Employers ‘should tailor retention strategies to different age groups’

-

Employers are being urged to tailor their retention strategies to different age groups in order to ensure they are able to hold on to the best talent.

According to new research from MRINetwork, younger workers at the beginning of their careers are one of the most challenging groups to keep hold of.

Dubbed ‘hummingbirds’ because they move frequently from job to job, younger workers require different retention strategies than those in the middle of their careers.

Employers need to understand what motivates younger workers and offer incentives based on their needs and aspirations, MRINetwork claims.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

For example, short-term benefits such as flexible working and performance-based bonuses appeal to younger employees more than long-term benefits such as pensions.

Younger workers are also more likely to remain in a job if they feel their opinions are valued within the company and they receive plenty of one-on-one support from their managers, the research suggests.

A recent survey from GRADdirect has revealed that the academic qualifications of graduate job applicants are less important than transferable skills such as communication and teamwork.

Latest news

Sidonie Viala: Pay transparency won’t close inequality if negotiation still drives pay

The EU's Pay Transparency Directive is on track to arrive with a simple promise: visibility will bring fairness. But transparency only exposes outcomes.

Calls grow for working from home as fuel shortages loom amid Iran conflict

Remote work is being urged as fuel shortages linked to Middle East conflict threaten commuting, business operations and workforce stability.

Worker denied leave for 25 years wins £400,000 in holiday pay case

A tribunal awards nearly £400,000 to a worker denied annual leave for decades, raising concerns about holiday policies and employer compliance.

Sustainable business starts with people, not HR policies

Why long-term success depends on supporting employees, not just meeting ESG targets, with practical steps for leaders to build healthier organisations.
- Advertisement -

Hiring steadies but Gulf crisis threatens recovery in UK jobs market

UK hiring shows signs of stabilising, but rising global uncertainty linked to the Gulf crisis is weighing on employer confidence and delaying recovery.

Women ‘face career setback’ risk with flexible working

Female staff using remote or reduced-hour arrangements more likely to move into lower-status roles, raising concerns about bias in career progression.

Must read

Wes Wu: How HR tools can increase employee performance

For social enterprise applications, the technologies are mature enough...

Ann McCracken: How we learn…explained by neuroscience

For many years I have been using multisensory learning...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you