How Do We Keep Our Best People During a Time of Upheaval?
Q: Things are getting scary for us. We recently had to downsize, and since then have lost some of our best people to other jobs. Aside from boosting their pay (which isn't feasible now), what practical steps can we take to keep them from quitting on us?
- Clinging to Hope, talent coordinator, hospitality, Guatemala
A: Talent will flee from uncertainty- and why not? It's a seller's market. Ensure that your best people know that they are your best people. Have respected senior leaders personally take them aside to sketch out the organization' s future and their role in it. These "messages of security" must be repeated six times in different ways, so that employees really understand that their jobs are safe.
If there is a sufficient number of them (at least 20), undertake a stay survey to identify the factors that encourage people to stay, causes that would make them resign, and which messages they need to hear about their future.
If there are insufficient numbers to conduct an aggregated survey, provide each employee with a "Personal Engagement Plan," in which an external group of people interviews each employee and creates a plan for their learning, their preferred manager practices, the changes they'd like to see to increase their performance, and ways to retain their knowledge in low-cost or no-cost ways.
If these really are your best people, make sure they know it by directly telling them-thus making it harder for them to leave.
[Source: Lisa Halloran, Retention Partners, Sydney, Australia, June 9, 2008.]
Q: Things are getting scary for us. We recently had to downsize, and since then have lost some of our best people to other jobs. Aside from boosting their pay (which isn't feasible now), what practical steps can we take to keep them from quitting on us?
- Clinging to Hope, talent coordinator, hospitality, Guatemala
A: Talent will flee from uncertainty- and why not? It's a seller's market. Ensure that your best people know that they are your best people. Have respected senior leaders personally take them aside to sketch out the organization' s future and their role in it. These "messages of security" must be repeated six times in different ways, so that employees really understand that their jobs are safe.
If there is a sufficient number of them (at least 20), undertake a stay survey to identify the factors that encourage people to stay, causes that would make them resign, and which messages they need to hear about their future.
If there are insufficient numbers to conduct an aggregated survey, provide each employee with a "Personal Engagement Plan," in which an external group of people interviews each employee and creates a plan for their learning, their preferred manager practices, the changes they'd like to see to increase their performance, and ways to retain their knowledge in low-cost or no-cost ways.
If these really are your best people, make sure they know it by directly telling them-thus making it harder for them to leave.
[Source: Lisa Halloran, Retention Partners, Sydney, Australia, June 9, 2008.]