Employee
Retention Article
How to Reduce Employee Turnover
Gregory P.
Smith
It
costs $4-7K to replace an hourly worker and up to $40K to replace a
midlevel, salaried employee. Replacement costs usually are 2.5 times the
salary of the individual. The costs associated with turnover include
lost customers, business, and damaged morale. In addition are the hard
costs of time spent in advertising, screening, verifying credentials,
references, interviewing, hiring, and training the new employee just to
get back to where you started.
This
expenditure of time and money does nothing to give a manager or an
organization a competitive edge. However, despite these known costs and
loss of productivity, a research company reports 54 percent of
businesses do nothing to create a high-retention culture or reduce high
employee turnover. The revolving door keeps moving – employees leave,
managers interview and hire more workers, allowing competitors with low
turnover to focus more on productivity.
People want
to be part of an organization that stands for something that provides
them with personal fulfillment and meaning. Singapore International
Airlines (SIA) prides itself on customer service. They improved
retention ratios by placing more time and effort in the selection and
training of employees and aligned the training to support the
organization’s mission goal of providing excellent customer service.
Today when customers are happy, they express their appreciation to SIA
employees who are proud of being on the SIA team.
General
Ulysses S. Grant once said, "There are no bad soldiers, only bad
leaders" to remind us that poor leaders and managers can be a problem
and on-going leadership development is critical.
Businesses
must focus on workplace flexibility to stay competitive. The downsized,
super competitive work environment of today often forces employees into
putting their family in a secondary position. The Randstad North
American Employee Review recently found in a survey that only 34 percent
of the American employees now want a traditional full-time job.
Communication talks. In 1995, the Boeing Company suffered its
second-longest walkout ever when the Machinists Union led a 69-day
strike. Boeing lost hundreds of millions of dollars and experienced big
customer service headaches when they missed the delivery dates on 36
planes. Boeing’s President, Frank Shrontz, later acknowledged the strike
was a result of management’s failure to communicate with the workforce
about their concerns. UPS provides another example where they lost over
$700
million in revenues and customer trust when UPS failed to communicate with
their workforce.
People want
to enjoy their work environment. Some work is boring, but findings
suggest providing employees something to talk about – future goals they
can conquer or results that have been achieved. Sports teams keep
players motivated. Often organizational bureaucracy kills the spirit and
ideas of employees who want to contribute.
Rewards and
recognition are critical to achieving organizational goals. All humans
need to feel appreciated. In a survey conducted by Robert Half
International, the results showed that recognition and praise was the
number one reason employees stay in their work environment with fair
compensation being secondary. Smith’s book provides low-cost, easy to
implement, "fair" recognition programs that keep people focused and
heading in the right direction.
Employees
migrate to training and career development opportunities. If employees
are blocked into a specific or dead end job with no opportunity for
promotion or variety, they will leave – especially Gen X and Gen Y
workers. An ASTD study showed that leading-edge companies trained 86
percent of their employees whereas average companies trained only 74
percent. Companies that invest in workplace learning yielded higher net
sales and gross profits per employee.
Greg Smith is a nationally recognized
speaker, author, and business performance consultant. He has written
numerous books and has been featured on television programs such as
Bloomberg News, PBS television, and in publications including
Business Week, Kiplingers, President and CEO, and the Christian
Science Monitor. He is the President and "Captain of the Ship" of a
management-consulting firm, Chart Your Course International, located in
Atlanta, Georgia. Phone him at 770-860-9464. More articles available:
http://www.chartcourse.com |