Grant Kieckhaefer | Content Strategist | March 22, 2024
Retaining valuable employees is a top priority for every organization, but it’s especially critical in sectors that face severe worker shortages, such as construction, education, healthcare, and transportation. Leaders must take steps to improve employee retention to stay competitive—and, ultimately, to stay in business. To help you take the right actions, here’s what you need to know about employee retention, including what it is, why it’s so important, and how you can improve it.
Employee retention refers to an organization’s ability to hold on to its people and reduce turnover. Employers can improve their retention numbers in several ways, including by offering competitive compensation and benefits, creating a positive workplace culture, giving workers some flexibility with where and when they work, formally recognizing high achievers, and promoting work-life balance.
Key Takeaways
Too many employers only pay lip service to the idea that their people are their greatest asset. But the most astute employers nurture their people and make employee retention one of the company’s metrics and values. Retaining skilled employees is key to every organization’s ability to execute efficiently, innovate, and maintain a competitive advantage. A company with high employee retention spends less time and money finding and training new hires and hangs on to valuable institutional knowledge—both of which can help the business succeed.
Retaining employees and keeping staff turnover low requires a strong focus on employee engagement and fulfillment. A 2022 global survey by Gallup found that more than half of employees expressed some level of interest in leaving their jobs, 59% were “quiet quitting” (not engaged at work), and 18% were “loud quitting” (actively disengaged). When asked what could change to improve their workplace, 41% of survey respondents cited engagement or culture (including better recognition and communications), 28% cited pay and benefits, and 16% cited well-being (including less overtime and the ability to work from home). Gallup estimates that low engagement levels cost the global economy US$8.8 trillion.
Employee retention plays a large role in the success and sustainability of every organization. Companies with high employee turnover risk financial instability because the cost of recruiting, onboarding, and training new hires can be considerable. So too are the opportunity costs of losing business because of understaffing. Employee morale can also suffer when people see their colleagues leave, especially if they’re forced to take on extra work as a result. Poor morale saps productivity. Meanwhile, the loss of institutional knowledge and continuity can slow down a business at the most critical times. It’s during moments of crisis or emerging opportunity that experienced team members shine brightest, seeing what needs to be done and knowing when and how to take the right actions. Companies with poor retention risk losing the valuable insights and proven skills those veteran employees bring.
High turnover rates can also damage a company's reputation. Customers may perceive the steady stream of new faces as a sign of instability, which can erode brand loyalty and negatively impact sales. By retaining top-performing and highly skilled employees, companies stand a better chance of maintaining or improving productivity, efficiency, and innovation.
Employee attrition refers to the departure of workers from a company due to events such as resignation and retirement. High employee attrition means a company has poor employee retention. Exit interviews are a valuable way to understand why employees are leaving. Departing employees will likely cite one or more of the following reasons:
The employee experience is the cumulative result of the daily interactions employees have within an organization’s culture and work environment. It encompasses the entire employee lifecycle, from recruitment through onboarding, training, professional development, performance evaluations, promotions, exiting, and even their experience as an alum.
The employee experience is shaped by a wide range of factors, including first impressions during onboarding and training, employee-manager relationships and communications, benefits such as paid time off and healthcare, and career development opportunities, including promotions, salary increases, and new assignments. Employee retention is closely related to the employee experience. Quality workers are more likely to leave their jobs if their day-to-day experiences with colleagues and management don’t match their expectations.
Technology can improve the employee experience, providing easy access to the information people need to do their jobs and navigate HR issues. Having an effective manager who communicates well can significantly increase the chance an employee stays with a company. Companies also build loyalty and strong retention by coming through at key moments of an employee’s life, including personal ones, such as the birth or adoption of a child or the death of a loved one, and by providing professional support—for example, performance reviews and educational opportunities. All these elements factor into the employee experience. An excellent employee experience is a powerful reason for people to stay with an organization for a long time.
Here are several of the benefits organizations stand to reap from keeping their most talented and skilled people.
In the current job market, individuals have more employment choices than ever before. Workers feel empowered to find not only higher-paying jobs but also ones that offer them more career growth and a greater sense of purpose. Here are 10 best practices employers should consider to keep their top people from moving on.
Employers typically calculate retention rates annually, dividing the number of employees that stayed with the company for the duration of the period by the number of employees at the beginning of the period and then multiplying that number by 100.
Employee retention rate = [ (number of employees at end of period – number of new employees during period) / number of employees at start of period ] × 100
To deliver on the 10 employee retention best practices cited above, it’s important for employers to leverage the latest human capital management (HCM) applications to help them manage recruiting, onboarding, employee engagement, training, performance management, payroll, benefits, and other HR processes. Here is an example of how one company uses those tools.
Silver Fern Farms: Silver Fern Farms, a New Zealand—based food manufacturer with 7,000 employees, replaced its homegrown HR tools with a single cloud-based HCM system, Oracle Fusion Cloud HCM, to improve several HR processes. For example, through an initiative linking Oracle Learning and LinkedIn Learning, company executives can more easily track employee development and provide opportunities to enhance skills, which in turn has boosted employee engagement. Using Oracle Workforce Compensation, Silver Fern Farms streamlined its annual review of workforce remuneration, stating that it reduced that process by 10 days while allowing multiple compensation processes to be handled simultaneously. Using the performance management application, half of the company’s permanent staff outlined their impact and development goals by the end of the first year the application was implemented. The application also promotes organizational transparency and effective internal communications.
Employees expect their work experiences to be positive, collaborative, rewarding, and meaningful. Oracle ME, part of the Oracle Fusion Cloud HCM suite of applications, is a complete employee experience platform that guides employees through professional and personal activities, delivers responsive HR service support, and streamlines communication across the organization. It provides tools to strengthen the manager-employee relationship and connect employees with their peers to nurture a greater sense of workplace belonging that encourages people to stay.
Which types of companies should use employee retention strategies?
Any business looking for ways to keep its top talent and stay competitive can benefit from implementing employee retention strategies.
How do I know if my employee retention strategies are working?
One indicator is to compare your organization’s retention rate at the time the retention strategy was implemented with what it is now. Another way is to gather feedback from current employees and those who are leaving the organization.
How does employee experience relate to employee retention?
Organizations that create a positive, collaborative work environment for their employees generally have higher retention rates than those that don’t.
Would it be more effective to hire new employees versus trying to retain them?
In general, it costs far less for organizations to retain existing employees than to recruit, onboard, and train new ones, especially in industries where the demand exceeds the supply of qualified candidates.
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