It’s no secret that the challenge
of finding high quality employees in today’s tight labour
market is on every business owner’s mind. What does appear
to be a secret - given the typical response to this challenge -
is what to do about it.
Most employee attraction and retention
strategies consist of creating a competitive compensation and benefits
package, or instituting an employee appreciation and recognition
program. Even worse, many companies – especially smaller ones
– think attracting the best employees is a lost cause for
them, because they can’t match the perks and programs of the
large corporates.
So is your business a “Talent Magnet” – the employers
of choice for highly talented people. Do you know that the key to
attracting and retaining quality employees isn’t compensation
and benefits packages or gimmicky programs. It’s how well
you address these four critical areas:
Your Company’s
Image
Great companies attract great people. If you have a strong brand
in the marketplace, you will have a strong brand in the labour marketplace.
If your company is synonymous with quality, you will attract quality
people; if it isn’t, you won’t.
The Quality of Your Internal Operations
Your image in the marketplace influences your ability to attract
good people. The quality of your internal operations influences
your ability to retain these people. Out-dated technology, inadequate
resources, inefficient work processes, and stifling bureaucracy
are guaranteed Talent Repellents. Conversely, when a company is
run intelligently and efficiently, people want to stay and be part
of such a world class operation.
How Well Your Management Team
Treats Your Employees
This is where so many companies drop the ball. They promote technically
adept people to management positions, even if they have virtually
no people skills. They further compound the problem by scrimping
on management training and coaching, so these managers never develop
the skills to bring out the best in their workers. Worse, many companies
turn a blind eye to disrespectful or even abusive behaviour by managers.
The importance of having a top notch management team and great supervisors
cannot be overstated. Research conducted by the Gallup Organisation,
involving over a million employees and 80,000 managers, revealed
that having good managers was the most influential factor affecting
both employee retention and performance.
Your Ability To Satisfy The Needs Of
Your “Internal Customers,” Your Employees
Just as the key to marketing and customer service success is understanding
what the customer wants, and then delivering it; competing in the
labour market requires understanding about what employees want,
and then delivering that. Here are a few of the things employees
want most:
- Pride in where they work and what they do.
- Meaningful work.
- Respect – both personal and professional.
- Sincere expressions of appreciation.
- The ability to exercise autonomy and control in one’s Job.
- The opportunity to learn and grow on the job.
- A sense of community and belonging.
- Flexibility that allows for work/life balance.
- The opportunity to make a difference; to have input and influence.
Taking
the First Step Toward Becoming a Talent Magnet
The first step is to find out where you currently are. Find out
what your “customers” – your employees –
think about your company. Engage your management team in a very
frank self-examination process about how well the company is run,
and how well employees are managed. Use the four critical areas
and the nine key human needs outlined in this article as a launching
point for this important discussion. By successfully addressing
these, you will become a Talent Magnet.
Reproduced with kind permission
of David Lee. |