1 / 80

Avoiding Six Dangerous Retention Mistakes Most Companies Make

Avoiding Six Dangerous Retention Mistakes Most Companies Make. Steve Puckett, SPHR Director, Corporate Human Resources. Introduction. Employers facing “Talent Paradox” Relatively high unemployment (peaked in 2010)

Télécharger la présentation

Avoiding Six Dangerous Retention Mistakes Most Companies Make

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Avoiding Six Dangerous Retention Mistakes Most Companies Make Steve Puckett, SPHR Director, Corporate Human Resources

  2. Introduction • Employers facing “Talent Paradox” • Relatively high unemployment (peaked in 2010) • Increasing shortages in areas where attracting and retaining employees is most critical • Loss of high-potential talent • Spike in voluntary turnover after a downturn • Employees advancing careers • Poor morale due to cost cutting measures • Gen Y’s comparing notes

  3. The Cost of Turnover • Can be significant and can result in… • Loss of productivity • Lost institutional knowledge and relationships • Added burdens on employees who must take on more work

  4. The Cost of Turnover • Direct Placement Costs • Accrued paid time off and replacement costs • 50-60% of annual salary • Indirect Placement Costs • Disruptions to team-based work • Lost clients • Decreases in overall service or product quality • 90-200% of annual salary • 12-40% of Pre-tax Income No longer a problem for just “large” employers

  5. Voluntary Turnover • During turbulent times best employees are the ones who leave • A’s first • B’s second • Left with C’s • Poor performers hold on to paychecks until unemployment eligible

  6. 4 Paths to Turnover • Employee is dissatisfied with job • Employee has better alternatives • Employee is following a plan • Employee is leaving without a plan

  7. Additional Factors • Organizational commitment and job satisfaction • Quality of the employee-supervisor relationship • Role clarity • Job design • Workgroup cohesion

  8. Focus Shifted from Talent Retention to Cost Reduction • 2/08 Corporate leaders priority • Retention of top talent • 2/09 Cost reduction/survival • Top talent retention fell to #8 • Once again, retention on our radar screens • Retention of top talent is even more critical as economic conditions improve…

  9. The Six Most Dangerous Retention Mistakes • Focusing on Retention Programs vs. Retention Processes • Supporting a Fear-Based Workplace • Confusing Employee Engagement with Employee Destruction • Not Supporting a Multi-Generational Friendly Workplace • Not Holding Supervisors Accountable for Retention • Not Narrowing the Front Door to Close the Back Door

  10. Critical Retention Mistake #1 Focusing on Retention Programs vs. Retention Processes

  11. Drive Retention from the Top, Because Executives Have Greatest Impact • Include turnover cost in annual report • Include in strategic plans and report monthly • Rewards for meeting goals • Consequences for missing goals • HR must encourage managers to lead with influence rather than authority • Leave authority to senior management - CFO’s must be on board

  12. Think! Sales Service Quality Safety Retention = $Profits $

  13. 10 Strategies of Rethinking Retention - Richard Finnegan • People quit jobs because they can • Companies make it too easy to quit • No effort to hold on to our best • Employees stay for things they get uniquely from you • Build a retention brand different from others • Supervisors build unique relationships that drive retention/turnover • Employees stay for bosses • Employees leave because of bosses • Hold supervisors accountable for achieving retention goals • Add to other measurable objectives

  14. 10 Strategies of Rethinking Retention (con’t.)- Richard Finnegan 5. Develop supervisors to build trust • Relationships Trust Information Success 6. Narrow the front door to close the back door • Focus as much on hiring process as retention 7. Script employees’ first 90 days • Predict how long employees will stay • The most critical time during employment 8. Challenge policies to drive retention(support/hinder) 9. Calculate turnover cost to galvanize retention 10. Drive retention from the top • Executive buy-in is a must

  15. Design Job for Engagement • Capture the minds and hearts of employees • Avoid the Sunday blues • Challenging assignments • The absent Millennial • Goals with feedback • Provide for personal growth and development • Full partnership career development process • Career interest forms

