Retaining Talent
Retaining Talent
Retaining Talent
Dr. G. Brindha
Professor & Head, Faculty of Management Studies,
Dr. MGR University, Chennai, India
ABSTRACT
It's every manager's nightmare: One of your best employees resigns out of the
blue. Right away, you've got a number of challenges to tackle. Not only do you have to
find a replacement for such a talented team member no small feat when skilled
professionals are in high demand, as they are today but you also have to consider the
impact this departure will have on the rest of your staff. Whenever someone walks out
the door, people notice, and some will start wondering if they should follow suit.
That's why employee retention should be on every company's radar. In fact, creating
effective employee retention strategies is one of your most important jobs as a
manager.
Key words: Employee Retention Strategies, Impact of existing retention strategies,
Chennai IT Industry.
Cite this Article: S. Rathan Raj and Dr. G. Brindha. A Study on Employee Retention
Strategies with Special Reference to Chennai it Industry. International Journal of
Civil Engineering and Technology, 8(6), 2017, pp. 38–44.
http://www.iaeme.com/IJCIET/issues.asp?JType=IJCIET&VType=8&IType=6
1. INTRODUCTION
Employee retention is an effort by a business to maintain a working environment which
supports current staff in remaining with the company. Many employee retention policies are
aimed at addressing the various needs of employees to enhance their job satisfaction and
reduce the substantial costs involved in hiring and training new staff. It is a process in which
the employees are encouraged to remain with the organization for the maximum period of
time or until the completion of the project. Retention Strategies helps organizations provide
effective employee communication to improve commitment and enhance workforce support
for key corporate initiatives. The IT industry can be classified into two major categories such
as IT Products and IT consulting. Bell, Intel, IBM are the industry based on developing IT
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A Study on Employee Retention Strategies with Special Reference to Chennai it Industry
2. REVIEW OF LITERATURE
Numerous studies have been conducted on employee retention strategies so far. The
exponential growth of IT sector in India in the last few decades have prompted the
Organization to focus on employee centered employment relationship to hold back the
employees1. A considerable amount of literature has been published on retention strategies
too. Review of related literature of the studies gave an insight about the subject matter and
also helped in analyzing the existing gap that could be taken up for further research.
According to Kreisman, Barbara J. (2002)5, the meaning of retention varies from the
mechanical (reduce the employee turnover figure to an acceptable level) to the abstract (about
the culture and value). He went further to say that the meaning can be couched in curt, wholly
objective phase or in a flowery, vague corporate language by seeing it as a distinct,
controllable element of labour management or viewed as a cross functional, pervasive and
seemingly all encompassing set of values or methodologies which centres on how to treat
people.
Mitala (2003)8 identified the preliminary retention strategies motive to include five major
elements namely compensation (financial and non financial incentives); environment
(physical structure, surrounding and atmosphere of the workplace); growth (advancement
prospect and development on the job vis-a vis organisation); relationship (mode of
interactions existing between employer and employees, superior and subordinates,
subordinates and subordinates, organisation and outside world) and support (assistance to
needy employees).
According to Gopinath and Becker (2000)4, effective communications improve employee
identification with their agency, build openness, and trust culture. Increasingly, organizations
provide information on values, mission, strategies, competitive performance, and changes that
may affect employees‟ enthusiasm. Many companies are working to provide information that
communication, through the most credible sources (e.g., CEO and top management
strategies) on a timely and consistent basis.
Stauss etal (2011)9 have suggested a more detailed and recent definition for the concept of
retention which is customer liking, identification, commitment, trust, readiness to
recommend, and repurchase intentions, with the first four being emotional cognitive retention
constructs, and the last two being behavioral intentions.
The above review of literature suggests that here are gaps in the existing literature. This
study attempts to fulfill the gaps by analyzing the impact of IT employees existing retention
strategies.
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S. Rathan Raj and Dr. G. Brindha
go a long way in motivating the employees so that they stick to the organization for the
maximum time and contribute effectively6. Sincere efforts must be taken to ensure growth
and learning for the employees in their current assignments and for them to enjoy their work.
Employee retention has become a major concern for corporates in the current scenario.
