Skip
Back to the hub

The 2026 Human Capital Risk Index: Why 85% of Your Workforce Flies Under the Radar

A cluster analysis across six industries. Who is genuinely activated, who counts as risk, and what that means in € per 1,000 employees.

Reading-Time-Savings · TL;DR

The three key takeaways for the next board meeting:

  1. Classic corporate health programmes reach only 12–18% of the workforce across industries. The remaining 82–88% count as a Human-Capital-Risk cluster.
  2. Per 1,000 non-activated employees, EBITDA-at-Risk lands between € 3.1M and € 4.7M p.a. depending on industry, primarily through presenteeism, attrition and knowledge loss.
  3. Three levers cut 60% of the risk in two quarters: pull activation, anonymised cluster reporting and CFO-grade translation.

What we examined

We screened 14,300 anonymised profiles across six industries, insurance, manufacturing, tech, healthcare, retail and banking, against a single question: who is genuinely "reached" in the classical sense, and who carries balance-sheet risk without being visible?

We define "reached" strictly: monthly active in at least one vital, movement or recovery module. Not "on the mailing list". Not "in the newsletter". Not "spotted at the fruit bowl".

Cluster distribution by industry

IndustryActivation rate (classic)Risk clusterEBITDA-at-Risk / 1,000 FTE p.a.
Insurance15%85%€ 3.2M
Industrial & Manufacturing12%88%€ 4.1M
Tech & Engineering18%82%€ 3.8M
Healthcare & Care11%89%€ 4.7M
Retail & Logistics14%86%€ 3.4M
Banking & Financial Services16%84%€ 3.1M

The spread is narrow. Across all six sectors the risk cluster sits between 82% and 89%. Anyone reaching health activation above 50% is not in the middle of the pack, they sit in the top decile of their industry.

Where the money disappears

  • Presenteeism (≈ 6× higher in non-activated teams, Deloitte 2024). By far the largest single line item.
  • Avoidable attrition. BCG benchmark: activated teams reduce resignation risk from 12% to 3%.
  • Knowledge loss per departure in knowledge roles: ~ € 50,000 recruiting replacement cost, plus six months of time-to-productivity.
  • Hidden burnout clusters that only become visible at the sick-leave spike.
60%of the risk can be cut within two quarters, when three levers pull at once.

Three levers that work in two quarters

1. Pull instead of push

Classic programmes send invitations, and hit the 15% ceiling. Pull mechanics (personalised micro-routines, buddy activation, visible team wins) lift the activation rate above 50%, because employees feel seen rather than summoned.

2. Anonymised cluster reporting

Person-level analytics are neither lawful nor useful. Cluster reporting at team and site level makes risk visible without breaking trust. HR steers the lever, not the individual.

3. CFO-grade translation

An engagement score on its own steers nothing. Only the translation into EBITDA-at-Risk per cluster moves the conversation out of HR and into the boardroom, using the same logic the CFO applies to credit risk.

If you want to run the workforce like an asset, you first have to stop treating it like a cost centre.

From the index methodology note

Methodology note

Activation rate = employees with ≥ 1 module touch per month over six months. EBITDA-at-Risk = productivity loss (€ 15,000/FTE × industry factor) + attrition cost (€ 50,000 × resignation delta). Sources below. Cluster data anonymised at team level (n ≥ 30).

Sources
  • Deloitte Global Human Capital Trends 2024
  • BCG Workforce of the Future 2023
  • McKinsey Health Institute. Working Population 2023
  • VitalHero Aggregate Cohort Data (n = 14,300, anonymised)
Zero Risk. Total Clarity.

See for yourself what your company is really costing you.

14 days. Your team. Your real data. No consulting contract, no credit card. Just a clear picture of where profit is eroding, and which lever pulls it back first.

Not sure yet? → Estimate profit risk