WHY RETENTION?
Key employee retention is critical to the long term health and success of your business. Managers readily agree that retaining your best employees ensures customer satisfaction, product sales, satisfied co-workers and reporting staff, effective succession planning and deeply imbedded organizational knowledge and learning employee retention matters. Organizational issues such as training time and investment; lost knowledge; mourning, insecure co-workers and a costly candidate search aside, failing to retain a key employee is costly. Various estimates suggest that losing a middle manager costs an organization up to 100 percent of his salary. The loss of a senior executive is even more costly.
Employee retention is one of the primary measures of the health of the organization. Losing critical staff members means other people in the departments are looking as well. Exit interviews with departing employees provide valuable information that can used to retain remaining staff.
WHY PEOPLE LEAVE THEIR JOB
With retention being such a high priority, why are people leaving organizations? Some literature suggests that people leave their jobs for a wide variety of reasons, including:
1. Unmet expectations
2. Inappropriate fit for the role
3. Lack of fit with company culture
4. Lack of sufficient opportunities for growth and advancement
5. Inadequate recognition and appreciation
6. Problems with a manager or supervisor
7. Dissatisfaction with compensation
8. Stress
9. Lack of work/life balance
10. Lack of confidence in the company and/or leadership
MANAGING EMPLOYEE RETENTION:
The task of managing employees can be understood as a three stage process:
1. Identify the cost of employee turnover
2. Understand why employees leave
3. Implement retention strategies
Identify the cost of employee turnover:
The organizations should start with identifying the employee turnover rates within a particular time period and benchmark it with the competitor organizations. This will help in assessing the whether the retention rates are healthy in the company. Secondly, the cost of employee turnover can be calculated. According to a survey, on an average, attrition costs companies 18 months’ salary for each manager or professional who leaves, and 6 months’ pay for each hourly employee who leaves. This amounts to major organizational and financial stress, considering that one out of every three employees plans to leave his or her job in the next two years.
Understanding Why Employees Leave:
Why employees leave often puzzles top management. Exit interviews are an ideal way of recording and analyzing the factors that have led employees to leave the organization. They allow an organization to understand the reasons for leaving and underlying issues. However employees never provide appropriate response to the asked questions. So an impartial person should be appointed with whom the employees feel comfortable in expressing their opinions.
Implement retention strategies:
Once the causes of attrition are found, a strategy is to be implemented so as to reduce employee turnover. The most effective strategy is to adopt a holistic approach to dealing with attrition. An effective retention strategy will seek to ensure:
• Attraction and recruitment strategies enable selection of the ‘right’ candidate for each role/organization
• New employees’ initial experiences of the organization are positive
• Appropriate development opportunities are available to employees, and that they are kept aware of their likely career path with the organization
• The organization’s reward strategy reflects the employee drivers.
ROLE OF MANAGER IN EMPLOYEE RETENTION
When asked about why employees leave, low salary comes out to be a common excuse. However, research has shown that people join companies, but leave because of what their managers’ do or don’t do. It is seen that managers who respect and value employees’ competency, pay attention to their aspirations, assure challenging work, value the quality of work life and provided chances for learning have loyal and engaged employees. Therefore, managers and team leaders play an active and vital role in employee retention.
Managers and team leaders can reduce the attrition levels considerably by creating a motivating team culture and improving the relationships with team members. This can be done in a following way:
1. Creating a Motivating Environment:
Team leaders who create motivating environments are likely to keep their team members together for a longer period of time. Motivation does not necessarily have to come through fun events such as parties, celebrations, team outings etc. They can also come through serious events e.g. arranging a talk by the VP of Quality on career opportunities in the field of quality. Employees who look forward to these events and are likely to remain more engaged.
2. Standing up for the Team:
Team leaders are closest to their team members. While they need to ensure smooth functioning of their teams by implementing management decisions, they also need to educate their managers about the realities on the ground. When agents see the team leader standing up for them, they will have one more reason to stay in the team.
3. Providing coaching:
Everyone wants to be successful in his or her current job. However, not everyone knows how. Therefore, one of the key responsibilities will be providing coaching that is intended to improve the performance of employees. Managers often tend to escape this role by just coaching their employees. However, coaching is followed by monitoring performance and providing feedback on the same.
4. Delegation:
Many team leaders and managers feel that they are the only people who can do a particular task or job. Therefore, they do not delegate their jobs as much as they should. Delegation is a great way to develop competencies.
