More employees now say they would be fine if they lost their jobs.
For many years, a job represented far more than a paycheck. It was often the way people explained who they were. Titles carried prestige. Employers served as anchors of identity. Career progression provided a storyline people could share with others and believe in themselves. In that environment, losing a job wasn’t only a financial disruption; it could feel like a personal crisis.
Work identity is evolving
That long-standing assumption is no longer true. Emerging data suggests many workers now feel emotionally neutral about their jobs, highlighting a broader transformation in how people relate to work these days. In a Headway survey, 45% of participants said they would feel indifferent if they were laid off, while another 10% reported they would actually feel relieved.
When a majority of workers no longer see job loss primarily as a threat, it suggests the meaning of employment is changing. Skills move more freely than job titles. Professional networks tend to last longer than the organizations people work for. Value is increasingly built through projects, communities, and varied roles rather than within a single employer.
Because of that, people can separate their identity from one specific job. Work becomes part of a broader professional ecosystem instead of the center of personal identity.
The change is particularly noticeable among younger generations. Research from ELVTR indicates many Gen Z and Millennial workers no longer expect employers to provide long-term security, identity, or career direction.
What they expect instead is flexibility.
Careers are increasingly seen as modular and adaptable. From that perspective, losing a job no longer represents the collapse of a life plan. It simply marks the conclusion of an agreement. Stability now depends on staying relevant, not staying in the same role. That mindset also helps explain why many Gen Z workers say they would rather experience unemployment than remain in work that feels meaningless.
This perspective also reframes how we interpret the continuing decline in employee engagement highlighted in Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace report. What appears to be disengagement may actually be diversification. When people no longer define themselves through one job, layoffs feel less like a personal failure and more like a shift between different expressions of their abilities. The job mattered, but it was never the whole story.
Technology has accelerated this transition. Artificial intelligence can now automate or reshape large portions of knowledge work in a matter of months instead of years. As a result, the lifespan of specific skills is shrinking. The work someone does today is less predictive of what they will do in the future. In that kind of environment, tying identity to a particular role, title, or even profession becomes risky.
Instead, people anchor their sense of self to learning, adaptability, and mobility rather than to any single job.
Rethinking engagement and retention
This reframing has real implications for how organizations approach engagement and retention. If employment is no longer the main source of identity, strategies built around strengthening emotional attachment to a company may miss the mark.
Many workers are not looking to be absorbed by an organization. They want support as they continue moving forward.
For a large portion of the workforce, especially knowledge workers, traditional employment already exists alongside side ventures, freelance assignments, skill development, and long-term career experimentation. In that reality, a job becomes one element within a wider career system rather than its focal point.
That helps explain why some respondents report feeling relief in the data. It doesn’t mean people want to lose their jobs. Instead, it suggests some roles have become misaligned with personal goals, pace, or values, and leaving offers a chance to reset.
When people mentally disengage before they formally exit, retention strategies based on prestige, fear, or inertia begin to lose effectiveness.
Retention therefore cannot focus on keeping people fixed in place or pushing them up a rigid corporate ladder. Instead, it needs to help individuals progress, even when that progression does not follow a predictable path inside the organization.
That could involve supporting ambitions beyond a current role, creating thoughtful off-ramps when growth stalls, and designing pathways that allow people to return later with new skills and perspectives.
This dynamic reveals a widening gap between how companies think about employment and how workers actually experience it. Many organizations still design roles and incentives around the idea that work should sit at the center of identity. Meanwhile, employees are building layered professional lives that include learning, side income, future career experiments, and sources of meaning outside work.
The result is a growing misalignment. Organizations interpret emotional distance as a lack of commitment. Employees see it as a healthy boundary. One side expects deeper attachment; the other has already broadened its focus.
It is difficult to rekindle emotional loyalty to roles that no longer reflect who people are becoming. Mission statements and cultural messaging cannot replace real opportunities for growth, autonomy, and relevance. In this environment, engagement is less about devotion and more about development — whether the work generates momentum, whether it builds skills, and whether the organization operates as a platform for learning and future value rather than simply present output.
This is not about declining work ethic or uncommitted employees; it reflects rational behavior in a world where skills age quickly and AI is reshaping roles faster than companies can redesign them.
People will not anchor their identity to institutions that fail to help them evolve.
The organizations that thrive will not be those that demand loyalty, but those that remain valuable. When work stops defining who we are, the organizations that matter most are the ones that help us become who we need to be next.















