Fix Culture or Lose Talent
There's a contradiction at the heart of how executives are running their companies right now — and most of them don't seem to see it.
According to a 2026 survey of more than 4,600 global executives, talent retention sits at the top of internal priorities this year, with employee wellbeing close behind. Dead last on that same list? Company culture. The very thing that drives both.
It's a bit like obsessing over a fever while ignoring the infection causing it.
The reason this blind spot persists isn't stupidity — it's measurement. Retention comes with hard numbers: turnover rates, exit interviews, and salary benchmarks. Culture doesn't show up in a quarterly report until it's already broken. So leaders pour energy into wellness perks and retention bonuses while, as one consultant put it, "the underlying soil stays dry."
But culture isn't a soft concept or an HR initiative. It's the operating system everything else runs on. It shapes how expectations get set, how feedback flows, how conflict gets handled — and whether people feel seen or expendable on an ordinary Tuesday. You can't fix retention without addressing that system first. You're just treating symptoms.
The executives who understand this don't talk about culture in the abstract. They make it visible. They measure it — through recognition data, network analysis, behavioral patterns — and they connect those signals to outcomes leadership already cares about: engagement, productivity, profit. One bank CEO cited 4% annual turnover and a workforce a third the size of comparable institutions. The differentiator, he argues, isn't compensation. It's a culture that compounds over decades.
The harder truth is that none of this can be delegated. Real culture is built — or eroded — in the small moments: how a leader responds to bad news, whether the reward system matches the stated values, whether people feel safe enough to flag a problem before it becomes a crisis. As one leadership consultant put it, by the time someone hands in their resignation, the decision was made a year earlier.
Retention is a lagging metric. Culture is the leading one. Leaders who treat them as separate problems will keep solving the wrong one.
