Employee Retention Issues? How to Keep Your BEST (Part 2)

Part 2 of 2-Part Series on the Important and Timely Issue of Employee Retention In Part 1 of Employee Retention Issues you took that long hard look in the mirror and realized you have a serious employee retention problem, and more than likely it is your fault as a leader. Just as you realize this, your bad employee retention dream becomes a nightmare. Your best salesperson resigns out of the blue. In a blink of the eye what you finally identified as a top strategic concern is now a raging fire you need to put out, even though you have a busy schedule and other initiatives underway. Now you not only have to find a replacement for this talented employee, which is incredibly difficult when skilled professionals of this caliber are currently in high demand, but you also have to temper the impact their departure will have on the rest of your team— who may be already exploring other career options. Whenever someone walks out the door, people notice, especially when they are good. Morale takes a hit, and it will push those not already looking for a way out to begin doing so. This is exactly why employee retention and job satisfaction should be placed at the top of your priorities list, and why finding unbiased professional advisory to do this so is critical. Why do I need an unbiased and independent advisor? Have you ever walked into the same room many times without seeing that someone left trash on the floor? Have you failed to notice that your significant other or a daily coworker got a haircut? These oversights are natural for us all. We get too close to our daily environment to see it objectively or with clear eyes. You may have extremely bright HR leaders on your team, but they may also be too close to the situation to provide the objectivity and tough honesty necessary to define retention strategies. Remember, you have already identified leadership as the culprit. Now asking that current leadership to figure out the answers treads on egos, fear of telling you your wrong, or concern of losing face with other employees. What retention strategies do I look for with an advisor? Before identifying a strategy with an advisor, you will be asked to begin looking at things from the employee’s point of view. It is imperative that you get out of your own way! All professionals are different with unique sets of behaviors, desires and goals. Yes, employees want to know they are being properly compensated at or above market rates. More importantly, employees want to feel they are appreciated and treated fairly. They want to be challenged and excited by their job. They then want the autonomy to do it. Provide full transparency to your advisor(s) in every area of the employer-employee relationship within your company. Only in approaching the situation in such an open and honest manner will you be able to embrace the key strategies that will improve your organization’s employee retention and boost employee morale. How? The BEST Employee Retention Process An effective employee retention program addresses all of these concerns and beyond. In fact, your efforts should start with the HIRING PROCESS… HIRE: Your recruiting and interviewing process sets the tone for an employee’s tenure at the company. Provide full transparency to candidates about the pros AND cons of your company, culture, products and their role. Clearly identify the role expectations with specific metrics they will be held accountable for. Doing so dramatically lessens the potential of a new employee feeling disenchanted that they were sold a “bill of goods” when being caught by surprise by something that should have been shared up front. TRAIN: Onboarding — Every new hire should be set up for success from the first day of work through 90 days and beyond. Develop an onboarding process where new employees learn about the job, the culture, how to contribute and thrive. Create an environment that fosters ongoing discussions, goals, and opportunities to address questions and issues. Having something as simple as their business cards and workstation ready is a small way to show your commitment to their success. Mentorship — Pairing a new employee with a mentor will increase their ability to learn the ropes from a veteran with a wealth of resources and experience. Reverse mentoring is equally as beneficial in this process as the new hire offers a fresh viewpoint to an experienced staff. Training and Development — Ask each of your direct reports about their short- and long-term goals to determine how you can help achieve them and invest in appropriate professional growth opportunities for employees. MOTIVATE: Communication and Feedback — Keeping open lines of communication is essential for employee retention. Your direct reports should feel that they can come to you with ANYTHING, and likewise, they expect you to be honest with them about improvements they need to make in their own performance. YOU need to connect with your people and not vice versa proactively! Work-life Balance — What message is your company culture sending? Burnout is very real. A healthy work-life balance is essential, and people need to know that management not only understands the importance butalso supports it. Dealing with Change —If your company is going through a merger, layoffs, or other big changes, keep your entire team informed as much as you can to avoid feeding the rumor mill. Getting out in front of it and accentuating the positive will keep morale and motivation strong. Promote Teamwork —Foster a culture of collaboration that accommodates individuals’ working styles and lets their talents shine. Clarify team objectives, business goals, roles, and inspire everyone to contribute ideas and solutions. REWARD: Employee Compensation — It is essential in this competitive labor market for companies to offer attractive compensation packages. That includes salaries, of course, but also bonuses, paid time-off, health benefits, retirement plans and all the other perks that can distinguish one workplace from another. Recognition and Rewards Systems: Make it a
