| The
Cost of Staff Attrition Nearly
25 per cent of Australian employees plan to look for a new job in the next twelve
months, according to 'What's Working' - the Mercer Survey of Australia at Work,
conducted by Mercer Human Resource Consulting in March 2004. And,
the international HR Group adds, even if only half of those people saying they're
contemplating leaving do in fact leave, Australian business face a potentially
huge cost - ranging somewhere between $30 billion and $89 billion. To add to this,
Mercer Associate, Randall Pearce, says that this is a conservative estimate since
an additional eight per cent of Australian employees are also considering leaving,
but not within the next year. On a more micro level, reviewing
the cost of staff turnover for individual companies is perhaps even more disturbing.
Mercer estimates that staff turnover costs range from 50% to 150% of annual salary
depending on the role and level of seniority. So, in a company with 250 employees
earning an average annual salary of $49,000 each, and using Mercer's forecast
2004 staff attrition rate of 25%, the cost of turnover for that company would
be more than $3 million per year. Furthermore, if that same company had annual
revenues of $30 million and a profit margin of 12%, staff attrition would represent
10% of total revenues - and 85% of profits. It is clear
from these figures that the development of effective staff retention strategies
should be high on the agenda for every organisation across Australia. Tip
Of The Iceberg
The figures from the Mercer
survey are valid, but some experts argue that they are only the
tip of the iceberg.
Organisations need to factor in the costs of decreased
productivity, lost investment in training and development, loss
of revenue for key sales or management executives, administration
set up, equipment purchase, recruitment costs, the new employee's
induction into the business culture, management downtime in interviewing
candidates, legal fees and payout commitments. There can be a lot
more to staff turnover costs than first meets the eye, which is
why it's so important to recruit the right candidate first off and
then do what you can to keep them challenged and satisfied.
The Link Between Retention
And Company Performance Research confirms a clear link
between effective staff retention strategies and well-performing companies. If
you take Fortune Magazine's list of 'the 100 best employers' (many of whom have
exceptional staff retention records), 80 per cent have outperformed their peers
on the Standard and Poors Index. Furthermore, an Aberdeen Group Report in 2001
found that top performing employees deliver 12 times the value of mid-level performers.
It's obvious. Happy employees are motivated, remain loyal and employers reap the
rewards. "The most successful companies globally are
all staffed by motivated people - motivated people are consistently core to high
performance," says Michael Rennie, director with McKinsey & Company.
"Take
my 20 best people and, virtually overnight, Microsoft becomes a mediocre company."
-
Bill Gates
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So, How Do You
Keep Employees Happy And Motivated? Here are seven
practical initiatives you can take to help keep your staff happy, motivated and
recognised: - Listen to your people - make your
employees feel you are interested in them personally. Use surveys, individual
or group meetings to gain the insights and information to help you plan your retention
strategy around areas most important and relevant to your staff.
- Reward
and Recognise - build your employees' esteem. Show them you value their opinion
and ideas and that you're watching their performance. Sometimes a simple monthly
'Star Performer' Award handed out by a Divisional Manager in front of co-workers
can have a far greater impact on motivation and retention than any financial reward.
- Career development - craft career development
planning strategies for individual employees that align with each employee's needs
and desire for future growth. It may mean keeping certifications up to date, sending
employees to seminars, or just providing subscriptions to magazines and journals.
Whatever the effort you make to help this person's career it will long be remembered.
- Provide
challenges - employees should be given new job assignments to keep them alert
and challenged. What better reason to stay with a company than to snare a new
job or project assignment? Providing employees with challenge and excitement can
encourage them to stay; they don't want to risk missing a good opportunity.
- Work/life
balance - consider providing staff with the flexibility to achieve a satisfactory
mix of time at home and on the job. Perhaps offer reduced working hours or work-from-home
options, where possible. The French, for example, have adopted a 35-hour working
week as a mandatory part of society, and employees are reporting a better work-life
balance as a result. The message? Long hours and satisfied employees rarely mix.
- Salary
Watch - McKinsey's and other recent research studies confirm what management
gurus have maintained for decades: as long as salary is in the general range for
a particular role, most employees will not consider it the deciding factor in
job satisfaction. So, check to see you are paying at an appropriate level. And
consider creative salary options that align with the individual's own needs such
as childcare, gym memberships and 'work from home' days.
- Mentors
- partner inexperienced and experienced workers together so both can benefit from
the other person's knowledge. The experienced worker may impart technical skills,
for example, while the new person may bring social/cultural lessons to the relationship.
According to Fortune magazine, a century ago the
most valuable US corporation was US Steel, whose primary assets were smokestack
factories. Today's most valuable corporation is Microsoft, whose most valuable
assets go home every night. Companies that want those assets to return every morning
must pay attention to the workplace. Don't let your investment
in staff and the massive amount of knowledge they possess slip through your fingers.
Take the time and energy and invest in keeping your staff happy, motivated and
productive, and you'll reap the rewards.
Trial an Australian-built
staff survey tool:
PeoplePulse is an Australian built online feedback
and survey tool used extensively by Australian and New Zealand based
organisations to discover the real drivers and motivations of your
workforce. The tool can also be used by HR to conduct cost effective
staff climate surveys, online exit interview surveys. training needs
analysis surveys, and 'new starter' feedback surveys to name a few
popular uses.

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above demonstration request form was powered by PeoplePulse. Article
written by Maggie McPhillips-Jacka and Paul Quinn of Quinntessential.
Article reference: 'Prevent high staff turnover with
these tactics'- http://techrepublic.com.com
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