Some seasons just feel heavy. The days get shorter the sunlight gets scarcer, and energy levels in the workplace seem to dip for no apparent reason. It’s not that your team suddenly lost their spark, it’s just the season working against them. These low-energy times, often seen in fall or deep winter, can cause a noticeable drop in mood, motivation and productivity. But here’s the good news: with a few mindful shifts you can turn things around.
This is where employee engagement takes the center of attention.
More than just a buzzword, employee engagement is the mental and emotional connection people have with their work, their team, and your company’s mission. During sluggish seasons, this connection can quietly loosen if it is not being maintained. When the usual spark fizzles out, leaders gets a real opportunity, not just to keep things moving, but to uplift, support, and re-energize their people in a way that sticks.
In our guide we’ll walk through how to engage employees during low-energy seasons with empathy, creativity, and real-life solutions. From wellness practices to flexible planning, we’ll dive into ideas that are not only practical but also human at heart.
Understanding the Core of Employee Engagement
At its heart, employee engagement is about how deeply a person cares about the work they do and the people they do it with. It’s not just about being present, it’s about being involved. Engaged employees are the ones who speak up in meetings, go the extra mile without being asked, and show up with a mindset that says, “I’m here because it matters.” When this feeling is strong, teams thrive.
But engagement isn’t static. It ebbs and flows, much like human energy does. And during certain seasons, particularly in the colder or transitional months, that flow can slow to a crawl.
Why Engagement Dips When the Weather Cools
There are several reasons for low employee engagement during low-energy seasons, and most of them tie back to how people feel — physically, mentally, and emotionally (1, 2).
Sometimes leaders think, “It’s just a slow time, things will pick back up,” but they not realize that engagement levels are quietly slipping. When left unattended, these seasonal slumps can lead to low employee engagement scores, disengagement, and even burnout.
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Spotting the Signs Early
Before the drop becomes a deep dive, it’s important to notice the signs. Teams may start missing deadlines. People show up on time but mentally check out. Conversations in the break room? They go quiet.
Managers should keep an eye out for:
This isn’t about blaming anyone. It’s about noticing what’s happening, and being willing to step in with empathy. Because employee engagement doesn’t vanish overnight. It fades! But with the right mindset, it can be reignited.
Read more: Thank You Wellness Week: A Complete Guide to Celebrating Your Team
The Ripple Effect of Low Energy in the Workplace
It’s not always obvious at first. A team might start the season full of drive, and then suddenly things just feel… off. It’s not about laziness, it’s about how our environment and internal rhythms change with the seasons. Light fades earlier, sleep cycles get thrown off, and our ability to think clearly? It can quietly take a hit.
One study from Sweden tracked a group of office workers through seasonal changes and found that lower daylight exposure during winter months was directly linked to reduced positive mood and altered behavioral patterns. That kind of shift can trickle down into how people work, interact, and show up for the team. (3)
What Research Tells Us About Performance Drops
The science backs up what many managers already sense i.e. when energy is low, employee engagement suffers, and with it, so does team performance.
Here’s what studies have shown:
All of these things can easily result in lower creativity, fewer informal check-ins and missed deadlines. And they don’t always show up with warning signs.
What Employees May Be Feeling
Even when people aren’t saying anything outright, here’s what may be running through their minds:
Leaders often overlook these quiet signals. They wait until productivity tanks or morale hits the floor, which by then it’s much harder to reverse. But engagement doesn’t have to disappear completely; it just needs attention at the right moment, with the right support. Seasonal slumps are real. The good news? There are strategies to overcome them.
The Hidden Power of the “Quiet” Times
When things slow down at work, it’s easy to assume everyone’s taking a breather. There are fewer meetings, fewer deadlines, and maybe even fewer complaints. But behind that silence? Disengagement might be quietly setting in.
According to a 2025 report, only 31% of U.S. employees are actively engaged in their work. This is the lowest rate in over a decade! One of the main causes? Lack of clarity and support from managers during less-structured periods. (6)
That means when leaders don’t show up in slow seasons, engagement can slide without anyone noticing until it’s too late.
Slow periods are golden opportunities to invest in culture, connection, and morale. Why? Because people are more available mentally and emotionally for check-ins, reflection, and growth.
When managers are present, consistent, and caring, engagement is seen to naturally improve. One study found that employees who feel supported by leadership and have more control over their schedules are more likely to stay, perform better, and recommend their workplace to others. (7)
Here’s what teams gain when leadership makes the effort:
And contrary to what some may believe, engagement doesn’t require a massive budget. In fact, there are countless low cost employee engagement ideas that pack a big punch, from one-on-one thank-you notes to giving team members a say in planning meetings.
But leaders often assumes that because the pace is slower, the need for support is also lower. That’s not always true.
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If you’ve been wondering how to engage remote employees during quiet or low-energy seasons, know this: they feel the dip even harder.
Remote workers don’t have hallway chats, shared break times, or that subtle buzz of being around others. According to a 2023 academic review on remote engagement strategies, isolation and unclear communication are two of the top contributors to disengagement in distributed teams (8).
Here’s what helps:
Remote or on-site, engagement is a flame that dims quickly without care. And slow seasons? That’s when you feed the fire.
Read more: 15+ Fall Wellness Challenge Ideas to Reignite Employee Engagement
Adjusting Strategy When Energy Is Low
When the pace slows and daily urgency fades, it’s a moment of opportunity for managers to step in, not simply to fill the gap, but to adapt how they lead. According to research, a manager or team‑leader alone accounts for around 70% of the variance in team engagement (6). That means how you lead matters a lot, especially during low‑energy seasons when routine is disrupted and motivation can drift.
