Why IT teams need a Voice of the Employee program to deliver a great digital workplace experience
Every IT team has dashboards: CPU utilization, session latency, logon duration, application crash rates. The numbers flow in, the alerts fire, the tickets get triaged. The infrastructure is monitored within an inch of its life.
And yet, employees still say their technology is frustrating. Productivity stalls. Support tickets pile up for issues that never show up as red in any monitoring tool. The digital experience feels broken, even when the metrics say it’s fine.
That’s because there’s a gap between what IT measures and what employees experience. And closing that gap requires something most DEX programs have been missing: the employee’s own voice.
Digital Employee Experience (DEX) management has matured enormously over the past five years. IT teams now have real-time visibility into endpoint health, application performance, network conditions, and VDI session quality that would have seemed impossibly sophisticated a decade ago.
But there’s an inherent limitation to telemetry-driven DEX: it only captures what sensors can see. Metrics measure systems. They don’t measure people, and the experience of working in a digital environment is profoundly human.
Consider what metrics can’t capture:
These signals don’t appear in monitoring dashboards. They live inside people using technology, so the only way to capture them is to ask.
Voice of the Employee (VoE) is a well-established concept in HR and people analytics. It’s the systematic practice of capturing, analyzing, and acting on what employees say about their work experience. Most organizations already have annual engagement surveys, pulse checks, and manager feedback loops.
But there’s a conspicuous gap: almost none of that feedback is specifically about technology. IT is often invisible in engagement surveys, lumped into a generic “tools and resources” question that tells you nothing actionable. Meanwhile, IT runs its own monitoring with no structured channel to hear from the people on the other side of the screen.
Voice of the Employee for IT fills that gap. It means:
ControlUp ONE includes a full Employee Sentiment and survey platform feature, and it’s time to use it not just as a nice-to-have, but as the foundation of a structured Voice of the Employee program for IT.
Here’s what makes the ControlUp approach to VoE uniquely powerful:
| In-the-moment surveys
Trigger surveys based on real events such as a failed login, a detected performance dip, or a completed support interaction so feedback is contextual, not retrospective. |
User group targeting
Segment surveys by department, location, device type, or VDI environment. Understand how the experience differs across your workforce, not just on average. |
| Sentiment + telemetry correlation
View employee satisfaction scores alongside your performance metrics in a single pane. See whether the numbers align with how people actually feel. |
Branching question logic
Build adaptive surveys that dig deeper based on an employee’s initial response, so a negative experience triggers a follow-up, while a positive one stays brief. |
| Trend reporting over time
Track sentiment scores week after week, before and after a major change, or across IT initiative milestones. Show leadership that IT improvements are measurably felt. |
Customizable templates
Start from ControlUp’s pre-built survey templates or create your own. Match your brand, your language, and the specific experience you’re trying to understand. |
VoE for IT isn’t about replacing monitoring. It’s about completing it. The most powerful DEX programs triangulate across three signal types: what systems report, what logs reveal, and what employees say.
| Signal type | Telemetry alone | Telemetry + VoE (ControlUp) |
| Detect performance issues | Yes | Yes + employee impact confirmed |
| Invisible frustrations | Not visible | Surfaced via surveys |
| Post-change validation | Partial (metrics only) | Confirmed by employee response |
| Prioritization signal | By severity score | By employee impact + severity |
| Executive reporting | Technical dashboards | Satisfaction scores + business context |
| Trust building with employees | No feedback loop | Employees see IT listening and acting |

A Voice of the Employee program for IT doesn’t have to be complex to be valuable. Here’s a practical framework to get started with ControlUp’s Employee Sentiment capabilities:
Not every interaction warrants a survey. Identify the key digital touchpoints where employee experience is most likely to diverge from what your metrics suggest, logon events, application launches, end-of-support-call moments, or after major change events. These are your “moments that matter” and should anchor your survey triggers.
The fastest way to kill a VoE program is survey fatigue. Use ControlUp’s branching logic to keep surveys to 2–3 questions for most users, only going deeper when a response indicates a problem worth exploring. A 60-second survey that employees actually complete is worth infinitely more than a 10-minute survey they skip.
Use ControlUp ONE to view your sentiment scores alongside your performance data. When sentiment drops, look for the correlated technical signal. When a remediation improves metrics, run a follow-up survey to confirm employees felt the difference. This correlation is where real insight lives.
The most powerful thing you can do after collecting employee feedback is tell people what you did with it. Even a brief “Based on your feedback last month, we’ve fixed X” communication builds more trust than any service level agreement. Use your survey data to make IT’s impact visible to the business.
Employee satisfaction with technology should be a board-level metric, not just an IT one. When you can show that after a major VDI upgrade, employee sentiment scores improved by 35% alongside a 20% reduction in support tickets, you’re speaking the language of the business, not just the language of IT.
There’s a broader shift happening in how forward-thinking IT teams define their role. The best IT organizations are no longer just infrastructure providers, their experience organizations. Their job isn’t just to keep systems running; it’s to ensure that every employee’s digital experience enables them to do their best work.
That reframing changes everything: how IT prioritizes projects, how it measures success, how it communicates value to the business. And it makes a Voice of the Employee program not a nice-to-have feature, but a core operational capability.
ControlUp’s scoring and survey tools were built with exactly this in mind. When you combine real-time monitoring with structured employee listening, you don’t just have a DEX platform, you have a complete picture of the digital workplace, measured both from the inside out and the outside in.
That’s what it means to make employees’ voices count, not just in HR, but in IT.
Ready to hear what your employees are really saying? See how ControlUp’s Employee Sentiment capabilities can become the foundation of your VoE for IT program.