杏吧性世界

杏吧性世界

Corporate Training and Professional Education

An Office of University Community Partnerships

News

A man with a beard and glasses standing in front of a whiteboard talking to a group of people

Keeping Good Employees Takes Thought and Effort

Think of the excitement you felt when you made that perfect hire. There was the outstanding r茅sum茅, the impressive interview. You felt, almost immediately, that this individual is a perfect fit for the position, and you were right. The first few years proved the decision was a good one. Now there鈥檚 another important matter to be addressed: You want this employee for the long haul. As a hiring manager or a business owner, don鈥檛 just assume they鈥檒l stay. Keeping good employees takes thought and effort.

What Kind of Bosses Make Employees Flee?

One of the greatest challenges facing any company today is retaining good employees, but why?

There鈥檚 no one-part answer to that question, but a by CEO Jack Altman cites a Gallup Poll finding that 50 percent of employees quit because of dissatisfaction with their bosses. That鈥檚 a big number, too big for those in management positions to dismiss.

My time in the corporate world informs my belief that when employees are unhappy with their bosses, it usually isn鈥檛 because the manager is belligerent or a tyrant. The majority of instances of dissatisfaction stem from workers not feeling supported.

It鈥檚 surprising, but acts of omission, not commission, often make the biggest difference in the fight to retain good employees. Even if there is no motive driving the neglect, there are tangible consequences that jeopardize overall function and morale. People and operations suffer.

Sure, tyrannical and belligerent bosses can drive off good employees, but a more common culprit is the manager who lacks self-awareness.

Employee Retention Efforts Are Cost-Effective

To boost managers鈥� self-awareness, assess how your company invests in managerial processes and employee development and see whether you can help up its game.

Investing in training for yourself and your employees will take time and money, but the alternative is an unsupportive workplace where people enter and then exit too quickly. That鈥檚 what burns too much time and money, with no return on the investment.

It鈥檚 Your Call: Stagnate or Flourish

Let鈥檚 face it, the time is gone when employees stick with the same company for 40 years. These are ultracompetitive times, and staying ahead of the employee retention game means not forgetting that:

  • Companies that operate without a good managerial system for their workers do so at their own peril.
  • Capable employees in search of career fulfillment will exit stagnant workplaces.
  • Investing in employee retention isn鈥檛 a luxury, it鈥檚 a necessity.

The goal is to create the kind of environment where employees flourish, loyalty grows, and the company thrives.

At USF, Higher Education Includes Private-Public Teamwork

The USF Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education is taking a prominent role in creating a world-class workforce in the Tampa Bay area. Contact us if you want one of our advisors to develop a plan for you.

To learn more about USF鈥檚 dedication to the art of managing people, interacting with professionals, and advancing careers, explore the university鈥檚 Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education. Visit the CTPE website or contact us.

Mark Koulianos is director of USF鈥檚 Office of Corporate Training and Professional Education and a 20-plus-year veteran of the corporate world. .

Return to article listing

About Corporate Training and Professional Education

USF Corporate Training and Professional Education empowers people to craft their future without limits through engaging professional growth learning and certification programs. Its programs focus on an array of topics – human resources, project management, paralegal, process improvement, leadership skills, technology, and much more.