MET MetLife Inc.

Employees to Employers: We Want You to Share Our Values and Make the World a Better Place

As work and life continue to blend together, employees are bringing their personal values into the office and want companies not only to recognize those values, but share them and take action. Fully nine out of 10 employees (89%) say they are willing to trade some of their salary to work at a company whose values match their own – a great deal of their salaries in some cases.

These are some of the findings of the new Role of the Company Survey commissioned by MetLife. Nearly two-thirds of American workers expect companies to go beyond providing a paycheck and contribute to their well-being (59%), and contribute to the well-being of society, as well (57%).

Part of sharing values is looking outside the four walls of the office – 61% of employees say that it is important to them to work for a company that contributes to the local community. On average, they say they are willing to take a 21% pay cut to work for a company with values aligned to theirs.

The importance of aligned values was strongest for Millennials, who say they are willing to take the largest pay cut – 34% on average – to work for a company that shares their values. While Millennials are typically viewed as the most idealistic generation in the workforce today, Gen X and Baby Boomers weren’t too far behind: Gen Xers say they are willing to take an 18% pay cut and Baby Boomers, 15%, to share values with the company where they work. This willingness to trade off salary for aligned values is not reserved for higher income levels but is consistent across all income brackets: on average, those making less than $50K, between $50-100K, and $100K+ would take a 22%, 21%, and 19% cut, respectively.

Companies can reap rewards when they share values and act on these values, as employees who felt their values aligned with those of their employers were more than twice as likely to be satisfied in their jobs (78%) and feel loyal to their companies (77%) than those whose values didn’t match (32% and 31%, respectively). When values match, more than three-quarters (78%) plan to stay at their company, compared to 57% when values are misaligned.

“People across all generations in the workplace today want companies to play a stronger role in aligning personal purpose with company actions,” said Jon Richter, vice president of corporate citizenship for MetLife. “Companies that want to succeed in today’s marketplace must rise to meet this challenge.”

As part of their expectations on sharing values, employees want companies to take action on those values, as respondents were three times more likely to agree that “companies should contribute to the well-being of communities and society” than “companies should focus solely on making money” (57% vs. 18%). Responding to these values took the form of a responsibility of companies to act, including to improve local communities (75% agree), work broadly to solve problems that impact employees (63% agree), and be more involved in improving the environment (60% agree).

Are companies fulfilling their employees’ desire for values alignment and action? More so than you might think. Respondents were four times more likely to agree their own company “makes the world a better place” than they were to disagree (56% vs. 13%). Another finding sheds light on this optimistic view of their employer held by many American workers: Despite a common perception that trust in companies is eroding, 57% still say they trust their company to “do the right thing” always or most of the time, versus only 37% who trust companies in general and 26% who feel that way about the government.

Through its Employee Benefit Trends Study (EBTS), now in its 15th year, MetLife tracks both worker and employer attitudes and expectations about the role of employee benefits for the workforce. The next EBTS will be released in April 2018. The Role of the Company Survey looks at the workplace through a different lens, revealing what employees and society at large expect of corporations broadly.

Research Methodology

MetLife’s survey on The Role of the Company was conducted in July 2017 and was fielded by ORC International, a leading business intelligence firm. The survey comprised 1,006 interviews with part-time and full-time U.S. employees, ages 21 and over. The margin of error was plus or minus 3.5%.

About MetLife

MetLife, Inc. (NYSE: MET), through its subsidiaries and affiliates (“MetLife”), is one of the world’s leading financial services companies, providing insurance, annuities, employee benefits and asset management to help its individual and institutional customers navigate their changing world. Founded in 1868, MetLife has operations in more than 40 countries and holds leading market positions in the United States, Japan, Latin America, Asia, Europe and the Middle East. For more information, visit www.metlife.com.

EN
29/11/2017

Underlying

To request access to management, click here to engage with our
partner Phoenix-IR's CorporateAccessNetwork.com

Reports on MetLife Inc.

Moody's Ratings rates MetLife’s subordinated debentures Baa1 (hyb)

Please see for any updates on changes to the lead rating analyst and to the Moody's legal entity that has issued the rating. Please see the issuer/deal page on for additional regulatory disclosures for each credit rating. The rating of the deben...

Moody's Ratings rates MetLife’s subordinated debentures Baa1 (hyb)

New York , February 24, 2026 – Moody's Ratings (Moody's) has assigned a Baa1 (hyb) rating to the subordinated debentures issued by MetLife, Inc. (MetLife, NYSE: MET, senior debt A3). The debentures are being issued off MetLife's multi-purpose shelf registration statement filed in May 2025 and the pr...

Moody’s Ratings assigns ratings to MetLife’s shelf (senior unsecured a...

Moody’ s Ratings assigns ratings to MetLife’ s shelf. New York, January 5, 2026– Moody’ s Ratings has assigned provisional ratings to. MetLife, Inc.’ s shelf registration filed on May 16, 2025.

Metlife Inc: 1 director

A director at Metlife Inc sold/gave away 30,684 shares at 0.000USD and the significance rating of the trade was 74/100. Is that information sufficient for you to make an investment decision? This report gives details of those trades and adds context and analysis to them such that you can judge whether these trading decisions are ones worth following. Included in the report is a detailed share price chart which plots discretionary trades by all the company's directors over the last two years cl...

ResearchPool Subscriptions

Get the most out of your insights

Get in touch