5. Extra Responsibility:
Giving extra responsibility to employees is another way to get them engaged with the company. However, just giving the extra responsibility does not help. The manager must spend good time teaching the employees of how to manage responsibilities given to them so that they don’t feel over burdened.
6. Focus on future career:
Employees are always concerned about their future career. A manager should focus on showing employees his career ladder. If an employee sees that his current job offers a path towards their future career aspirations, then they are likely to stay longer in the company. Therefore, managers should play the role of career counselors as well.
RETENTION STRATEGIES:
1. Selection:
Retention starts up front, in the selection and hiring of the right employees. This requires not only an assessment of basic job skills, but also an examination of the "softer" issues of motivation, values, and being able to fit into the organization—factors that have a powerful impact on an employee's success and tenure with a company.
2. Leadership:
To a great extent, an employee's experience at a company is shaped by his or her boss. Employees rely on supervisors for everything from communication to promotions and rewards. Not surprisingly, a number of studies show that ineffective supervisors—that is, "bad bosses"—are the largest single factor driving employee turnover. Companies need to select the right people for supervisory positions, and then offer them development opportunities to make sure they continue to enhance their leadership and communication skills.
3. Professional growth:
Today's employees know that a successful career depends on constant learning and on picking up skills and experience that will make them more employable in the open market. That means that access to ongoing training and development is important to them, and a strong incentive to stay with a company. This is a fundamental paradox of employee retention: By preparing people to leave, a company can actually encourage them to stay.
4. Meaningful work and ownership:
People need to know they are making a difference and being effective in their jobs. Expectations and responsibilities need to be clearly defined, so that employees can understand their roles, and see how their jobs are linked to the organization's overall success. Employees must also be involved in determining how work is done, so that they have a sense of ownership and an opportunity to contribute to improvements in the company's performance.
5. Recognition and rewards:
In addition to salary and similar compensation, people appreciate and respond to alternative forms of acknowledgement, such as dinners, awards, comp time, and so forth. To be effective, such recognition should be clearly tied to achievement, and encourage the desired behaviour in individuals or teams.
6. Culture and environment:
It may seem obvious that employees will tend to stay with an organization that makes them feel comfortable—where stress is minimized and they feel valued and respected. However, too many companies still operate with a culture based on control and fear, rather than one that provides well-defined direction and values, and emphasizes care for customers and employees alike.
Key employee retention is critical to the long term health and success of your business. Managers readily agree that retaining your best employees ensures customer satisfaction, product sales, satisfied co-workers and reporting staff, effective succession planning and deeply imbedded organizational knowledge and learning employee retention matters. Organizational issues such as training time and investment; lost knowledge; mourning, insecure co-workers and a costly candidate search aside, failing to retain a key employee is costly. Various estimates suggest that losing a middle manager costs an organization up to 100 percent of his salary. The loss of a senior executive is even more costly.
Employee retention is one of the primary measures of the health of the organization. Losing critical staff members means other people in the departments are looking as well. Exit interviews with departing employees provide valuable information that can used to retain remaining staff.
WHY PEOPLE LEAVE THEIR JOB
With retention being such a high priority, why are people leaving organizations? Some literature suggests that people leave their jobs for a wide variety of reasons, including:
1. Unmet expectations
2. Inappropriate fit for the role
3. Lack of fit with company culture
4. Lack of sufficient opportunities for growth and advancement
5. Inadequate recognition and appreciation
6. Problems with a manager or supervisor
7. Dissatisfaction with compensation
8. Stress
9. Lack of work/life balance
10. Lack of confidence in the company and/or leadership
MANAGING EMPLOYEE RETENTION:
The task of managing employees can be understood as a three stage process:
1. Identify the cost of employee turnover
2. Understand why employees leave
3. Implement retention strategies
Identify the cost of employee turnover:
The organizations should start with identifying the employee turnover rates within a particular time period and benchmark it with the competitor organizations. This will help in assessing the whether the retention rates are healthy in the company. Secondly, the cost of employee turnover can be calculated. According to a survey, on an average, attrition costs companies 18 months’ salary for each manager or professional who leaves, and 6 months’ pay for each hourly employee who leaves. This amounts to major organizational and financial stress, considering that one out of every three employees plans to leave his or her job in the next two years.
Understanding Why Employees Leave:
Why employees leave often puzzles top management. Exit interviews are an ideal way of recording and analyzing the factors that have led employees to leave the organization. They allow an organization to understand the reasons for leaving and underlying issues. However employees never provide appropriate response to the asked questions. So an impartial person should be appointed with whom the employees feel comfortable in expressing their opinions.