Individuals once being trained have a tendency to move to other organizations for better
prospects. Lucrative salary, comfortable timings, better ambience, growth prospects are some
of the factors which prompt an employee to look for a change. Whenever a talented employee
expresses his willingness to move on, it is the responsibility of the management and the
human resource team to intervene immediately and find out the exact reasons leading to the
decision. Since they are considered as backbone of the company, their progression will lead
to the success of the company for the long run. This study can be helpful in knowing, how
employee perceive the existing employee retention strategies and to measure the influence of
demographic variables of employees on employee retention strategies. This study can be
helpful to the management to identify the impact of existing employee retention strategies to
improve its core weaknesses by the suggestions and recommendations prescribed in the
research. This study can serve as a basis for measuring the organization’s overall performance
in terms of employee satisfaction which results in employee retention.
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A Study on Employee Retention Strategies with Special Reference to Chennai it Industry
6. RETENTION STRATEGIES
Following retention strategies have been taken for the current research,
Organizational Strategies
Responsibility for retention starts at the top. High retention organizations do not leave the
issue of employee retention to chance. The organizational strategy implies management by
fact – why people leave and why people or are dissatisfied are the issues taken up for the
study. Rewarding good managers who help employees to stay, appointing a manager be
totally responsible for retaining employees (appointing Retention Czars), interview the
employees every year to find out what new skills, qualifications they have acquired and rehire
them to suitable positions, holding managers accountable for high turnover, assessing the
organization for weaknesses and making it an ongoing exercise, and finally conducting exit
interviews to understand the reasons why people leave. Organizational strategy also means
leaders/managers need to care for employees, be empathetic with people working with them,
pinpointing job satisfaction or otherwise, identify and list top ten reasons why people leave
and adopting ‘equal pay for equal experience’7. Thirdly, this strategy implies creating a
positive environment by way of building a supportive workplace, have a shared vision,
generate purpose and direction for employees, fulfill the promises given to employees, build
an employee Alumni Association, and give importance to pay the employees get. Such
organizations do succeed in managing attrition quite effectively.
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S. Rathan Raj and Dr. G. Brindha
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A Study on Employee Retention Strategies with Special Reference to Chennai it Industry
the ability to help their organization be more successful. Mr. Greg Smith recommends that
managements adopt the Ritz Carlton Way of this strategy. In Ritz-Carlton Hotel the
employees are required to write their ideas and suggestions on an “easy wipe” board in their
department. Instead of passing untested ideas to the higher ups in the management hierarchy,
the employee is responsible for its achievement. They follow a three step work process as for
the new ideas are concerned – Study it, Pilot it, and Adopt it. This has worked very well. The
organizations and competition make the employees to think “out of the box”, idea Olympics
system, to think creatively during the time they are way from work environment (as the
Toyota has the system), annual idea exposition once a year (as in Sony) by engineers and
scientists leading to creating at all levels of organization. Similarly, have suggestion
exhibition, suggestion competitions among employees. More important a sub-strategy in the
area is managing innovation from the employees, and recognizing innovative employees –
innovator of the quarter, team involvement, bright ideas club, lunch with the President for
innovators , and lastly, encouraging individual suggestions and recognize individual
employees innovatively for their suggestions.
These seven strategies have helped different organizations to reduce the rate of employee
attrition, retain their employees and achieve success. Our study plans to examine whether the
adoption of these strategies by the IT companies in CHENNAI is considered by the managers
and other employees of these companies as beneficial to the organization.
7. CONCLUSIONS
It’s clear that having proper retention strategies is key in order to retain employees.
According to Mike Foster, founder and CEO of the Foster Institute, in order to foster an
environment that motivates and stimulates employees, managers need to incorporate
motivation-building practices into their corporate culture. These practices include listening to
employees and respecting their opinions, basing rewards on performance, and being available
to them for everything from listening to their ideas and concerns to assisting them with their
career advancement. In the global competition for talent, successful retention requires
organizations to shift from a mindset of keeping their employees from leaving the company,
to one of continuously attracting them. The approach of creating trust and supporting life long
careers causes talented people to stay. People are more inclined to stay when they perceive
that the opportunities and experiences they have with their current employers expand their
career options. Employees need to feel valued and appreciated, be given feedback, provided
with growth opportunities, be given work-life balance options, and have trust and confidence
in their leaders. All of these retention strategies are beneficial when an employer wants to
keep employees within an organization and keep costs of turnover low. Effectively managing
retention in your organization isn’t easy. It takes extensive analysis, a thorough understanding
of the above seven strategies and practices available, and the ability to put retention plans into
action and learn from their outcomes.
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