Employee Retention Issues? Look in the Mirror (Part 1)

Part 1 of 2-Part Series on the Important and Timely Issue of Employee Retention There is a saying that employees don’t leave companies, they leave managers. Today, they are leaving more than ever. According to recent U.S. Department of Labor statistics, the average tenure of an employee in the U.S. is now only 1.5 years. We have ample statistics that clearly indicate money is NOT the reason for employees leaving a company. They do not resign on impulse, or in a “Jerry Maguire” moment of anger, delirium, or a personal epiphany. When they decided to join your company, they initially saw the opportunity as a great fit for their career and wanted it to be a successful long run. Unfortunately, somehow, the wheels they thought fit came off. If you take the time to thoroughly investigate the true reason for their leaving – AND YOU SHOULD – you will likely uncover that it’s not the products, customers, industry, competition, location, coworkers, commit,e or tools they have at their disposal. IT’S THE LEADERSHIP! When employees or ex-employees grumble about “culture,” or that “communication is poor,” or express frustration at the lack of career progression and professional development, they are telling you that it is the leadership they are unhappy with and leaving. Clearly, company leaders are responsible for setting the culture, communication, and career development within a business. For the sake of your company, and more importantly, your people, take one moment as a leader and be brutally honest with yourself in answering these questions: Do you find yourself behind closed doors a good portion of the day as you strategize or execute in private? Do you put your personal gain over your employee’s best interest when making decisions? Do you consistently affix blame on the departing employee for “not following the process” or working hard or smart enough? (Have you ever blamed yourself?) Do you promise the “stars” in career progression, but consistently find an excuse why the company cannot deliver them? It’s time to look in the mirror and answer these questions. A “company” is a legal entity. A “business” is a collection of assets and liabilities. No one resigns because of that. It’s the decisions, the motivation, the atmosphere, the ethics, the support, the training, the vision, and the direction set by leadership that will properly engage employees to stay with you in a highly productive manner. If they are not engaged, then take another look in that mirror! The next time an employee resigns, resist your patterned behavior to shrug it off as “another underperformer who didn’t follow the process.” Take a moment to reflect in that mirror on what it actually is they are resigning from. Too many times it is not the departing employee who doesn’t “get it.” It’s not the company they are leaving. IT IS YOU! So you looked in the mirror and – employee retention issues are your fault. Admitting that is a good first step. Should you act immediately to improve employee retention challenges? Can’t you just add it to the projects scheduled later this year?” Check out these two recent findings published in a recent Kiplinger report as to why you should act NOW. Unemployment held at 4.1% in December 2017. Look for 3.8% by the end of 2018 as it becomes harder for employers to find suitable candidates. The short-term unemployment rate (less than six months) has fallen to its lowest level in 65 years. Further proof of a tightening labor market is evidenced by lots of job openings in certain sectors, including health care, food services, construction, transportation, and warehousing. Openings in health care and food services are at their highest level in 15 years. If you lead a company of 500 or fewer employees, the urgency is heightened. The shortage of qualified workers is starting to squeeze small businesses. In industries such as manufacturing and construction, many small firms are finding themselves forced to hike wages. Not just to lure new hires… many smalls need to pay more just to keep their current workers from jumping ship. The problem will only worsen later this year. The economy is accelerating, and many small businesses want to expand in order to cash in on rising orders. But those expansion plans will bump up against the constraints of a tight job market. What are retention or engagement warning indicators you should be looking for? According to the U.S. Department of Labor: 55% of Employees are currently searching for other job opportunities. 40% of organizations report that losing key employees is the top concern. 33% of new hires quit their job in the first 6 months. 33% of employees know within 1 week if they will stay with that company long term. What do the statistics look like for companies with highly engaged employees? They are: 2x more likely to remain with their current company. 3x as likely to do something good for the company that was not asked of them. In addition: 51% are more likely to have engaged employees when companies’ values are properly communicated, clear, and understood by all. 78% of employees communicate they would retain/stay longer with their current company if they could see a clear career path for their career. “So, how much is subpar employee retention costing my business?” Employee turnover costs include more than job posting fees and recruiter commissions. Some costs include, but are not limited to: Revenue loss from unfilled Jobs. Pre- & Post-employment administrative functions and expenses. Pre-employment screening and interviews for replacement hires. Training Costs for new hires and promotions. Loss of Productivity due to overworked remaining employees. Loss of knowledge transfer opportunity. Click here for the full list of 20 Retention Cost Metrics available upon request. To help you identify your company’s specific cost of retention, we found this calculator on bonus.ly that you may find helpful. Just remember to check the “assumptions” that these automated calculators use to make sure they accurately represent your company’s situation. Up Next: Click Here