Implement retention strategies:
Once the causes of attrition are found, a strategy is to be implemented so as to reduce employee turnover. The most effective strategy is to adopt a holistic approach to dealing with attrition. An effective retention strategy will seek to ensure:
• Attraction and recruitment strategies enable selection of the ‘right’ candidate for each role/organization
• New employees’ initial experiences of the organization are positive
• Appropriate development opportunities are available to employees, and that they are kept aware of their likely career path with the organization
• The organization’s reward strategy reflects the employee drivers.
ROLE OF MANAGER IN EMPLOYEE RETENTION
When asked about why employees leave, low salary comes out to be a common excuse. However, research has shown that people join companies, but leave because of what their managers’ do or don’t do. It is seen that managers who respect and value employees’ competency, pay attention to their aspirations, assure challenging work, value the quality of work life and provided chances for learning have loyal and engaged employees. Therefore, managers and team leaders play an active and vital role in employee retention.
Managers and team leaders can reduce the attrition levels considerably by creating a motivating team culture and improving the relationships with team members. This can be done in a following way:
1. Creating a Motivating Environment:
Team leaders who create motivating environments are likely to keep their team members together for a longer period of time. Motivation does not necessarily have to come through fun events such as parties, celebrations, team outings etc. They can also come through serious events e.g. arranging a talk by the VP of Quality on career opportunities in the field of quality. Employees who look forward to these events and are likely to remain more engaged.
2. Standing up for the Team:
Team leaders are closest to their team members. While they need to ensure smooth functioning of their teams by implementing management decisions, they also need to educate their managers about the realities on the ground. When agents see the team leader standing up for them, they will have one more reason to stay in the team.
3. Providing coaching:
Everyone wants to be successful in his or her current job. However, not everyone knows how. Therefore, one of the key responsibilities will be providing coaching that is intended to improve the performance of employees. Managers often tend to escape this role by just coaching their employees. However, coaching is followed by monitoring performance and providing feedback on the same.
4. Delegation:
Many team leaders and managers feel that they are the only people who can do a particular task or job. Therefore, they do not delegate their jobs as much as they should. Delegation is a great way to develop competencies.
5. Extra Responsibility:
Giving extra responsibility to employees is another way to get them engaged with the company. However, just giving the extra responsibility does not help. The manager must spend good time teaching the employees of how to manage responsibilities given to them so that they don’t feel over burdened.
6. Focus on future career:
Employees are always concerned about their future career. A manager should focus on showing employees his career ladder. If an employee sees that his current job offers a path towards their future career aspirations, then they are likely to stay longer in the company. Therefore, managers should play the role of career counselors as well.
RETENTION STRATEGIES:
1. Selection:
Retention starts up front, in the selection and hiring of the right employees. This requires not only an assessment of basic job skills, but also an examination of the "softer" issues of motivation, values, and being able to fit into the organization—factors that have a powerful impact on an employee's success and tenure with a company.
2. Leadership:
To a great extent, an employee's experience at a company is shaped by his or her boss. Employees rely on supervisors for everything from communication to promotions and rewards. Not surprisingly, a number of studies show that ineffective supervisors—that is, "bad bosses"—are the largest single factor driving employee turnover. Companies need to select the right people for supervisory positions, and then offer them development opportunities to make sure they continue to enhance their leadership and communication skills.
3. Professional growth:
Today's employees know that a successful career depends on constant learning and on picking up skills and experience that will make them more employable in the open market. That means that access to ongoing training and development is important to them, and a strong incentive to stay with a company. This is a fundamental paradox of employee retention: By preparing people to leave, a company can actually encourage them to stay.
4. Meaningful work and ownership:
People need to know they are making a difference and being effective in their jobs. Expectations and responsibilities need to be clearly defined, so that employees can understand their roles, and see how their jobs are linked to the organization's overall success. Employees must also be involved in determining how work is done, so that they have a sense of ownership and an opportunity to contribute to improvements in the company's performance.
5. Recognition and rewards:
In addition to salary and similar compensation, people appreciate and respond to alternative forms of acknowledgement, such as dinners, awards, comp time, and so forth. To be effective, such recognition should be clearly tied to achievement, and encourage the desired behaviour in individuals or teams.
6. Culture and environment:
It may seem obvious that employees will tend to stay with an organization that makes them feel comfortable—where stress is minimized and they feel valued and respected. However, too many companies still operate with a culture based on control and fear, rather than one that provides well-defined direction and values, and emphasizes care for customers and employees alike.
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