  16. Hidden Obstacles to Retention • Young workers with fewer bills • Growing number of entrepreneurs

  17. Calculate Turnover Cost to Galvanize Retention • Develop formula to calculate turnover cost • Those who have CFO endorsement have greater opportunity for upper management support • Call center identified turnover cost at $12K per employee • Destroyed a $12,000 obsolete piece of computer equipment to drive point • Drove home actual cost • Delivery company put cost of driver turnover at $60K, same value as company truck • Showed video of totaled truck from accident to emphasize cost

  18. Best practice Retention is an on-going process driven by upper management NOT a Band-aid program

  19. Critical Retention Mistake #2 Supporting a Fear-Based Workplace

  20. Managing Through Fear vs. Trust* * Managing Through Trust vs. Fear, a Human Workplace E-Workbook by Liz Ryan

  21. Managing Through Fear vs. Trust* * Managing Through Trust vs. Fear, a Human Workplace E-Workbook by Liz Ryan

  22. During economic downturns most companies focus on keeping employees with good attendance even though their work is substandard. • This seems to be a better alternative to firing the employee and waiting days, weeks or months to replace. • Some bosses are encouraging young workers to buy a new car, boat or other expensive item knowing they would have to keep their job to make the payments.

  23. Beware “Jerk Bosses” • Since 2003, 24 states have introduced legislation on “workplace bullying”, however no laws have been enacted* • 9 states with 12 bills active as of 3/25/13* • 37% of U.S. workers report they were a bully victim – 12% have witnessed workplace bullying* • Verbal attacks from supervisors are generating six figure settlements • Four times more complaints than all forms of harassment combined *According to the Workplace Bullying Institute

  24. Transitioning From a Fear-Based Workplace10 Early Signs of a Fear-Based Workplace • Appearances are everything • Staying longer than boss • Worrying less about quality of work than how they’re perceived • Fear-based discussions rule over work discussions • Who’s stock is falling/rising • Preoccupied with who is invited to meeting vs. meeting agenda • Predicting employee failures

  25. Transitioning From a Fear-Based Workplace (con’t.)10 Early Signs of a Fear-Based Workplace 3. Distrust rules • Off the record conversations • Coded messages • Back alley meetings • Backstabbers thrive…”Would this be your knife in my back?” • Your failure is my success 4. Numbers rule • Total obsession w/ metrics • Employee is sum of numeric goals • Record profits and now cutting back on perks…coffee, etc. • Stock price vs. People price 5. Too many workplace policies • Overdependence of rules vs. common sense • Lengthy, tedious policies • Ordering supplies, scheduling a business trip or vacation day

  26. Transitioning From a Fear-Based Workplace (con’t.)10 Early Signs of a Fear-Based Workplace 6. Management discourages lateral conversations • Fear of employees comparing notes • No one has authority to authorize meetings • Loss of sharing ideas…No Brainstorming Allowed! 7. Information is restricted • Information leads to success • Lack of transparency • Knowledge = Power • Destroys trust

  27. Transitioning From a Fear-Based Workplace (con’t.)10 Early Signs of a Fear-Based Workplace 8. Brown-nosers rule • Kissing up at all levels • “Who said it” rules over “what was said” • Fear-based leaders surround themselves with “yes men” and “yes women” • Right answer vs. truth 9. The boss is so out of touch it’s almost comical…The Office • Focuses on keeping one’s head down, taking no risks and sucking up to anyone in management

  28. Transitioning From a Fear-Based Workplace (con’t.)10 Early Signs of a Fear-Based Workplace 10. Management leads by fear • Most decisions made in secret • Information is given in drips • Company culture “Be glad you have a job, stop whining and get back to work” • Leadership is based on keeping employees in the dark • Major gap between management and employees

  29. Treating Employees Fairly Requires: • Distributing rewards • Respect through interpersonal relationships • Involving employees in difficult decision-making • Offering opportunities to question decisions

