Blog 2: Quiet Quitting, Quiet Firing and the Rise of Invisible Workplace Conflicts

 

There is a moment almost every modern manager fears , the moment an internal issue becomes public. A frustrated employee posts anonymously on LinkedIn. A Glassdoor review exposes internal culture. A WhatsApp group screenshot circulates. A policy change sparks debate on social media. Suddenly, the organisation’s internal employee relations issue becomes a global conversation.

This is not a sign of rebellious employees. It is a sign of employees searching for a voice.

Most employees don’t go online to attack their organisation. They go online when they feel unheard inside it. And this shift employees using digital platforms to express concerns, share experiences and influence decisions  has redefined the entire landscape of employee relations.

Employee voice, once limited to town halls, suggestion boxes or union channels, now happens everywhere:
• anonymous online forums
• internal collaboration platforms
• WhatsApp groups
• social media posts
• TikTok workplace stories
• Glassdoor
• private Slack channels
• employee activism campaigns

We are witnessing the rise of Digital Employee Voice a phenomenon that is powerful, urgent and impossible for organisations to ignore.

It Starts With a Whisper: A Familiar Workplace Moment

Picture this scene.

A team of junior analysts is working overtime for the third week in a row. The manager promises that “leadership is aware,” but nothing changes. One evening, during a late shift, someone finally says what everyone is thinking:
“Why do they ask for feedback if they never act on it?”

The group nods. Frustration hangs in the air.

Later that night, one of them anonymously posts on Glassdoor:
“Great company, but management ignores workload concerns. Burnout is real.”

By the next morning, the review has fifty likes and several comments from former employees echoing the sentiment.

Within days, HR becomes aware. Within weeks, leadership begins conducting “listening sessions.”
But by then, employees already know the truth:

The digital world hears their voice faster than their own organisation does.

This is the new reality of employee relations. Voice is no longer contained. It is amplified, accelerated and impossible to silence.

 

Why Digital Voice Has Become So Powerful

Digital spaces give employees something the workplace often doesn’t:
Freedom. Audience. Visibility. Safety. Influence.

Four major factors are driving this shift:

1. Psychological Safety Gaps Inside Organisations

When employees don't feel safe to speak internally, they go external.
Research by Google (2020) revealed that psychological safety is the top factor shaping high-performing teams, yet many workplaces fail to create it.

2. Transparency as a Global Norm

Gen Z and Millennials reject secrecy. According to Deloitte (2023), 72% of younger employees expect open communication and workplace transparency.

Digital platforms force transparency, whether organisations embrace it or not.

3. Power Redistribution Through Technology

Technology gives employees leverage.
They can influence reputation, hiring, and even policy. McKinsey (2022) found that organisations take online employee feedback as seriously as internal data.

4. Communities That Validate Employee Experience

Employees no longer feel alone.
One post is enough for thousands to say: “This happened to me too.”

Digital voice has become a form of community-driven employee relations.

 The Theory Behind Digital Voice: Participation, Pluralism and the Psychological Contract

Although digital voice feels modern, its foundations sit deeply in long-established employee relations theory.

Pluralist Perspective

Digital platforms reflect pluralism:
Employees have their own interests, and when internal systems fail, they seek alternative spaces.

Psychological Contract

Employees expect fairness, respect and responsiveness.
When organisations break these unwritten expectations, digital outlets become the new contract enforcement mechanism.

Participation vs. Involvement

Traditional involvement:
“Tell us what you think.”
Digital participation:
“If you don’t listen, the world will.”

Digital voice is participation without permission.

Soft HRM and Commitment-Based Approaches

Employee-centred cultures tend to handle digital voice better because they build trust early.
Hard, control-oriented cultures struggle  because control weakens the moment digital voice enters.

 

 From TikTok to Twitter: When Employee Voice Goes Viral

Storytelling in the digital era has become a form of activism.

Example 1: The “Quiet Quitting” Wave

A single TikTok video describing “quiet quitting” employees doing exactly what they’re paid for and nothing more went viral globally. It sparked debates in the Wall Street Journal, LinkedIn and HR conferences worldwide.



It wasn’t laziness.
It was voice.
A protest against broken psychological contracts.


Example 2: Starbucks Unionisation Movement (US)

The movement began with employees posting videos of unsafe conditions and unfair scheduling on social media. These posts drew national attention and triggered the largest unionisation surge Starbucks had ever seen.

