Millions wasted because employers won’t listen

-

Almost 8 in 10 employees who leave their jobs do so because of dissatisfaction with their employer rather than the lure of pastures news, thereby costing the economy millions.

Recruitment outsourcing expert Amanda Marques has warned that the figure of 78 per cent is likely to increase, due to what she calls a ’feedback vacuum,’ where employers fail to find out why employees move on.

Mrs Marques, Managing Director of recruitment outsourcers PPS, said: “Our analysis of data using our specialist exit and retention software, shows that within the companies we have worked with, 78 per cent of the leavers felt the push factors from their employers were far greater than the pull factors of the company they were going too.”

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

 

“It means the disruption to organisations in the vast majority of cases as well as the huge cost incurred is totally avoidable, and as the economy hopefully recovers talented people who feel they are not being given the correct channels for their skills will certainly jump ship in greater numbers,” she said.

“Employers should be asking themselves how many others would have left in the past year if the employment market was more robust.”

Mrs Marques whose company has recruited for some of Britain’s best-known brands, including Halfords and David Lloyd, said productivity was suffering because of the lack of feedback.

“The feedback vacuum where employees leave without companies finding out why is costing companies millions by greatly affecting productivity,” she said.

“The CIPD recruitment, retention and turnover survey in 2009 showed average UK employee turnover at 15.7 per cent and now the average cost of recruitment is estimated at £6,000 including management and admin time, advertising, recruitment fees and the cost of covering vacant posts as well as other costs. This is costing colossal sums in needless waste, ” she said.

She added that exit and retention interviews were the best way of combating the problem and urged bosses not to overlook the importance of them.

“It really is important that employers ask for reasons why people are leaving to stop this feedback vacuum.”

“Both exit and retention interviews should be a prerequisite for employers wishing to keep a stable crew to help navigate the choppy waters in these unstable times.”

Mrs Marques claimed that third parties interviewers are the best solution to find out the real issues behind problems at work.

“To get meaningful feedback you need someone who is not part of the organisation,” she said. “ It makes discussing issues far more comfortable for employees. Retention interviews are especially important as it often highlights potential issues early enough for them to be remedied.”

Mrs Marques added: “Considering employees are the lifeblood and the biggest expense in the huge majority of organisations, finding out what they are thinking and keeping them happy has never been so important. Even in tougher economic times demoralised workers will look to get out.
Employers who keep their staff onside are always the most successful and it is often the simple steps like this, listening to workers, that can propel companies forward.”



Latest news

England’s overnight World Cup clash and 5am pub opening prompt CIPD advice

The CIPD is urging organisations to agree any flexibility before England's 1am World Cup last-16 tie to help minimise disruption at the start of the working week.

Russell Cowley: Gen Z – rebuilding workplace culture, break by break

Gen Z workers are taking proper breaks and in doing so, they may be fixing something the rest of us broke.

Fit for Work: Weekend warrior? You can still reap the health benefits

Weekend exercise can still improve long-term health, even for people who struggle to fit physical activity into the working week.

Superdry co-founder’s victim warns workplace power can silence abuse victims

A survivor's account raises questions about speaking-up cultures and accountability in organisations.
- Advertisement -

UK’s always-on work culture ‘driving employee burnout’

Nearly half of UK workers say they end most working days mentally exhausted as rising workplace pressure leaves employees and managers struggling to switch off.

Andrew Murray on why no two days look alike

A people development leader shares how travel, training and a passion for helping others shape a working day with little room for routine.

Must read

Matthew Sanders: Zero hour contracts – good for nobody

Recent media buzz about the use of zero hour...

Seren Trewavas: What HR can learn from Ryanair

Earlier this month, budget airline Ryanair  announced it would...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you