Extracted from Forbes
By: Lewis Efron
There’s
a saying that employees don’t leave companies, they leave managers – and today
they are leaving more often than ever. According to recent Department of Labor
statics, the average tenure of an employee in the U.S. is now only 1.5 years.
What do these numbers mean? Are managers doing that bad of a job engaging and
retaining their people. Is this churn and burn dynamic the new norm?
Wherever
the macro trends are headed, the ability to engage and retain talented
employees is a critical skill for managers. Here are six reasons good employees
quit you and how to keep them – none of which involves throwing a pile of money
around:
1) No Vision
Most
employees don’t get out of bed each morning trying to hit a profit number. In
the majority of companies there are only a handful of people that truly care
about it or, in some cases, even understand exactly what it means to hit that
number. As a manager, don’t confuse your financial objectives with vision.
Vision feeds financials and not the other way around.
For
example, Walt Disney
DIS +1.39% was the master
of painting a compelling vision of the future. He dreamed up Disneyland
while his two young daughters were riding the carousel at Griffith Park in Los
Angeles. Sitting on a park bench with other parents, he envisioned a place
where both children and adults could play together. Today, Walt Disney’s vision
is worth $128 billion
and is his company is the largest media conglomerate in the world. Successful
managers sell their employees on a vision of the future.
2) No Connection To The Big Picture
Gallup’s Q12
employee engagement survey asks the following question: “The mission or
purpose of my company makes me feel my job is important.” Their
extensive research shows that there is a direct
correlation between how employees rate that one question and
employee retention, customer metrics, productivity, and profitability. Gallup
concludes that “The best workplaces give their employees a sense of purpose,
help them feel they belong, and enable them to make a difference.”
One
example of this dynamic is Google
GOOG +1.25%. While almost
no one understands exactly how Google’s search engine works, its mission is
clear: “to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible
and useful.” It is a simple, actionable, and meaningful connection to the huge
company. Successful companies and managers understand that business strategies
may change, but a mission does not.
3) No Empathy
No
one joining the workforce today expects to get a gold Rolex after 50 years with
the same company. Employers let hundreds and thousands of people go each year
while employees are just as likely to leave companies for other opportunities.
Generally speaking, there is very little loyalty on either side. But there is
an almost ridiculously simple and inexpensive solution for that problem: Take
the time to listen to your people.
This
is not just talk therapy – they should leave the conversation believing that
you will take whatever action may be helpful and possible or at least logically
explain why nothing can be done. But by leaving your door open to employee
concerns and suggestions, leaders encourage them to feel that they have a stake
in an organization that considers them important and cares enough to listen.
4) No (Effective) Motivation
In
the 1990s, I spent several years working as a producer and director of Off
Broadway productions. This wasn’t particularly lucrative work and I had to take
on waiter jobs to pay my rent. But for theater aficionados like me, waiting
tables was just a side job to enable me to do what I loved. In what I
considered my “real work,” the rewards frequently consisted of internal
gratification or audience applause. I certainly wouldn’t have turned down a big
payday, but I could walk away from a poorly paid performance satisfied that I
had done good work.
On
the other hand, as a waiter I measured my success in cash, by the tips I had
made. I rarely ended a poorly paid shift simply happy to have provided really
good service. What’s more, because my job as a waiter offered nothing more than
an opportunity to walk away with cash in hand, my connection to my employer was
also monetized – a surprisingly weak connection.
In his
2009 book Drive,
author Daniel Pink examined decades of social experiments that described the
phenomenon that I had experienced in terms of “extrinsic” and “intrinsic”
motivators. The “extrinsic” motivators consist of traditional carrot and stick
rewards such as cash bonuses or punishment – the reward environment in which
waiters work.
The
“intrinsic” motivators are internal desires to do good work or create a
successful product – the goal of many people working in the theatre. Pink’s
argument is that, in the modern workplace, the “extrinsic” system of rewards is
often a less effective motivator, but one on which too many managers still
rely. In fact, there is no greater myth in managing a team or company than
believing financial compensation is a sufficient incentive to engage and retain
top talent and drive high performance.
5) No Future
5) No Future
In
her Forbes article “What Employers
Need To Know About The Class of 2012,” Jacquelyn Smith cites a
recent study that shows that the majority of graduating students are looking
for career advancement over anything else. This is certainly not a new concept,
but a big disconnect from today’s burn and churn, transient employment market.
Creating
career paths that are well communicated and understood by employees is not
something most companies do well. Even in the best-case scenario where managers
are holding regular performance reviews with their employee, employees often
don’t understand how to move either horizontally or vertically in an
organization. Of course, not every employee is going to end up as the CEO.
Likewise, a person who is brilliant at product design won’t necessarily succeed
in sales. But, for any employee that is worth retaining, a manager must make
clear to them how and where they can move forward on their career path.
6) No Fun
For
many employees, instant gratification is the new norm. The evolution of film,
television, the internet, social media, and handheld devices means that
everything is on demand all the time and wherever we may be. As a result,
putting in eight straight hours of work at the same desk is less and less
attractive to many employees. But this doesn’t mean the work force is lazier,
it’s because defining work in such a traditional manner doesn’t make sense to
employees in today’s constantly interconnected and fast-paced world.
For
businesses, this means that attracting, engaging, and retaining top talent
depends on reinventing their work environments, blurring the line between work
and play. Companies must embrace a culture of increased autonomy and
innovation, and engage employees around a powerful mission and purpose.
In
2003, Best Buy
BBY +0.98%’s H.R. leaders
began piloting a new approach to this engagement problem. Slowly,
department-by-department, they rolled out a program called ROWE (Results-Only Work Environment) that
relied on increased employee engagement by reducing work to a baseline:
productivity. That was it!
Employees
were released from a world of mandatory meetings, nine-to-five schedules, and
long commutes. It was a radical departure and the results were emphatically
positive, engagement rose, causing a spike in performance. The pilot continued
until it was adopted throughout the entire Best Buy headquarters operation. In
2006 the company was included on Fortune’s list of America’s Most
Admired Companies.
Of
course, ROWE was designed to relieve the tedium of office work and there are
serious limitations to this specific program. It is hard to imagine how a
schedule-free, post-geographic work environment could be successful for a
restaurant or a roofing company. And, sure enough, Best Buy was unable to roll
out a version of ROWE to help combat the company’s 67% turnover rate at their
retail stores. But the biggest lessons of ROWE’s measurable success – thinking
about work as fun and flexible – can still be applied to any size and type of
business, creating more productive work environments at every level.

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