Why proving the ROI of your employee recognition program matters

By Andrew Littlefield4 min. readJun 13, 2025

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Employee recognition makes work feel better. But when HR leaders are at the table with finance or ops leaders, “people feel good” doesn’t close the deal on budget for employee rec initiatives. When CFO’s are approving spend, it all comes down to a simple question: “So what?”

In tight markets, nice-to-have perks can find themselves on the chopping block. HR teams are under pressure to show how culture investments translate to measurable business outcomes.

The good news is there is a strong-base of research that supports financial returns for companies that invest in culture and recognition. The bad news is it can be hard to communicate this in a way that connects with executives and finance departments.

So how do you build a solid business case for recognition? You draw a clear line from metrics recognition can improve (like morale, retention, and engagement) to what execs will care about most (productivity and cost savings).

Measure the impact of recognition to defend the cost

Recognition programs need a clear link to business outcomes in order to prove their value.

“HR teams often focus on ‘soft’ outcomes (like satisfaction scores) without tying them to hard business results,” says Siobhan O’Leary, founder of Aubergine Partners. “That’s when leadership starts asking what they’re really paying for.”

In practice, this means when budget cuts come around, programs that can’t show a connection to retention, productivity, or performance may be at risk of budget cuts. In her 25 years of executive experience, O’Leary has seen it happen: “Programs that weren’t grounded in leadership behavior or clear results got slashed.”

Of course, sometimes it’s prudent to cut back on a program during economic downturns. Spending budget on expensive recognition programs while freezing hiring and delaying wage increases can cause more issues than it solves.

“Sometimes it is prudent to cut these programs if the organization is cutting in other areas,” says O’Leary. “If a company is laying off employees or cutting back on supplies, making a case for recognition needs to shift so that it is effective for the given environment. Demonstrate how recognition sustains morale during tough times and helps keep top talent engaged, which in turn reduces long-term costs of disengagement and turnover.”

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Thankfully, employee recognition doesn’t need to be expensive. With strategic planning, recognition programs can be fairly lean and offer big returns for the company.

It’s important to stay proactive in tracking financial ROI of employee recognition so that HR leaders can come from a position of power, rather than scrambling to defend their programs. Focus on metrics that show how recognition reduces turnover, or even shortens time-to-hire during recruiting.

Executive leaders are looking for concrete outcomes

There’s a lot of room for improvement when it comes to performance management. Deloitte’s 2025 Global Human Capital Trends survey found that 61% of managers and 72% of employees could not say that they trust their organization’s performance management program.

Ouch.

These are the kinds of stats that can make executive leadership view recognition as a nice-to-have. If you’re dealing with a tightening budget, it’s critical to focus on strategy.

“HR teams are trained to mitigate risk and can at times allow risk to roadblock strategy," cautions O’Leary. Avoid this by focusing on the data and tying your recognition program to key business metrics, like turnover rates, absenteeism, and sales performance. That also means translating your results into cost savings, risk reduction, or revenue gains.

Doing so can help you present a clearer picture for leadership.

Tracking and reporting helps improve your program

Measurement is important for justifying past spend, but it also plays a critical role in shaping the future of your strategy. When HR teams track performance over time, they can fine-tune recognition strategies based on what’s actually working.

“Start by tracking basic metrics like participation rates in recognition programs, employee engagement survey scores, and voluntary or ‘non-regrettable’ turnover,” says O’Leary. “Even simple comparisons before and after program implementation can reveal impact.”

If your peer-to-peer shoutout system has high usage but your points-based employee rewards don’t move the needle, that’s a clue. Good data leads to better programs, and better programs make for better metrics. It’s a feedback loop that works in your favor.

Use the feedback you’re getting to continually improve results, and listen to your employees. They’ll tell you how they want to be rewarded.

A strong ROI argument unlocks bigger opportunities

The best way to grow your program? Prove it pays off.

“Results that show clear links to retention and recruitment tend to move the needle for leadership the most,” says O’Leary. “There is an opportunity in most organizations to link benefits and recognition, and this can be a very strong financial win and way to gain momentum.”

You don’t need to boil the ocean. A single dashboard showing how your program correlates with performance reviews or NPS can do the job.

“Use structured surveys and data analysis to capture pre- and post-implementation results. Pair this with regular reporting to show trends and long-term benefits rather than isolated stories.”

The labor market still rewards companies with strong cultures

Even in a slower hiring market, reputation matters. Companies that get recognition right build cultures that attract and keep top talent. When a company has a positive, people-first culture, it can be easier to recruit talented folks. Additionally, those talented workers want to stick around for longer.

The financial case for employee recognition is strong. It just needs to be communicated.

Bottom line: prove the impact of your program

Recognition fuels performance, retention, and culture. But if you can’t connect it to ROI, your program risks being seen as expendable.

Want to make a stronger case? Start with the basics: track what you can, tie it to business outcomes, and present it in leadership’s language.

And, of course, a true recognition-based workplace starts with culture. “The foundation of recognition is in leadership behavior, values and culture,” says O’Leary. “Do you have a culture of gratitude and are you spending time giving feedback to the right players on the team? If your organization is not doing that, any recognition program is a waste of money.”

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