10 Ways To Lose Your Best Employees
Want to hold tight to your talent?
Don't do these things!
In the course of writing The Talent Mandate, I spoke with a prominent business school professor who told me that
no corporate function lags behind today so dramatically as talent. He sees
improvements and innovations in every area except in the vital matter of
managing people. That’s astonishing--and it’s also lunacy at a time when people
costs tend to be upward of 50 percent of a company's expenses. What could be
more vital than talent to the bottom line? And yet the people in our employ
continue to be neglected, taking a backseat to the various other matters that
occupy our workdays.
Want to unload your most dynamic,
highest-potential employees? Keep doing these things:
1. Hire for the past, not the
future.
Choose talent based on what worked
before, not on where the category is heading. Emphasize candidates’ narrow
former experience over a more generalized, nimble agility to adapt to a
fast-changing world.
2. Downplay values and mission.
Send the signal that anything goes
in pursuit of profit, making employees guess about what choices are truly acceptable.
Fail to spend time articulating to your workers why they come to work every day
and how the greater community benefits.
3. Bungle the teams.
Avoid mixing generations and skill
sets, instead grouping like with like and producing stale and predictable
solutions that excite nobody—but might be safer.
4. Place jerks in management.
Reward the old-fashioned, autocratic
style that stifles unorthodox, creative thinking and feels threatened by youth
and dynamism.
5. Measure hours, not results.
Keep an expensive cadre of stern
enforcers busy with policing everybody. Don’t trust your talent to use their
time wisely. Crack down on social media. Forbid personal activities during nine
to five, even as you expect work to be conducted over the weekend.
6. Promote people straight up the
ladder.
Fail to give them exposure to
different parts of the business through lateral moves. Thereby give them the
sensation of being narrowed over time, not broadened.
7. Leave talent to HR.
Expect the staff who must deal with
the minutiae of personnel issues also to be visionaries in hiring. Detach the
C-suite from talent recruitment and retention; it’s not their department.
8. Hoard information.
Keep decision-making securely
ensconced in the airless bunker of the executive wing. Avoid empowering
mid-tier employees lest they suddenly become entrepreneurial and unpredictable.
9. Don’t bother with training.
It’s costly, and employees will
probably jump ship with their new skills. Instead, have your workers do the
same tasks over and over in the same way.
10. Hire outsiders.
After you have failed to train and
develop your best people, follow it all up by stifling their ambitions for
increased responsibility. When they come to you and say, “I’m leaving,” express
astonishment and outrage.
If this sounds at all familiar,
you’d better hope your competitors are following the same game plan.
--Andrew Benett
http://www.fastcompany.com/3019050/leadership-now/10-ways-to-lose-your-best-employees?partner=newsletter
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