Why Belonging Is a Performance Metric, Not a Feeling | with Andrea D. Carter

Why Belonging Is a Performance Metric, Not a Feeling | with Andrea D. Carter

Author: Bill February 20, 2026 Duration: 1:11:59

Most organizations measure engagement. But engagement only tells you who's busy, not who's going to stay. Andrea D. Carter, organizational scientist and creator of the Belonging First methodology, joins the 40% Better podcast to share why belonging is measurable performance infrastructure and what technical leaders need to build it on purpose. Andrea is CEO and Founder of Andrea Carter Consulting and creator of the Belonging First Methodology.
Andrea developed the first scientifically validated framework for measuring workplace belonging, starting with a two-year study across 3,500+ employees in Canada's mining sector. The findings were clear: belonging gaps aren't primarily a diversity issue, they're a positional power issue. And when those gaps close, organizations see a 24% reduction in belonging gaps, a 28% increase in performance, an 18% increase in engagement, and a 16% reduction in turnover.
In this conversation, Andrea walks through the five conditions that must be present for belonging to exist: comfort, connection, contribution, psychological safety, and well-being. She translates each into practical, behavioral actions leaders can take immediately, from how to open a meeting to how to rotate facilitation to how to name the impact of someone's work, not just the task they completed. Bill and Andrea also dig into why brilliant technical work dies in silos when connection is low, why resilience training alone sets people up to fail, and how belonging is fundamentally interdependent, not something one person figures out alone.

Key Takeaways
Belonging is not a feeling. It is measurable performance infrastructure with direct impact on speed, quality, retention, and engagement.
The five indicators of belonging are comfort, connection, contribution, psychological safety, and well-being. Each one has specific behaviors attached to it that leaders can implement immediately.
Comfort is about cognitive load management. When roles, expectations, and decision processes are predictable, people's brains stop scanning for threats and free up capacity for complex problem-solving.
Connection is your information transfer protocol. When trust is high and information flows without verification overhead, cross-functional collaboration accelerates and quality goes up.
Contribution requires making impact visible, not just task completion. Acknowledge specifically how someone's work moved things forward and create visibility for your B and C contributors, not just your A players.
Psychological safety is your early warning system. It only functions well when comfort is already present. Without it, people silence themselves before errors reach a point where they're catastrophic to fix.
Well-being is infrastructure, not a perk. Resilience is not a solo sport. Organizations that treat it as an individual responsibility burn out their best people first.
80% of managers never receive training on how to lead people. The performance gaps this creates are measurable and preventable.
Belonging is interdependent. It requires both parties to actively give and receive the five conditions. When it's 100% on one person to figure out, that's a fitting-in environment, and it will eventually break people.

Connect with Andrea D. Carter: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andreadcarter/ Website: https://belongingfirst.com/ Company: Andrea Carter Consulting
If this episode made you think differently about your team, subscribe to the 40% Better podcast for more conversations at the intersection of leadership and technology. Share it with a leader who's still measuring engagement and wondering why people keep leaving.

I hope you enjoy this episode! Give it a like, share, and subscribe to not miss the content coming your way weekly. – Bill and the 40 % Better podcast team

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wblennan/ 

Hosted by Bill, 40% Better-Engineering Leadership is a conversation for those who build and guide technical teams. This isn't about abstract theory; it's a practical dialogue focused on the tangible mechanics of morale, motivation, and output. Each episode features a single expert in employee engagement, and together we dissect the specific strategies that lead to measurable leaps in performance. You'll hear detailed explorations into what actually moves the needle for engineers and their managers, translating research and experience into actionable leadership techniques. The goal is straightforward: to provide the insights that can help your team operate at a significantly higher level of effectiveness and satisfaction. Tune in for a focused, deep-dive podcast that cuts through the noise of generic management advice, offering concrete ideas you can apply directly to the unique challenges of engineering leadership.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

40% Better - Engineering Leadership
Podcast Episodes
Do Hard Things - episode 52 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 13:25
Accept the inevitable - success requiers hard work.When you accept this, life gets way easier.Fighting against hard work - makes things harder.....
Mistakes are Required - Episode 51 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 7:07
The inspector gave me a list of 6 things to fix. Only one was easy. Every issue was solvable. And each one would take time and effort. It wasn't what I wanted, it was what I got. And it taught me a lot!
Success Metrics - Episode 50 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 10:34
Car racing, surfing Pipeline, 70 ft free dives, and beating software release predictions. These activities are all built on a stack of small success metrics. Having deliberate and sufficiently detailed metrics lets us ta…
3 Mental Models and 1 Lie - Episode 49 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:51
These mental models (beliefs) were taught to me well before my first leadership role. And the lie was one I started leading with - but dumped in a few months
Being Lucky - Episode 48 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 17:19
I've been outrageously lucky in this life. And looking back, there's a consistent pattern for how I made luck my friend.Initiative + Optimism -> LuckClover thanks to: Umberto Salvagnin, CC BY 2.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
Steven Puri and Sukha - Episode 47 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 54:39
Software engineer to Hollywood powerhouse and back to software.Raised $21M to fund startups and was a senior executive in Hollywood studios. Independence Day, Transformers 1/2, Star Trek, Eagle Eye, Wolverine, etc - all…
Jeff Hancher - Episode 46 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 43:40
Jeff's journey began as a child growing up in southwestern Pennsylvania.After serving in the United States Army, Jeff began a career as a blue-collar worker at a large corporation.Since that start, he was promoted 10 tim…
Imposter Syndrome- Episode 45 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 11:36
Oh boy, have I heard stories!!Team leads and managers who were sure any day they'd be discovered as frauds. And yes, I've been that person. Convinced that my team's performance was amazingly lucky hires. And in hindsight…
Above Your Pay Grade - NOT!! Episode 44 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 20:38
People regularly tell me some version of "that's above my pay grade". But that is not true. The real problem is people don't have a system to bring issues up the org chart and get executive attention, approval, and budge…
Brian Maggi - Episode 43 [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:04:06
Brian Maggi has an impressive list of accomplishments. From building medical education websites to Desktop Technology Manager at Apple to live entertainment and now AI - diverse experience is an understatement. You can l…