What Healthcare Can Learn From Retail About Burnout and Retention

ZoCo’s Founder and CEO, Lacey Picazo, recently joined a retail panel with executives from LEGO, Adidas, and Jumpmind. The discussion centered on experience—not just for customers, but for the associates within the system—an insight with powerful parallels in healthcare.

Illustration of a man in an ER

Here at ZoCo, we live and breathe healthcare. So why did our Founder, Lacey, join a panel with global execs from LEGO, Adidas, and Jumpmind to talk about retail?

Well, the conversation wasn't just about stores and customers. It was about the experience of the people inside the system, the associates.

And the parallels to healthcare were striking.

When considering the people employed—the nurses, the providers, and the retail associates—both retail and healthcare are facing the same storm:

  • Burnout is rampant.
  • New systems and tools are being rolled out faster than teams can absorb.
  • Workers feel voiceless, disconnected, and stretched thin.

In retail, change is constant—new tech, new promotions, new mandates. In healthcare? Same story, but add higher stakes and a growing shortage of providers. We’re on track for a 1M nurse shortage in 2026. And nearly 60% of new nurses leave the bedside within two years of practicing.

So what’s going wrong?

We’re designing solutions around people, not with them.

And in an age when it's easier than ever to launch new things, the problem is growing.

New software is in every roadmap. Compressed timelines and top-down rollouts make adoption harder. Employees are “included” in the change, but only through the checkbox of a sentiment survey. And workers—whether they wear scrubs or name tags—don’t feel heard.

  • They don’t see the “why.”
  • They don’t feel valued.
  • They don’t trust the process.
  • They can’t handle one more thing on their plate.

As a behavior design nerd, it's no surprise to me that these workforces are rejecting change—or opting out entirely.

Want your change to stick? Want to build solutions that elevate your workforce, rather than bury them? The solutions are the same in healthcare and in retail.

Here’s what works—and what we need more of:

  1. Real inclusion as a habit, not a project. Co-creation isn’t a phase—it’s continuous. Invite people into the problem definition, not just the solution testing. Understand what their world looks like today, and what they need to be successful.
  2. Clarity before rollout. Don’t just present the “what.” Start with the “why.” Show your work. Discuss openly how this might affect your people, and what you will do about it.
  3. Test. Learn. Adjust. Experiments are powerful, and create room for change. There is even more power in saying “we got it wrong—and here’s what we’re going to do differently.” You get this context through conversation, above and beyond engagement surveys.
  4. Build trust through consistency. Change management is not a one-and-done event. It’s ongoing, iterative, and human. Your team needs time, repetition, and rituals.

The bottom line? If you’re launching a new solution, adoption is earned, not expected.

All of these habits support more than change and digital readiness, however. They improve your culture. They improve your workers' experience, giving them a voice, and including them in the solutions. And the data shows, belonging and inclusion are central to keeping your people. Retention is the new recruitment.

Human-centered design isn’t a buzzword—it’s the most reliable path to change that sticks.

If you’re trying to solve for retention, burnout, or behavior change—don’t just speed up launching solutions. Make sure you’re building things that improve the experiences of your people.

If you’re in healthcare and working on improving your experiences, let’s connect. We’ve got stories about what it takes for clinical workers and providers to choose new solutions (yes, including AI adoption-check out our work in digital pathology).

Thank you to RETHINK Retail, Lauren Cevallos, Martin Urrutia, and Lesley Hawkins for your thought partnership.

Lacey Picazo, Founder & CEO

Lacey Picazo, Founder & CEO

Learn More

Check out our Ultimate Guide to UX Research & Product Design Services

Looking for insights for healthtech product leaders, delivered to your inbox every few weeks? Sign up for our newsletter.

Share
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Currently exploring

UX Mastery

0
ZoCollection
Subscribe
Subscribe
Subscribe
Subscribe
Subscribe
Subscribe

For product leaders seeking to build more human experiences in healthcare.

Explore
close button
Everything
0
Collections
Topics
Insights
0
0
0
0
0
0
Videos
0
0
0
0
0
0
Events
0
0
0
0
0
0
Work
0
0
0
0
0
0
News
0
0
0
0
0
0
Culture
0
0
0
0
0
0
Subscribe to our Curious Communications
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.