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Will You Add? - Tackling The Truth of Turnover
Absent without Leave - Managing Absence in the Workplace Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more moneyAccording to the Institute of Psychiatry (April 2005), for the first time, stress, anxiety and depression have overtaken physical ailments as the most common cause of long-term absence from work. With sickness absence reportedly costing employers an average of ?522 per employee per year (or an average of 10 lost working days), there are good reasons to look closely at the root causes of absenteeism an Franchising Countries to Create a Common Cause I've long been a believer that businesses owners must maintain an awareness of their standing in two highly competitive and equally important arenas.Can we franchise nations to create a World Franchise System that might be similar to the United States but it would be more like the United Countries in Franchising motif? Would it be strong enough to stay together like the United States has and work together too?The Franchise System grows as the Franchised Outlet Countries succeed. Of course no doubt each country would be slightly different an 1. Competition for customers 2. Competition for the talent needed to attract, serve and maintain those customers. Some attrition is natural in both arenas. Significant defection in either area will adversely affect the other. Because this is a briefing, let's examine one element of defection: employees who voluntarily leave and why. The July 2006 issue of Workplace Solutions Magazine published a list of the top reasons people leave their jobs. (Note: these are listed in no particular order) The Top Five Drivers of Voluntary Terminations * Relationship with Manager * Opportunities for Growth * Workload * Organization * Compensation What Are You Hearing? Of these five reasons, which one do you hear most frequently? I am willing to wager that it is the last one on the list, "More money." Why? The authors of the book Play To Your Strengths provide some insight about a potential flaw in the exit interviewing process they call the Say-Do Trap. Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more money. Office Affiars - A Special Kind of Stress ion is natural in both arenas. Significant defection in either area will adversely affect the other. Because this is a briefing, let's examine one element of defection: employees who voluntarily leave and why.Affairs between coworkers are not something new. For the most part the common reaction among the onlookers is one of surprise. Sometimes it is also one of criticism or condemnation. Occasionally it also provokes jealousy, as was the recent unprecedented case among the astronauts. Looked at from a broader perspective, affairs at work bear much in common with affairs at church. But it should come as no The July 2006 issue of Workplace Solutions Magazine published a list of the top reasons people leave their jobs. (Note: these are listed in no particular order) The Top Five Drivers of Voluntary Terminations * Relationship with Manager * Opportunities for Growth * Workload * Organization * Compensation What Are You Hearing? Of these five reasons, which one do you hear most frequently? I am willing to wager that it is the last one on the list, "More money." Why? The authors of the book Play To Your Strengths provide some insight about a potential flaw in the exit interviewing process they call the Say-Do Trap. Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more money Career as a Toy Designer op reasons people leave their jobs. (Note: these are listed in no particular order)One of the coolest jobs is to become a designer of consumer products and there is good pay in it. Think of the people who designed the Norelco Razors or the Automatic Tooth Brush or the iPod. Very fun stuff no doubt and all those we have interviewed love their jobs and liken it to designing futuristic cars for GM, Ford, Ferrari or Jaguar.Even former aerospace workers, NASA scientists and race c The Top Five Drivers of Voluntary Terminations * Relationship with Manager * Opportunities for Growth * Workload * Organization * Compensation What Are You Hearing? Of these five reasons, which one do you hear most frequently? I am willing to wager that it is the last one on the list, "More money." Why? The authors of the book Play To Your Strengths provide some insight about a potential flaw in the exit interviewing process they call the Say-Do Trap. Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more money 5 Reasons to Always Tell The Truth In Your Business 1. As my mom would always say, "Telling one lie just leads to another and another and another."Why waste time in an endless loop of lies? I've seen this many times as an employee and as an employer. When a person tells a lie or a partial truth (same thing), it usually leads to more of the same. After a while, they can't even remember what lies they told.2. All it takes is one lie to Of these five reasons, which one do you hear most frequently? I am willing to wager that it is the last one on the list, "More money." Why? The authors of the book Play To Your Strengths provide some insight about a potential flaw in the exit interviewing process they call the Say-Do Trap. Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more money Advertising Balloons Just as political pollsters face challenges with the accuracy of their responses, the same is true for exit interviewers. What employees say is not always what drives their behavior. Exiting employees who prefer not to burn bridges may be saying that they have found a position for more money. But that answer often masks the real issue. Compensation is a socially acceptable reason to leave and it typically will not be challenged. The exiting employee can easily avoid having a potentially uncomfortable conversation about the real reasons that led them to seek a happier workplace. While their search may have coincidentally resulted in higher pay, the reality may be that they would have been content to work for less money just to escape a bad situation.As a consumer, you probably have been in contact with different forms of advertising. Like most people, you have grown tired of the usual advertisements and commercials that seem to assail you anywhere you turn.While you watch your favorite program or listen to the radio, you are bombarded by an array of commercials in the process. If you surf the Internet, you will find an incessant flow of ad There's Something Else About Mary Here's a hypothetical scenario about "Mary". Mary tells her exit interviewer that she got "more money" elsewhere while her real reason for departure is that her manager is a condescending, incompetent idiot. Mary is one of several in her department who have recently left for that same stated reason, more money. To address this defection problem uncovered by socially correct exit interview responses, what does management do? They decide it's time to raise the department pay scale. So, not only has the exit interview failed to get to the root cause of the problem, misinformed management's remedy results in an unnecessary increase in overhead. They succ
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