Example 3: Tech Layoffs and LinkedIn Stories

During global tech layoffs, thousands of employees shared their emotional stories online. Their posts shaped public opinion, pressured employers, and drove conversations on humane restructuring.

The lesson?
Digital platforms have become the new ER battlefield and the new ER opportunity.

 

Internal Digital Voice: When Companies Try to Get Ahead

Progressive organisations don’t fear digital voice. They harness it.

They create safe, internal digital spaces where employees can express ideas openly, such as:

  • anonymous suggestion apps
  • "ask-me-anything" sessions with CEOs
  • digital town halls
  • pulse surveys
  • Slack channels for innovation
  • feedback dashboards
  • employee listening platforms (e.g., Viva, CultureAmp)

CIPD (2023) found that companies with structured internal digital voice platforms experience:

  • 25% higher trust
  • 20% lower turnover intentions
  • 33% more innovation activities

Employees are more likely to speak internally when they trust they’ll be heard.

The formula is simple:
Create safe spaces inside, and employees stop going outside.

 

The Double-Edged Sword: Risks of Digital Voice

Digital voice is powerful but not always positive.

Potential risks include:

1. Reputational Damage

One viral post can overshadow years of employer branding.

2. Misinformation and Emotional Narratives

Stories shared online may be one-sided or exaggerated.

3. Loss of Control

Organisations can no longer “contain” employee relations.

4. Escalated Conflict

Issues that could have been solved internally become public crises.

5. Employee Echo Chambers

Employees may validate negative emotions within peer groups without hearing management’s perspective.

These risks highlight the importance of building trust before issues escalate.

 

The Opportunity: Digital Voice as a Strategic ER Asset

If handled well, digital voice becomes a strategic advantage.

Organisations that embrace digital voice gain:

  • early insight into employee issues
  • authenticity in employer branding
  • real-time engagement data
  • deeper understanding of employee expectations
  • stronger psychological contracts
  • healthier conflict resolution
  • more transparent cultures

McKinsey (2023) argues that organisations that integrate digital listening outperform others in engagement by up to 45%.

Digital voice can either expose weaknesses or strengthen relationships.

It depends on how organisations respond.

 

What the Future of Employee Relations Looks Like

The future employee relations model is clear:

Voice-first.
Digital-enabled.
Transparency-driven.
Human-centred.

Employees no longer wait for permission to speak.
They speak when they need to.
They speak where they feel safe.
And they speak to whoever will listen.

Organisations that adapt will build trust.
Organisations that resist will face digital backlash.

HIWS, participatory cultures, psychological safety, and transparent communication will become the foundations of modern ER systems because employees expect to be part of the conversation, not outside it.

Digital voice is not a threat.
It is an invitation.
A chance to build the best version of organisational life one where silence is replaced with communication, frustration with participation, and fear with trust.

 

 References

CIPD (2023) Employee Voice and Digital Working. Available at: https://www.cipd.co.uk (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
Deloitte (2023) Gen Z and the Future of Work. Available at: https://www2.deloitte.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
Deloitte (2024) Human Capital Trends. Available at: https://www2.deloitte.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
Google (2020) Project Aristotle: Psychological Safety. Available at: https://rework.withgoogle.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
Glassdoor (2022) Workplace Transparency Report. Available at: https://www.glassdoor.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
McKinsey & Company (2022) Employee Voice in the Digital Era. Available at: https://www.mckinsey.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
McKinsey & Company (2023) The Great Attrition and the Power of Voice. Available at: https://www.mckinsey.com (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).
Starbucks Workers United (2023) Unionisation Movement Timeline. Available at: https://www.sbworkersunited.org (Accessed: 18 Nov 2025).

 

 

Comments

  1. Venumi’s article effectively highlights the paradigm shift in employee relations driven by digital platforms, where employees now have unprecedented avenues to express their concerns and shape organizational narratives. The examples of 'quiet quitting' and unionization movements underscore the imperative for companies to foster internal transparency and psychological safety, lest they face reputational risks and talent attrition in an increasingly vocal digital landscape.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful reflection. You’ve captured the essence of the article very well digital platforms have undeniably transformed employee voice and reshaped organizational accountability. The points you raised about transparency and psychological safety are especially important in today’s environment. I appreciate your insightful contribution to the discussion.

