you move from passive sentiment to active, inclusive governance that improves decision quality. – Sonia Vora
19. Building Organization-Wide Mentoring As A Listening Strategy
Build mentoring as a formal, organization-wide listening system and strategy. When leaders engage regularly across roles, geographies and hierarchy—including reverse mentorship—they hear unfiltered perspectives that surveys miss. Those direct relationships surface overlooked ideas and issues and bring previously unheard voices into real decision-making. – David Satterwhite
20. Launching Monthly ‘Listening Labs’ With Visible Follow-Through
Build monthly “Listening Labs,” rotating small-group sessions run by trained peer facilitators, with leaders only as observers. Capture themes in a public backlog, vote on priorities in real time and assign an executive sponsor and a deadline for each action. Close the loop within 30 days and report back. Empowering people to come together, share and problem-solve is the most powerful and impactful aspect. – Sheena Minhas, ST Microelectronics



















