More attention on retention needed, Hays survey
More attention on retention needed, Hays survey
Despite perceived economic uncertainty more than 40 per cent of New Zealanders will leave their employer in the first one to two years, according to recruiting experts Hays.
Hays recently conducted a web survey of more than 400 candidates across the country to reveal their job hopping habits. The survey found that 41 per cent change jobs every one to two years, while 37 per cent leave their employer every two to four years. Meanwhile, 22 per cent indicated they will stay with their employer for five or more years.
“A strategy for retaining your top talent and curbing the turnover of staff has many positive outcomes for a business,” says Jason Walker, Managing Director Hays in New Zealand. “Firstly, it can help to prevent the cost of unexpectedly having to replace good staff. As most hiring managers know, the cost of such turnover adds significantly to a company's expenses.
“While it is difficult to fully calculate the cost of turnover it can often equate to 25 per cent of the average employee salary – and this is a conservative estimate.
“When an employee leaves there is the loss of not only valuable industry knowledge which can contribute to your businesses’ future success, but knowledge about your company, your customers, current projects and past history, which can take a long time to regain.”
According to Jason, customer and client relations can also be affected by staff turnover and the effect can be felt throughout an entire organisation with other staff having to pick up the workload.
“However, the rate of turnover can be reduced by implementing a few integral but simple retention strategies – and they don’t always involve money. Candidates are also looking for good management, clear career paths and challenges, or even perhaps good relationships at work, to keep them engaged and satisfied with their roles and their employers,” he says.
Hays’ top 5 retention tips:
1. Managing
performance
This is the key to an employer’s
retention strategy. Performance reviews are a simple but
essential process which should take place regularly and
managers need to be committed to the practice. Formal
performance feedback is also an excellent opportunity to
ensure talent is engaged, but remember to make sure the
system is user friendly for everyone involved. And be sure
to communicate clearly with employees. Setting clear
objectives and deadlines will mean your employees can be
comfortable knowing what is expected and when they should
deliver it.
2. Your leaders
Front line managers
are the key to retention, so you should definitely evaluate
the quality of yours. Remember, people join companies and
leave people. Your managers are at the coal face. They
should be good at motivating and inspiring their team
members, managing performance - good and bad, and setting
useful goals. They also need to provide useful performance
feedback, including positive reinforcement or suggesting
solutions when things have not gone well. So, employers may
also need to look at what their organisation does to develop
its managers as part of their retention
strategy.
3. Good relationships
If an employee
has good relationships at work they are more likely to stay
with a company and feel engaged with their work. So
employers need to focus on how they understand, communicate
and build good relationships with their employees. It’s a
good idea to ask employees for their opinion on key
engagement factors such as career progression and
performance feedback through employee opinion surveys,
online forums or regular reviews. And it is best not to
assume anything about an employee’s career path as there
can be many factors at play – just maintain open and
honest communication to find out what your employees’
goals are.
4. Career pathways
Employees can
become stale and bored without the proper career development
– and this is often a reason why candidates look elsewhere
for work. As different organisations have different
parameters within which they must work, career development
does not always mean promotion, although it certainly can.
Can you instead offer additional responsibility, or the
opportunity to supervise other employees? Could an employee
coach and train others, manage projects or chair
meetings?
5. Training & development
Courses
aren’t always what training and development is about, nor
do they have to take place in a formal classroom.
Mentorships are a useful retention tool and can also be used
to pass on corporate insight to other employees. One-on-one
training and taking on additional duties can also be just as
effective. Investing in your employees’ skills development
allows them to be the best they can be, which has obvious
rewards for both them and you.
Hays, the world’s leading recruiting experts in qualified, professional and skilled people.
About Hays
Hays is the leading
global specialist recruiting group. We are the expert at
recruiting qualified, professional and skilled people
worldwide, being the market leader in Asia Pacific and the
UK and one of the market leaders in Continental Europe and
Latin America. We operate across the private and public
sectors, dealing in permanent positions, contract roles and
temporary assignments.
Hays employs 7,800 staff operating from 245 offices in 33 countries across 20 specialisms. For the year ended 30 June 2012, Hays reported net fees of £734 million and operating profit (pre-exceptional items) of £128 million. Hays placed around 55,000 candidates into permanent jobs and around 182,000 people into temporary assignments. 33% of Group net fees were generated in Asia Pacific.
Hays operates in the following countries: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Chile, China, the Czech Republic, Denmark, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UAE, the UK and the USA.
ENDS