I was speaking at an International Institute for Research seminar last week (they are great people) and my Retention Tool kit got a good response. Here it is in checklist form.
Retention “ToolKit”
63 Retention Tools And Tips You Can Use Tomorrow
- Measure and reward managers (teams) for attracting, developing and retaining the best.
- Identify and fix bad managers.
- Treat people differently (special) and tell why.
- Develop a Challenge plan for every employee. Realize employees rank it #1.
- Do a barriers to productivity survey.
- Ask people why they stay.
- Ask them to stay, and to tell you before they consider leaving.
- Treat Hi-Pers like volunteers/ free agents/ mature adults.
- Buy CEO time for Hi-Per visits.
- Realize the relationship between attraction, motivation, Cust. Satis. and retention.
- Calculate the cost / impact of turnover on time to market and product development.
- Make it the most talked about topic.
- Have HR stop employees and ask them “are you challenged, listened to & recognized.”
- Use focus groups to identify issues.
- Involve head hunters and recruiters in identifying our weaknesses and strengths.
- Appoint a retention director team. Make someone accountable.
- Buy all managers the “1001 Ways to Reward” book
- Do post-exit interviews to find out why employees “really” leave.
- Fire Lo-Pers (low performers).
- Do forced ranking to identify Hi-Pers.
- Practice random acts of attention and recognition.
- Do an in depth analysis of the actual costs of turnover.
- Shift retention responsibility to managers and employees (“Managers Manage”).
- Stretch orientation over the first 6 weeks.
- Have a party for all new hires.
- Have their computer, Bus cards, office ready before they start.
- Ask employees who is at risk of leaving.
- Develop constructive confrontation skills among your employees.
- Measure “performance” turnover (turnover by performance ranking).
- Institute “Part-Time” job rotations for full time employees and short-term assignment programs.
- Ask your employees what they want (more of / less of).
- Train managers/ teams on how to retain their employees.
- Over-Communicate with your employees.
- Remember, it’s hardly ever just the money.
- Do a Garage Factor / Start Up analysis (risk of leaving) on the very best Hi-Pers.
- Develop Compelling reasons to stay.
- Excite the workers before the headhunter calls start, teach them how to say no!
- Increase your employees “learning speed.”
- Hire “cool” people.
- Place an ad thanking your employees.
- Develop internal “smoke detectors” for employee relations problems.
- Practice Intraplacement to actively move internal candidates.
- Have employees write up “dream sheets.”
- Be flexible on international retention practices (one size fits one).
- Treat employees like mature adults.
- Do a “pulse” e-mail survey to gauge retention issues.
- Do a quarterly “human asset’ review (turnover = assets out the door).
- Set outrageous goals (turnover of 0% top- and 100% of bottom performers).
- Use headhunters to “validate” salary.
- Offer “stay on” bonuses to encourage key people to finish projects / close plants.
- Offer referral bonuses to non-employees (suppliers, customers, etc.).
- Develop “corporate head count “fat” identifiers to avoid morale killing layoffs.
- Remind employees on a regular basis why this is a great place to work.
- Involve and recognize the family get the spouse to be a retention ally.
- Create an “overdue” for recognition/ promotion list.
- Hire your competitors best recruiters away so they can’t hurt you. Involve recruiters in the long term retention of those they recruited.
- Don’t pay retention bonuses unless you make them ‘happy” with their job first.
- Develop a list of corporate “traumas” (layoff, loss of CEO, stock price drop, etc.) that are triggers to increased turnover.
- Develop lists of precursors (predictors) of imminent turnover. Leaving early, Resume updating, completed advanced degree, rejected for promotion.
- Increase the quality of ‘first month” welcome & orientation activities to cut frustration.
- Pre-qualify internal candidates for promotions to lessen anxiety and turnover.
- Identify the unique needs of diverse employees and tailor programs to make them feel needed and part of the team.
- Ask recent hires why they said yes and “turndowns” why they said no.
© January, 1998
As seen on Gately Consulting.