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Retaining your team
The CIPD estimates the cost of an employee leaving at £4,625 - and
£5,000 for managers. Research shows that average job tenure is two years
four months, and that 40% of new recruits leave within one year, and 20% stay for
less than six months. So attrition may represent a substantial cost to
your organisation!
Use the BusinessHR guide to keep track of your turnover and identify potential
problem areas requiring action.
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Measure and track labour turnover and stability. Do this either monthly or quarterly.
This way, you will know what to tackle and will have a measure in place to track
improvements:
| Labour turnover = |
Total number of leavers during the period x 100 |
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Total number of positions in the organisation |
Stability index = % of leavers with less than six months' service
If your stability index is high, review your recruitment processes.
It is sometimes the case that employees leave because they have been poorly
recruited and given false expectations. The best example is employees who are
over-sold the job and the business and who, on joining, are disappointed
with what they find, hence the psychological contract  suffers.
Other examples is where the fit between the person's skills and what
is needed is too large and cannot be resolved by training.
If your stability index is high, this could also indicate a need to improve your
induction processes. A high stability index says that you are losing
employees with short service and this could be because they are not being effectively
inducted or introduced into your organisation.
Find out why people are leaving.
You can do this in one of two ways, either by
conducting an exit interview  , or by asking them to complete a
short questionnaire. Explain why you want the information - that you intend to
use it to make improvements in the future and that you would greatly appreciate their
honest response.
Some employers prefer to use either HR departments, or
employees outside of the immediate working area to do this, or even
use external consultants, in an attempt to encourage employees
to really "open up" and give truthful answers and comments on their
reasons for leaving.
Read our guide on exit interviews and use our
exit interview form to gather your data.
Look at what it's telling you and, even more meaningfully, look at trends.
The exit interviews  will provide you with some useful data.
However, it's invariably too late to retain someone when they get to the stage
of handing in their notice. Therefore, it is a good idea to conduct an
employee satisfaction survey on a regular basis.
This will give you information on the opinions of your entire workforce
- what they are satisfied and dissatisfied with. Conduct the surveys six monthly
or annually. Study the results and take actions to improve the areas
highlighted as sources of employee dissatisfaction.
- Be particularly careful to retain your star performers - those who do a
really great job. Be careful not to discriminate
, but clearly
these employees are your most valuable and should be retained at all costs.
- When you measure labour turnover, you may find it useful to separate
out those who leave for reasons outside your control (moving house,
retiring etc.) from those which you could have avoided.
- Typical reasons for leaving are listed below with possible remedies:
| Reason for leaving |
Remedy |
| Low pay |
Benchmark your pay with other companies who compete in the same labour market
and make adjustments where you are behind the market.
Remember that low pay is rarely the only reason why people
leave, so delve for the others.
Sometimes people will make pay comparisons on basic pay only.
You may provide additional benefits eg bonus opportunities, health cover,
which make the total package more attractive. An annual
"benefits statement" listing these, and specifying their value, may
help. Alternatively, if you are providing benefits which are of
little value to your employees and which they do not appreciate, you
may wish to consider offering a flexible benefits
scheme. |
| Lack of involvement |
This is a popular one. Lack of involvement can be the biggest
demotivator. Ask the opinions of all your employees and involve them in
areas that affect them.
Even more importantly, listen to what they have to say and take
on board their ideas, or tell them why not.
Consider introducing an employee suggestion scheme where great
ideas to improve the business are invited and rewarded if acted
upon. |
| Hours of work |
Try to be flexible, if you can, to accommodate the working
hours that suit your employees as well as you. |
| Working environment |
Ask your employees to think of ways in which the working
environment could be improved. Give them a budget (which could be
zero - you can often make improvements without spending money). |
| Job content |
This is also a popular one. Use the appraisal
process to ensure that regular discussions take place with each of your
employees about them, their job and their plans. Find ways to enrich jobs
for people who need a greater challenge - give them projects, involve
them in other areas, delegate areas of responsibility etc. |
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