Top Employee Performance Metrics to Prioritize in 2026
Work has changed—and so has what employees expect from it. To keep pace, organizations need the right performance management metrics.
Work has changed—and so has what employees expect from it. To keep pace, organizations need the right performance management metrics.
In this article we discuss:
Work doesn’t look like it used to—and neither should the way we measure it.
In 2026, employees expect more than just fair pay and a decent benefits package. They want clarity, alignment, and opportunities for career growth. They want to know their work matters, and they want to see how it fits into something bigger than themselves.
Understanding how to effectively measure and enhance employee performance is one of the most important steps in building stronger teams and better employee experiences. In fact, McKinsey found that companies that focus on their people’s performance are 4.2X more likely to outperform their peers.
Choosing the right staff performance metrics to track can transform how teams perform and grow. Here are the 10 strongest employee performance metrics organizations should ensure they prioritize:
Goal achievement measures how effectively employees meet their targets over a set period. Rather than simply tracking binary success or failure, organizations should assess whether goals were appropriately challenging, how they were achieved, and the level of quality in the outcome.
A straightforward way to calculate it is to divide the number of completed objectives by the number of goals set for the employee at the start of the quarter. To make it more insightful, apply a weight to each goal (e.g. a scale of 1–5) based on complexity or impact so the score reflects difficulty as well as completion.
Employee engagement correlates strongly with retention, innovation, and overall business performance. It's only by measuring employee engagement with regular employee surveys that you can assess where there's room for improvement, and work to build a workforce that actively advocates for the business.
The employee net promoter score (eNPS) measures engagement by asking employees how likely they are to recommend their company on a scale of 0 to 10. eNPS is calculated by subtracting the percentage of respondents who choose 0 through 6 (detractors) from the percentage who choose 9 or 10 (promoters).
A high score points to strong morale and commitment, while a low score signals a need to dig into the drivers and address common friction points.
In 2026, workforces have to be adaptable. Tracking skills development and certifications reveals whether employees are growing alongside the business’s evolving needs. If your employees feel that they are stagnating, they won't bring their full self to work.
Measure progress by dividing the number of successfully completed certifications or training modules by the total number assigned within a set period. To confirm the learning is translating into real capability, pair completion data with an application check, such as whether the employee used the new skill on at least one live project.
360-degree feedback incorporates diverse perspectives—managers, peers, and direct reports—to create a comprehensive view of performance. This metric shows an understanding that a full picture of an employee's performance can't only come from their line manager.
360 feedback is most useful for roles where outcomes depend on influence and coordination, such as cross-functional contributors and people managers. To measure, gather confidential ratings on a 1–5 scale across specific competencies, then average the scores to create a composite rating for each category.
For customer-facing roles, employee performance is directly tied to client experiences and customer service. Metrics like NPS (Net Promoter Score), customer satisfaction surveys, and retention rates help tie individual contributions to broader business outcomes and provide tangible proof of value
You can measure customer satisfaction by calculating the share of positive customer ratings over a set period. For example, divide the number of ratings above your defined threshold, such as 4–5 on a five-point scale, by total ratings received to produce a percentage score.
If an employee’s output appears strong internally but customer satisfaction is lagging behind, use that gap to pinpoint where support is needed.
Attendance and reliability are two of the most straightforward employee performance metrics, and they’re also critical to keeping your company running smoothly.
Attendance measures whether employees show up when they are expected. In shift-based roles, it’s often captured through clock-in and clock-out systems. In more corporate settings, you may track it through other signals, such as meeting attendance or scheduled coverage.
Reliability goes a step further by measuring an employee’s ability to follow through on commitments. You can evaluate it by pairing attendance rate with related measures, such as on-time delivery rate or productivity efficiency rate. Strong results show that an employee follows through consistently, while low scores may prompt a performance conversation.
Adaptability measures how quickly an employee masters new processes, tools, or ways of working. It reflects an employee’s ability to stay productive through periods of organizational change—effectively a new constant as companies adopt new technologies and respond to external shifts.
You can track adaptability by measuring time to proficiency with new tools, such as the number of days it takes for output to stabilize after a change is introduced. Pair that with skills acquisition and certification progress to see whether employees are building the capabilities needed to keep pace.
Companies are increasingly operating cross-functionally as connected data platforms make it easier to see what’s happening in other areas of the business. At the same time, remote and hybrid work models have made it possible for teams to operate together across geographies and time zones.
Employee willingness to collaborate, such as knowledge sharing or participating in cross-functional projects, is a key indicator of engagement and value contributions. 360-degree feedback is a helpful input for measuring it, as are project management systems that detail the projects an employee has contributed to.
No-one likes to feel like their boss is watching them over their shoulder, but productivity remains an important metric when monitoring performance.
Productivity efficiency measures the volume of work an employee can complete within a standard work week. It reflects their speed of delivery while maintaining the quality standards required for the role.
Calculate it by tracking time-to-completion for repeatable, comparable tasks, then dividing total output by total hours worked over a set period. Output can be defined in a way that fits the role, such as revenue generated, tickets closed, or projects delivered. In turn, this baseline value helps you plan capacity, forecast workload, and set realistic deadlines.
A leader is only as good as their team and its outcomes. Managerial effectiveness measures how well a leader equips their direct reports to perform and stay engaged in their roles.
To quantify it, build a simple managerial effectiveness index using a blend of team stability, performance, and employee sentiment. For example, average the team’s retention rate, the share of direct reports meeting goals, and upward feedback scores from anonymous surveys.
Strong results signal a manager who sets clear expectations and develops employees consistently, while weak results point to where additional coaching or support may be needed.
After exploring the trending performance metrics in 2026, the next step is choosing the right ones for your organization. Not every metric will fit every team or role—and that's the point. The best metrics are customized, intentional, and tightly aligned to what success looks like for your business and your people.
Selecting the right metrics takes more than just picking KPIs off a list. It requires a thoughtful approach that considers your organization's strategy, culture, number of employees, and future goals.
Here are key steps to help you choose the right employee performance metrics:
Connect to business strategy: Start by clarifying your organization's top priorities. Metrics should directly link individual performance to broader company goals.
Tailor by role and function: Different teams and roles contribute in different ways. Customize metrics based on what success looks like in each unique context.
Balance short-term outputs with long-term growth: Blend leading indicators (such as skills development) with lagging indicators (such as revenue impact) to create a fuller picture.
Involve employees: Collaborate with employees when developing metrics. Co-creation increases buy-in and ensures that metrics feel fair and achievable.
Focus on clarity and actionability: Choose metrics that are easy to understand and tied to specific behaviors or outcomes, making feedback more actionable.
Stay flexible: Business priorities change. Review and update performance metrics regularly to stay aligned with evolving needs.
When employee performance metrics are chosen with intention and used consistently, they create clarity for everyone involved. Managers gain a consistent way to understand performance, and employees gain visibility into expectations, priorities, and how their work connects to outcomes.
That clarity supports long-term growth. Employees know where to focus and which skills to build next, while managers can coach with shared reference points instead of subjective judgment. Over time, the right metrics help performance conversations feel grounded in shared goals rather than evaluation alone.
Our AI-powered listening solution helps you keep a pulse on how your people feel about work. Explore Workday Peakon Employee Voice today.
More Reading
Our North Star remains rooted in our AI ethics principles and a robust responsible AI framework.
Learn Workday’s practical framework for designing sustainability into workplace and event experiences, with real-world examples from Workday Rising.
In this installment of our Workday Foundation’s “Switching Gears” series, discover how former journalist Dan Duane navigated a midlife reinvention, pivoting from a 30-year writing career to finding new purpose and connection as a therapist.