Why HR middle managers are the most overlooked drivers of engagement 

Jonathan Kirby

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5–7 minutes

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When organizations talk about employee engagement, attention usually focuses on senior leadership setting the big picture strategy or frontline managers supporting teams in their daily work. Sitting between those two groups are HR middle managers, a group that often has the greatest day to day influence on how engagement initiatives are experienced but receives far less recognition. 

Across North America, middle managers within HR play a key role in shaping the employee experience, driving retention and supporting high-performing teams. They translate strategy into action, support frontline teams through change and enable people managers to lead effectively. Despite this, HR middle managers are frequently overlooked when engagement outcomes are discussed or measured. 

As businesses continue to navigate post-pandemic workforce challenges, recognizing the role HR middle managers play in engagement has become essential. 

HR middle managers operate at a critical intersection. They sit close enough to senior leaders to understand priorities and direction, while remaining deeply connected to frontline teams and the realities of the day-to-day employee experience. 

This position allows HR middle managers to: 

  • Interpret engagement initiatives in a way that fits the organization’s culture 
  • Spot early warning signs of disengagement, burnout or declining well-being 
  • Influence how managerial roles are carried out across the business 

Because they work closely with people managers, HR middle managers shape how policies, leadership training and development programs are applied in practice. Over time, this directly affects how team members perceive trust, fairness and work-life balance.

Employee engagement is built through everyday interactions rather than high-level statements from senior management. How supported employees feel, how decisions are explained and how managers handle pressure all influence engagement outcomes. 

HR middle managers act as enablers of these interactions by: 

  • Coaching frontline managers on leadership behaviors 
  • Helping managers avoid micromanaging while maintaining accountability 
  • Supporting decision-making during periods of uncertainty or change 

When engagement initiatives succeed, it is often because HR middle managers have adapted them to fit frontline realities. When engagement suffers, it is frequently because this layer lacks capacity, influence or alignment with senior leadership. 

Organizations that overlook the middle management layer often struggle to move engagement metrics in a sustained way. 

The scope of HR middle manager roles has expanded considerably since the pandemic. Many are now responsible for supporting hybrid work models, navigating increased mental health concerns and responding to changing expectations around flexibility and well-being. 

At the same time, expectations from senior leaders have increased. HR middle managers are expected to: 

  • Roll out new initiatives quickly 
  • Support frontline managers through complex people issues 
  • Maintain momentum on engagement and retention without additional resources 

This creates a risk of burnout among HR middle managers themselves. When middle managers feel stretched or unsupported, their ability to drive positive engagement outcomes diminishes. This can create silos, reduce consistency and weaken trust across teams. 

One of the most overlooked aspects of employee engagement is the role of translation. Engagement strategies designed by senior leadership rarely land successfully without interpretation. 

HR middle managers translate engagement strategy into practical guidance by: 

  • Helping managers understand how initiatives apply to their specific teams 
  • Adjusting approaches for different workforce groups and roles 
  • Feeding insights back to senior leaders on what is and is not working 

This two-way translation ensures engagement remains relevant rather than performative. Without this layer, engagement efforts often feel disconnected from the reality of daily work

Retention is one of the clearest indicators of engagement, and HR middle managers have a direct influence on it. They are often involved in talent development discussions, succession planning and identifying early signs of disengagement. 

Because they work across teams, HR middle managers can identify patterns individual managers may miss, such as: 

  • Repeated workload issues affecting employee satisfaction 
  • Gaps in development programs or leadership training 
  • Behaviors within senior management that undermine trust 

When empowered to act, HR middle managers can address issues before they lead to turnover. When they are excluded from decision-making or lack authority, those opportunities are missed. 

Despite their influence, HR middle managers are frequently under-recognized. Their impact is often indirect and difficult to tie to a single metric, which means their contribution can be overlooked when engagement is evaluated. 

Common reasons include: 

  • A focus on senior leadership visibility rather than mid-level influence 
  • Assumptions that middle managers naturally have the skills required 
  • Underinvestment in development compared to frontline or senior roles 

In some organizations, HR middle managers also feel caught between competing demands, expected to absorb pressure from both the top and the frontline without additional enablement.

To be effective engagement drivers, HR middle managers need a broad skill set that goes beyond technical HR knowledge. Coaching, influencing and judgment are critical, as is the ability to manage ambiguity. 

Key capabilities include: 

  • Building trust with frontline managers and senior leaders 
  • Supporting people decision-making without taking ownership away 
  • Balancing empathy with commercial realities 

As organizations become more complex, the need for HR middle managers who can operate confidently across teams and functions will continue to grow.

Organizations serious about improving employee engagement should reassess how they view HR middle managers. Rather than positioning them as implementers, they should be recognized as a key role in engagement delivery. 

Practical actions include: 

  • Involving HR middle managers earlier in engagement initiative design 
  • Investing in leadership training tailored to mid-level roles 
  • Clarifying expectations and reducing unnecessary silos 

By strengthening this layer, organizations improve consistency, reduce burnout and create more sustainable engagement outcomes. 

Employee engagement is not driven by a single initiative or message. It is reinforced through daily behavior, aligned leadership and trust across the organization. HR middle managers are central to making that happen.

Frazer Jones specializes in HR and people-focused recruitment across North America and globally. We work closely with organizations to identify HR professionals who bring the capability, influence and experience needed to drive engagement at every level, including within HR middle management. 

Our global talent pool allows us to present candidates who combine technical HR expertise with strong leadership, coaching and enablement skills. Whether you are strengthening your HR function, improving retention or building long-term engagement capability, get in touch with Frazer Jones to find out how we can help you find the right talent. 

 

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