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Better Together: The Co-op Employee Experience

By Angie Coleman, Organizational Development Consultant, FCCS

HUMANITY IN LEADERSHIP: WHY EMPATHY, AUTHENTICITY, AND CONNECTION MATTER MORE THAN EVER

Cooperative organizations are built on a foundation of values that emphasize people, purpose, and community. While these principles often guide how co-ops serve their members, they are just as powerful in shaping how leaders engage with their employees. At a time when humanity in leadership is more important than ever, cooperatives are uniquely positioned to lead with empathy, authenticity, and connection.

In a national landscape where employee engagement is at its lowest point in over a decade, co-ops are bucking the trend. Recent survey data from FCCS’s Cooperative Engagement Survey highlights six workplace strengths that stem directly from the cooperative model and reflect the kind of human-centered leadership today’s workforce is seeking.

LEADING WITH EMPATHY THROUGH COOPERATIVE VALUES

When leadership is rooted in cooperative principles, like shared ownership, democratic participation, and concern for community, employees experience more than just a job. They feel seen, supported, and valued. Here’s how co-ops bring humanity into leadership and create thriving, purpose-driven workplaces:

1. Purpose-Driven Work That Connects People to Impact

Cooperative Principle #7: Concern for Community

Employees in co-ops understand their work contributes to something greater, supporting producers, rural communities, credit union members, or electric utility customers.

2. Supportive Managers Who Coach, Not Command

Cooperative Principle #5: Education, Training, and Information

In cooperatives, managers are mentors first. They foster development through authentic conversations and individualized support.

3. Collaboration Over Competition

Cooperative Principle #6: Cooperation Among Cooperatives

Employees often describe co-op work environments as team-oriented, inclusive, and collaborative.

4. Transparent, Trustworthy Leadership

Cooperative Principle #2: Democratic Member Control

Co-op leaders tend to be accessible and values-driven. Decision-making is transparent and inclusive, which builds trust at every level.

5. A Sense of Ownership and Voice

Cooperative Principle #3: Member Economic Participation

Even when not formal owners, employees in co-ops often feel a deep connection to the organization’s success.

6. Well-being as a Shared Priority

Cooperative Principle #5: Education, Training, and Information

Work-life balance and holistic well-being aren’t afterthoughts, they’re embedded in how co-ops lead.

WHERE PEOPLE AND PERFORMANCE THRIVE TOGETHER

These six strengths reveal a deeper truth: when leaders lead with heart, and when organizations are structured around values that put people first, employees are more engaged, loyal, and resilient.

Cooperatives create cultures where:

By embracing humanity in leadership, co-ops are not just building successful businesses, they are building communities where people can belong, grow, and lead together.

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