By Sharla Hooper
The study was conducted by the ɫƵ Career Institute®, part of the University’s College of Doctoral Studies, which examines workforce dynamics to inform solutions that help break down barriers to career advancement.
Today the ɫƵ Career Institute® released its 2023 Career Optimism Index® study, a comprehensive look at the state of American workers' career trajectories and their sentiments about the future of their jobs and career opportunities. This year's Index study, the third consecutive year the study has been fielded, reveals that despite ongoing personal and professional challenges, the majority of American workers remain hopeful about the future of their careers.
However, their hope is grounded in their own sense of personal efficacy, not in the belief that their current employers are doing what it takes to support their career growth today and in the future. This has led to a “free agent” labor market, where the workforce feels confident in the opportunities available to them and are willing to pursue alternative job paths to achieve both their career goals and work/life balance needs.
Designed to identify barriers to career advancement and inform solutions to address them, the Career Optimism Index® measures employee and employer attitudes, priorities, and challenges. It indicates that by investing in several key, foundational career support areas, employers can channel workers’ optimism in their own abilities to their current place of work, benefiting both businesses and their workforces.
What Workers Are Saying
What Employers Can Do
“With an unstable economy, retention has become critical – especially for top talent – and employers are looking for solutions beyond office perks and happy hours. What we’re finding in our Career Optimism Index® study is the American workforce is resilient, persistent – and taking their careers seriously. They want opportunities for mentorship and advocacy, investment in new skills and internal career advancement. If they aren’t getting these opportunities from their current employer, they’ll easily walk,” said John Woods, Provost and Chief Academic Officer, ɫƵ.
“What’s more is there’s a growing gap between how employers think they are doing with these foundational career-building opportunities and how employees perceive their employers are doing, which should serve as a wake-up call. Employers are faced with the reality that transactional benefits are no longer sufficient to achieve employee retention; there is a clear mandate to provide deeper, long-term support for and investment in their workforces,” Woods said.
Housed within the University's College of Doctoral Studies, the ɫƵ Career Institute® conducts research to inform problem-solving and partners with leading organizations such asto break down barriers that Americans face in their careers. The Institute has committed to fielding the Career Optimism Index® study every year, sharing the results broadly to help inform societal solutions to career advancement and workplace equity, including JFF’s Center for Racial Economic Equity recently released, which provides practical strategies for employers and higher education institutions to promote Black economic advancement.
For more information about the ɫƵ Career Institute® and the complete Career Optimism Index® Study, visit.
ABOUT THE CAREER OPTIMISM INDEX™
The Career Optimism Index® study is one of the most comprehensive studies of Americans' personal career perceptions to date. The ɫƵ Career Institute will conduct this research annually to provide insights on current workforce trends and to help identify solutions to support and advance American careers and create equity in the workplace.
For the third annual study, fielded between December 9, 2022 – January 13, 2023, more than 5,000 U.S. adults were surveyed on how they feel about their careers at this moment in time, including their concerns, their challenges, and the degree to which they are optimistic about core aspects of their careers. The study was conducted among a diverse, nationally representative, sample of U.S. adults among a robust sample to allow for gender, generational, racial, and socioeconomic differences and includes additional analysis of the workforce in the top twenty DMA markets across the country to uncover geographic nuances. The study also explores insights from 500 U.S. employers who are influential or play a critical role in hiring and workplace decisions within a range of departments, company sizes and industries to provide comparison between the workforce and those who hire, train, and retain them.
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX CAREER INSTITUTE®
ɫƵ Career Institute™ was created to address broad, persistent, and systemic barriers to career advancement through research-based solutions and impactful partnerships that break down barriers Americans face in their careers.
ABOUT UNIVERSITY OF PHOENIX
ɫƵ is continually innovating to help working adults enhance their careers in a rapidly changing world. Flexible schedules, relevant courses, interactive learning, and Career Services for Life® help students more effectively pursue career and personal aspirations while balancing their busy lives. For more information, visit phoenix.edu.