Managers should focus on:
Practical Adjustments for Low‑Energy Times
Here are some real, actionable strategies managers can implement when things feel sluggish:
Why These Work
Cautions and Pitfalls to Avoid
Helping People Feel Better and Stay Engaged
When things slow down at work, it’s easy for motivation to start fading too. These low-energy stretches don’t always feel dramatic, but they can quietly drain engagement if nothing’s done to support people through them.
This is exactly where wellness and flexibility can make a real difference. They’re not just perks. When offered in thoughtful ways, they help people recharge, reconnect, and get their focus back.
In fact, a 2024 study found that flexible work setups like adjusting hours or allowing hybrid days had a clear and positive effect on employee engagement, especially when teams felt trusted and supported (11).
When people are feeling low on energy, adding more pressure doesn’t usually help.
Simple Ways to Support Wellness and Engagement
You don’t need complicated systems or major programs. Even small, human changes can have a big impact.
Why It Makes a Difference
Research backs it up: when people feel supported, they’re more likely to stay motivated, even in slower seasons.
The Job Demands-Resources model shows that when workplaces offer things like flexibility, recognition, and wellness support, people are better able to manage stress and stay engaged (12).
Another recent study found a strong link between flexible work setups and better engagement across all sectors, meaning this approach isn’t just a trend, it works (13)
And the best part? When people feel like they’re trusted and their health matters, they’re more likely to bring their full selves to the work, not just show up, but actually care.
A Few Things to Keep in Mind
Wellness and flexibility won’t fix everything, but they’re a strong foundation — especially when energy is low. And when done right, they help people feel better and work better.
You Can’t Improve What You Don’t Measure
Employee engagement isn’t a one-time pulse check or a yearly survey — it’s a living, changing reflection of how people feel about their work, team, and leadership. During low-energy seasons, those feelings can shift quietly, making it even more important to have the right tools in place to track what’s actually happening.
According to a large-scale study published in Frontiers in Psychology, workplace engagement is strongly influenced by measurable enablers like recognition, manager support, and trust in team relationships. These factors can be tracked using structured tools, which give leaders the chance to act early before disengagement sets in (13)
Another peer-reviewed study validated the Work Engagement Scale in Colombia, showing that employees’ energy, dedication, and absorption can be reliably measured with simple tools and adapted to different workplace settings (14).
What Kind of Tools Actually Work?
Not all tools are equal but the ones that work share a few things in common: they’re consistent, easy to use, and they link data to action. Based on the latest research, here are tools you can trust:
Putting Tools to Work Especially When Energy Dips
Tools work best when used regularly and intentionally. During low-energy seasons, it helps to adjust both the cadence and tone of how you’re using them.
When leaders use engagement tools well, they don’t just gather data — they build trust.
Evidence That This Works
Peer-reviewed studies consistently support the value of well-designed tools. The ISA scale (used in the Thai public sector) was shown to be psychometrically sound, giving reliable engagement scores that helped leaders understand where to act. (18)
In another study, researchers analyzed over 39,000 employee records and found that tools measuring manager support, team relationships, and recognition had a significant impact on engagement outcomes (13).
What these findings tell us is that tracking engagement isn’t just about performance metrics — it’s about understanding the human drivers underneath them.
What to Avoid
In the end, tracking employee engagement shouldn’t feel like a task. It should feel like listening. And when it’s done well, it creates space for real growth, both for individuals and the organization as a whole.
When things pick up again after a quiet stretch, it’s easy to assume everything’s back on track. The pace returns, calendars fill up, and energy might feel higher. But unless engagement is actively maintained, that momentum can fade just as quickly.
In fact, the transition period after a lull is a powerful chance to solidify what worked and avoid slipping back into old patterns that may have caused low employee engagement scores in the past.
To keep engagement high after the slow season ends, managers and leadership teams need to shift gears thoughtfully. Here’s what research and practical experience suggest:
Why This Matters Long-Term
Studies show that companies who maintain engagement especially after transitions perform better across nearly every metric. One large-sample study found that engagement, when supported continuously, was a better predictor of team performance than job satisfaction or even pay (9).
And when you treat slow seasons as time to build habit and faster seasons as time to reinforce them, the culture becomes not just engaged, but resilient.
Watch for These Common Missteps
Keep the Fire Burning
The goal isn’t to go “back to normal.” It’s to create something better where engagement isn’t just a response to a slow season, but a lasting part of how your team works together. With a little intention, you can carry the calm focus of quiet months into your busiest ones and make that energy truly sustainable!
Seasons change, and so does the energy your team brings to work. But low-energy periods aren’t just something to wait out. They’re an opportunity to strengthen connection, rethink support, and show your team that their well-being matters just as much as their output.
By prioritizing employee engagement through flexibility, wellness, communication, and thoughtful tools, leaders can turn seasonal slumps into strategic resets. Whether it’s checking in with remote staff, sharing health tips, or simply giving space for breath and focus, small acts can make a lasting impact.
And when energy returns? Don’t let go of what worked! Keep the structure, the trust, and the human-centered habits in place. Because sustained engagement isn’t about doing more; it’s about doing what matters, more intentionally.
Support people through the quiet. Recognize them in the busy. And engagement won’t just survive the seasons, it’ll grow through them!
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