Is Your Team Running on Empty?

83% of workers report some degree of burnout. This free 3-minute assessment reveals where you and your team fall — and what to do about it.

Question 1 of 10 0%
Exhaustion

After my workday, I feel completely drained — physically and emotionally.

Cynicism

I dread opening my laptop on Monday mornings.

Efficacy

I'm doing more work than ever but feel like I'm accomplishing less.

Exhaustion

I frequently skip breaks, eat at my desk, or work through lunch.

Cynicism

I've become more cynical or detached about my team's goals.

AI Anxiety

I worry about being replaced by AI or automated tools.

Meeting Overload

I spend more than 25% of my week in meetings that could've been emails.

Always-On Culture

I feel pressure to respond to messages outside of work hours.

Team Signal

My team's energy and enthusiasm has noticeably dropped in the past 6 months.

Cynicism

I can't remember the last time I felt genuinely excited about a project at work.

What to do next

Your team might be feeling this too.

Burnout doesn't happen in isolation. If you're experiencing it, there's a good chance others on your team are as well. QuestWorks builds the team resilience and genuine connection that stops burnout from spreading.

Try it free

How This Assessment Works

This burnout assessment is grounded in the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) framework, the most widely cited and validated research instrument for measuring occupational burnout. Developed by Dr. Christina Maslach at UC Berkeley, the MBI has been used in thousands of studies across healthcare, education, technology, and every industry in between.

The original MBI measures burnout across three core dimensions: Emotional Exhaustion (feeling drained and depleted), Depersonalization/Cynicism (detachment from your work and colleagues), and Reduced Personal Efficacy (feeling ineffective despite effort). Our assessment preserves these dimensions while adapting the language for today's remote and hybrid workforce.

We've also added three modern workplace stressors that the original MBI didn't account for — because the workplace has changed dramatically since 1981.

Exhaustion

Physical and emotional depletion from sustained work demands

Cynicism

Detachment, dread, and loss of meaning in your work

Reduced Efficacy

Doing more but accomplishing less — the productivity paradox

AI Anxiety

Fear of obsolescence as automation reshapes every role

Always-On Culture

Pressure to be responsive 24/7 without clear boundaries

Meeting Overload

Calendar fragmentation that kills deep work and autonomy

This is not a clinical diagnosis. It's a research-informed signal — a starting point for honest self-reflection and team-level conversation about sustainability.

Why Burnout Is a Team Problem

We tend to treat burnout as an individual failure — someone who couldn't "handle it," who needs to practice more self-care, who should take a vacation. But decades of organizational psychology research tell a different story. Burnout is contagious. When one person on a team burns out, the emotional and operational ripple effects touch everyone.

The data is stark. 52% of workers say burnout actively drags down their engagement — up from 34% just a year ago. That's not a trend line. That's an acceleration. And the downstream costs are devastating: increased turnover, quiet quitting, declining collaboration quality, and a slow erosion of the trust that makes teams function.

Here's what makes it a systems problem: burnout spreads through teams the same way energy does. When one person withdraws, others pick up the slack. When that extra load isn't acknowledged, resentment builds. Communication deteriorates. Small misunderstandings become interpersonal friction. And suddenly, the whole team is running at 60% — not because anyone is lazy, but because the connective tissue of the team has broken down.

The fix isn't more perks or pizza parties. It's building real resilience — the kind that comes from genuine connection, mutual understanding, and trust that's been stress-tested. Teams that regularly practice collaboration in meaningful ways (not forced fun) develop the psychological safety that makes burnout less likely to take root and less likely to spread when it does appear.

That's exactly what QuestWorks is built for. Our cinematic, voice-controlled team quests create the conditions where teams build real trust, surface each other's strengths, and develop the kind of resilience that prevents burnout from cascading through the group. It's the flight simulator for team dynamics — because the best time to build resilience is before you need it.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does this burnout quiz take?

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About 3 minutes. There are 10 questions, each with a simple 5-point scale from Strongly Disagree to Strongly Agree. You'll see your results instantly after completing the final question — no email required to get your score.

Is my data private?

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Yes. This quiz runs entirely in your browser. Your answers are not sent to any server or stored in any database. Your results are calculated on your device and are only visible to you. If you choose to enter your email for the detailed report, that's the only information we collect — and you can unsubscribe anytime.

Can my whole team take this?

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Absolutely. Share the link with your team and have everyone take it individually. While individual results stay private, comparing which archetypes show up across your team can spark meaningful conversations about workload, energy management, and what the team needs to stay sustainable.

What's the difference between stress and burnout?

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Stress is typically short-term and tied to specific demands — you feel overwhelmed but still engaged and motivated. Burnout is chronic: it involves emotional exhaustion, cynicism or detachment from your work, and a persistent sense of reduced effectiveness. Stress says "too much." Burnout says "not enough" — not enough energy, not enough purpose, not enough impact. The key difference is that stress usually resolves when the stressor is removed, while burnout requires deeper systemic change.

How accurate is this burnout assessment?

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This assessment is based on the Maslach Burnout Inventory framework, the gold standard in burnout research since 1981. We've adapted it to include modern workplace stressors like AI anxiety, always-on culture, and meeting overload. While this is not a clinical diagnostic tool, it provides a reliable signal of where you fall on the burnout spectrum and which specific dimensions are most affected.

What should I do if my score is high?

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A high score is a signal, not a sentence. Start by identifying which specific dimensions are driving your burnout — exhaustion, cynicism, or reduced efficacy. Have an honest conversation with your manager or a trusted colleague about workload and boundaries. Look at systemic changes like reducing unnecessary meetings, setting clear off-hours expectations, and redistributing tasks. If symptoms persist or affect your health, consult a mental health professional. Remember: burnout is a systems problem, not a willpower problem.

Burnout isn't a badge of honor.
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Build the team resilience that prevents burnout from spreading. Your team will create characters, start building their world, and kick off their adventure. Then, you can decide if you'd like to continue.

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