  30. Critical Retention Mistake #3 Confusing Employee Engagement with Employee Destruction

  31. Employee Engagement • Employees who are so committed to their jobs that they want to give… Discretionary Effort

  32. 3 Buckets of Employee Engagement- N. Davis, Editor, HR Magazine - G. Sherrill, VP HR, Wal-Mart • 17% actively disengaged • Unhappy • Undermining co-workers • 54% not engaged • Sleepwalking thru workday • Putting in time w/o passion • Fence sitters • 29% work with passion “Do you want the 17% hanging around your 29%? Disengagement costs U.S. economy $300B in lost productivity annually.

  33. 6 Essentials for World Class Employee Engagement • People Senior leaders who excel at • Listening • Knowing and cherishing relationship with employees • Outstanding communication • Work Providing resources for employees to over-achieve • Full Service Recognition Competitive pay Recognition for each generation One size does not fit all • Opportunities Succession planning Training Career development

  34. 6 Essentials for World Class Employee Engagement (con’t.) 5. Quality of Life Issues Targeted benefits Flex schedules 6. Company Culture Live your practices • Diversity • Company reputation • Performance management *Every employee must understand How their job impacts organization’s success

  35. Employees First and Customers Second- Vineet Nayar HCL Technologies • Key is holding management equally accountable to employees • Live in a world of democratic form of government BUT • Autocratic nature of business

  36. Customer Service Focus Must Include Internal Customers • Employee first, Customers second • Satisfied employees display better customer service

  37. How Not To Engage Your Employees • Company President • Not listening to employees • Hires a $100K consultant • Consultant listens to employees • Makes same recommendations • Not embracing 50-50 meetings • 50% informing • 50% listening

  38. Employees Stay Because of Things They Get Uniquely From You • Write down 2-3 employees in your company who are critical to your success • Write answers to these questions for each employee • Could this employee leave you for a better job? • Has the employee ever considered looking elsewhere? • Now write down reasons you feel they have stayed Tangible…shift, schedules Intangible…new skills, good supervisor

  39. Critical Retention Mistake #4 Not Supporting a Multi-Generational Friendly Workforce

  40. Traditionalists (Veterans) • Born before 1945 • Long term careers • Loyal • Tech-challenged • Like structure • Respect authority • Law & order • Hard work…max effort • Duty before pleasure • Honor

  41. Baby Boomers • Born 1945-1964 • Motivated by position, perks and prestige • Competitive • Goal-oriented; equate work & position with self-worth • Independent • Prefer to meet face-to-face • Believe you have to “pay your dues” to get ahead in the workplace

  42. Generation X • Born 1965-1980 • Technologically savvy • Like informality • Learn quickly • Work/life balance • Embrace diversity • Like to work independently • Like casual work environment • Short attention spans

  43. Generation Y (Millennials) • Born after 1980 • Communicate through texting, social networking, email • Family-centric • Embrace diversity • Expect to advance quickly • Attention craving • Participation vs. accomplishments • Good at multitasking

  44. Major Increase in Employment Replacing Exiting Boomers Top Job Opportunities for Next 10 Years* The best paying, fastest growing jobs will grow up around one of the richest and fastest growing segments of the population: the retiring Baby Boomers. *24/7 Wall St.

  45. Generational Expectations of Succession Planning

  46. How Generations View Change

  47. Using Social Media to Engage Workers • Gen Y will make up 36% of U.S. workforce by 2014; 46% by 2020 • Opportunities for career progression • Opportunities for personal development • Collaborative work environment • Flatter them; motivate them • Employers must embrace social media to enhance learning opportunities

  48. Washington Post Survey3400 SurveyedEmployee Retention Desires

  49. Critical Retention Mistake #5 Not Holding Supervisors Accountable for Retention

  50. Hold Supervisors Accountable for Achieving Retention Goals • All levels of supervisors should have retention goals • Should be weighted same as productivity, safety, other goals • Talent Keepers recent survey • Only 14% supervisors have retention goals

More Related