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  2. Hi Venu,

    Excellent and incedibly timely article. The opening story about the junior analysts is a perfect, relatable illustration of a crisis unfolding in countless organizations. The line, "The digital world hears their voice faster than their own organisation does," is a powerful and slightly terrifying summary of the modern ER challenge.You've brilliantly framed digital voice not as the problem itself, but as a symptom of a broken internal psychological contract. It's a wake-up call for leaders to stop trying to control the narrative and start building the trust that makes employees want to share it internally first.

    The conclusion that this is an "invitation, not a threat" is the perfect reframe. It shifts the perspective from defense to opportunity. A must-read for any leader who thinks their Glassdoor rating is an HR problem, not a leadership one.

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    Replies
    1. Hi Rajitha,Thank you for such a thoughtful and well-articulated response. I’m pleased that the opening story resonated with you.
      Your insight that digital voice emerges when internal trust erodes captures the core of the issue beautifully. Leaders truly cannot manage this moment by controlling narratives; they must create environments where employees feel safe and motivated to speak internally first. I appreciate your recognition of the reframing at the end seeing this as an invitation rather than a threat is indeed crucial. Thank you for your engagement.

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  3. This article Venumi delivers an insightful and timely analysis of why wellbeing must be structurally engineered rather than treated as an individual responsibility. What stands out most is her strong emphasis on stress as an organisational outcome, aligning closely with Maslach, Leiter and the JD-R framework. The story of Alisha compellingly illustrates how high performers are often the most overlooked, reinforcing that resilience based solutions overlook systemic causes. Her argument that wellbeing depends on workload equity, psychological safety and fair organisational design adds both depth and urgency. Overall, this is a thoughtful and well-researched article that reframes wellbeing as a strategic ER priority rather than a personal expectation.

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    Replies
    1. This was a very relevant and valuable remark. I do love the fact that you pointed out the risk of sticking to resilience and not considering the systems that result in stress. Good that you were able to connect with the story of Alisha, it is a real-world representation of the accumulation of pressure among high performers. Your reflection is a masterpiece on why wellbeing should be regarded as strategic ER focus.

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  4. The idea of “quiet quitting” is often mistaken for laziness or lack of engagement. In reality, as the article explains, it is a withdrawn form of employee voice — a quiet way of signalling frustration with heavy workloads, unclear expectations and emotional fatigue.
    In the same way, “quiet firing” highlights weak leadership. It shows a breakdown in Organisational Justice Theory, where employees experience unfair processes or poor treatment and respond by withdrawing or speaking out online.
    For MBA students, these patterns illustrate three key types of justice:
    Distributive justice: when work or rewards are shared unfairly
    Procedural justice: when employees have no clear, fair process to raise concerns
    Interactional justice: when leaders stop communicating or show lack of respect
    When these forms of justice break down, employees increasingly turn to digital platforms to express their voice.
    Creating internal channels where employees can safely speak: anonymous apps, AMA sessions, digital town halls, is not just an initiative; it is a strategic ER intervention grounded in:
    Psychological Safety (Edmondson)
    High-Involvement Work Systems (HIWS)
    Voice Theory (Hirschman)
    Commitment-Based HRM
    As an HR manager, I see these platforms not as tools but as cultural commitments.
    For MBA students, these are examples of HR as a systems designer, building mechanisms that keep voice internal and constructive. Perhaps when Management listens digitally from within, employees stop shouting from outside.

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    Replies
    1. We are grateful to have had this most fruitful and happy reflection. I really like the way you redefined quiet quitting as a withdrawn kind of employee voice instead of disengagement and how you associated quiet firing with organisational justice and leadership failures. The way you have subdivided the distributive, procedural, and interactional justice is particularly effective in your explanation on why employees have a greater tendency in sharing their frustrations on digital platforms. Another aspect that I appreciate in your presentation of digital voice mechanisms is that it is not presented as a tool, but rather as a cultural commitment based on psychological safety, HIWS, and Voice Theory. It is timely and very relevant that you control your eye on the HR as a constructive voice systems designer. An extremely provocative input.

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  5. Thank you for this insightful article. I appreciate how it highlights the rise of digital employee voice and its role in transforming employee relations. The distinction between traditional involvement and participation through digital platforms is very clear, and the examples of “quiet quitting,” Starbucks unionization, and tech layoffs effectively illustrate the impact of employees speaking out when they feel unheard.

