The numbers look promising. Attrition rates have plummeted, employee turnover has stabilised, and the costly churn that once plagued HR departments has seemingly vanished. By traditional metrics, this should signal triumph: engaged workforces, satisfied employees, and thriving company cultures. Yet scratch beneath the surface, and a more troubling reality emerges.
Workers are staying put not out of passion or loyalty, but from fear. This phenomenon, which workplace experts now term “job hugging”, represents an anxious embrace of security over satisfaction. Unlike the career commitment of previous generations, today’s job hugging stems from economic volatility, widespread redundancies, and shrinking opportunities in once-booming sectors. Employees cling to their roles not because they love their work, but because the alternative—unemployment in an uncertain market—feels too risky to contemplate.
What appears to be stability is actually stagnation in disguise. Across industries, from technology to finance, a growing cohort of workers remains trapped between their desire for meaningful careers and their need for reliable income. The result is reshaping workplace culture in ways that few organisations fully comprehend.
Fear as a career driver
The implications of job hugging extend far beyond individual career satisfaction. Vivek Tripathi, VP-HR, NewGen Technologies, observes that while disengaged employees have always existed, their impact was previously masked by market dynamics. “In certain sectors, especially IT, till a couple of years back, it was almost always a boom market,” he explains. Previously, dissatisfied workers simply moved on, keeping the problem of disengagement largely invisible. Today, however, with opportunities scarce, even deeply unhappy employees are staying put, making workplace apathy impossible to ignore.
The psychological toll is considerable. Manish Majumdar, head-HR, Centum Electronics, describes the internal conflict faced by those caught in this bind: “If I continue in a role merely because I feel I have no other option, rather than because I genuinely want to stay, it naturally creates stress and inner conflict.”
“If I continue in a role merely because I feel I have no other option, rather than because I genuinely want to stay, it naturally creates stress and inner conflict.”
Manish Majumdar, head-HR, Centum Electronics
This stress manifests in predictable ways. Job huggers deliver the bare minimum required to survive, avoiding discretionary effort and shunning innovation. They become workplace zombies—physically present but mentally absent, going through the motions while their enthusiasm withers. “They bring down the energy of the team they are part of,” warns Tripathi. “Many of them now know that there aren’t a lot of opportunities outside, so they don’t even try too hard. They just resign themselves to the fact that this is what they need to do now.”
“They bring down the energy of the team they are part of. Many of them now know that there aren’t a lot of opportunities outside, so they don’t even try too hard. They just resign themselves to the fact that this is what they need to do now.”
Vivek Tripathi, VP-HR, Newgen Software
The problem compounds at managerial levels. Senior employees with over a decade of experience find job switching particularly challenging in stagnant markets. Yet these are precisely the individuals leading teams and shaping organisational culture. When managers display disengagement and low energy, their negative attitude cascades downward, creating what Tripathi describes as uninspiring leadership that infects entire departments.
The contagion effect
Perhaps most alarmingly, job hugging behaviour proves contagious. New employees quickly absorb the cultural norms around them, adapting their expectations to match what they observe. “As a new joinee, if I see many people fulfilling the minimum requirement in terms of work, without even trying to go above and beyond, then after a point, even I will wonder whether I should even bother to do anything extra,” explains Majumdar. “And sure enough, I will be happy doing just the bare minimum.”
This cultural shift from striving to mere surviving poses existential questions for organisations. Companies find themselves carrying workforces whose costs rise annually while their contributions remain static. Innovation stalls, risk-taking disappears, and competitive advantage erodes—not through dramatic failure, but through gradual decline.
The phenomenon reveals a fundamental misalignment between what employees need and what organisations provide. For some workers, particularly those with modest career ambitions, the trade-off between security and growth may seem acceptable. But for ambitious professionals, job hugging creates deep frustration as aspirations collide with economic reality.
Early intervention tactics
Recognition represents the first step toward addressing job hugging. Both Tripathi and Majumdar emphasise the importance of early identification through performance metrics, team feedback, and behavioural observation. Once spotted, targeted intervention becomes crucial.
“We need to have candid conversations: helping employees see how their disengagement is self-defeating, not only for the company but for their own career,” suggests Tripathi. Without energy, learning, or motivation, employees risk being sidelined when they can no longer keep pace with evolving organisational demands.
However, the responsibility extends beyond individual coaching. Organisations must examine whether systemic issues contribute to the problem. Majumdar stresses the need to address cultural shortcomings: “Is the culture discouraging innovation? Are managers hoarding credit or failing to inspire their teams? Are employees overburdened to the point where growth feels like a sacrifice of work-life balance?”
The solution lies in creating environments where security doesn’t preclude progression. This might involve role expansion, responsibility redesign, or learning opportunities that encourage self-investment. Growth need not always mean promotions—it could involve new skills, increased responsibilities, or more critical roles within existing positions.
Security meets growth
Job hugging represents more than an HR challenge; it signals a fundamental shift in how fear influences career decisions. When economic uncertainty transforms passionate professionals into anxious survivors, both individuals and organisations suffer. The phenomenon warns of hidden costs lurking beneath apparently stable employment figures—costs measured not in redundancy packages, but in lost innovation, diminished competitiveness, and cultural decay.
The challenge for modern workplaces is achieving balance: providing the security employees crave while maintaining the dynamism businesses require. Those who fail to address job hugging may discover that their stable workforces have become museums of mediocrity—preserving the past while failing to build the future. In an era where adaptability determines survival, such preservation may prove the riskiest strategy of all.