    I particularly value the emphasis on creating safe internal digital spaces to harness this voice strategically. The article provides a compelling reminder that trust, transparency, and psychological safety are essential for managing modern employee relations in a digital era.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks to this very insightful comment! I am delighted that you were interested in the issues of digital employee voice and safe internal platforms. You are quite correct with the presence of trust and psychological safety digital voice is an effective tool of engagement instead of conflict. Your reflection is indeed appreciated by me.

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  6. This article sheds light on the growing influence of **digital employee voice** in modern **employee relations**. As platforms like LinkedIn, TikTok, and Glassdoor amplify employee concerns, workers now have a powerful, visible channel to voice frustration when traditional internal systems fail. This shift is driven by gaps in **psychological safety**, the demand for **transparency**, and the rediscovery of **employee power** through technology. While digital activism can lead to risks like reputational damage, it also offers organisations a valuable opportunity to listen in real-time, address concerns proactively, and strengthen trust. For forward-thinking companies, embracing digital voice will be key to building transparent, participatory cultures and avoiding the pitfalls of **silent disengagement**.

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    1. Thanks to this very insightful comment! I personally like the way you have explicitly pointed out the dangers, as well as the possibilities of digital employee voice. You are completely correct, these platforms can be used as great tools of trust and involvement when organizations fail to listen instead of being defensive. Your comment is introducing a lot of richness to the discussion.

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  7. Hi Venumi,

    Your analysis of digital employee voice compellingly reframes ‘quiet quitting’ and viral posts as signals of broken internal trust. The post rightly urges organisations to build internal digital listening, psychological safety, and participatory channels treating external posts as invitations to act. It’s a timely call to redesign ER around transparency and responsiveness.

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  8. HI Venumi, This is a highly relevant and forward thinking blog that accurately captures the shift to Digital Employee Voice. This blog brilliantly reframes external digital platforms (Glassdoor, TikTok) as a sign of employees searching for a voice when internal channels fail. It correctly applies the Pluralist Perspective to show that digital participation is now a powerful and uncontained force that enforces the psychological contract. The clear conclusion is invaluable organizations must proactively create internal psychological safety and digital listening spaces to gain real time insights, build trust and prevent internal whispers from becoming viral public crises.

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  9. This is an excellent article. You have discussed how digital employee voice, quiet quitting, and invisible workplace conflicts are reshaping modern employee relations. And also, you have discussed the psychological, technological, and theoretical foundations behind this shift, supported by real-world examples and research. Furthermore, you have discussed how digital voice presents both risks and strategic opportunities for organizations.

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  10. Hi Venu, The article provides an insightful and timely analysis of how digital platforms are reshaping employee relations. I particularly appreciate the reframing of “quiet quitting” and viral posts as signals of unmet employee voice rather than disengagement, highlighting the importance of trust and psychological safety. The discussion effectively links pluralist theory, the psychological contract, and participation principles to modern ER challenges. The examples of Starbucks, tech layoffs, and TikTok illustrate the real-world impact of digital voice. Overall, the blog emphasizes that organizations must proactively build internal digital listening channels and transparent, participatory cultures to transform potential conflicts into strategic opportunities.

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  11. Thank you for this timely and powerful analysis of digital employee voice. Your opening scene frustration spilling from internal silence to Glassdoor captures the modern ER reality perfectly. The distinction that employees go online when they feel unheard inside not to attack and reframes digital voice as a diagnostic signal rather than a threat. The examples from Starbucks unionization and "Quiet quitting" demonstrate voice as activism. How do you recommend organizations respond authentically to viral employee posts without appearing defensive or performative?

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  12. Hi Venu, This article reflects how
    Quiet quitting and quiet firing represent two sides of a growing silent struggle within modern workplaces. Quiet quitting occurs when employees mentally detach, meeting only minimal expectations due to burnout, disengagement, or feeling undervalued. Conversely, quiet firing happens when managers indirectly push employees out by withholding support, reducing opportunities, or creating an environment where they no longer feel welcome. Together, these behaviours contribute to a rise in invisible workplace conflicts—tensions that remain unspoken but significantly impact morale, productivity, and organizational culture. These conflicts rarely appear in formal reports, yet they silently erode trust, weaken collaboration, and drive higher turnover. Addressing them requires leaders to cultivate open communication, psychological safety, and fair performance management practices that prevent problems from festering beneath the surface.

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  13. This topic is explained in a very clear way and feels very relevant today. While AI can feel like a threat, in some workplaces it can also help improve performance if used properly. The main issue really comes down to how managers choose to use these tools.

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