Title: Employee Separation and Retention
1Employee Separation and Retention
2Existing Source of Corporation
- Three types of talent people decide the
corporate development - Key talent people decide the development in the
near 3-5 years - Talent people of existing source decide the
profit - Unsubstitution talent people lack of talent
people in the manpower market
3Looking for existing source of corporation
- Software companies?
- Advertisement companies?
- Building company?
- Business trading company?
4Characteristics of Key Talent people
- They will be excellent in the future, one company
need to foster this kind of talent people for the
near future
5How to use these three types of people
- Key talented people
- Improving their ability, offer opportunities
- Talents of existing source
- Characteristics selfish, self-centered
- Tactics offer more loose and comfortable
environment - Unsubstitution talented people
- Characteristics few people
- Tactics Offer honour certificates
6Introduction
- To compete effectively, organizations must take
steps to ensure that good performers are
motivated to stay with the organization, whereas
chronically low performers are allowed,
encouraged, or if necessary, forced to leave. - The two types of turnover are
- Involuntary
- Voluntary turnover
7Managing Involuntary Turnover
- The employment-at-will doctrine is a policy that
allows for termination of an employee with or
without a good or just cause. - Violence in the workplace caused by involuntary
turnover has become a major organizational
problem in recent years. - A standardized, systematic approach to discipline
and discharge is necessary.
8Employee Assistance Programs
- These are programs that attempt to ameliorate
problems encountered by workers who are drug
dependent, alcoholic, or psychologically
troubled. - EAPs are usually identified in official documents
published by the employer. - There are several issues in controversy regarding
EAPs.
9Managing Voluntary Turnover - Job Withdrawal
- Progression of withdrawal
- Three categories
- Behavior Change
- Physical Job Withdrawal
- Psychological Withdrawal
- Withdrawal behaviors are related to one another,
and they are all at least partially caused by job
dissatisfaction.
10The reason of turnover
- Think about the reasons of turnover?
11Job Dissatisfaction-Job Withdrawal Process
Causes of job dissatisfaction - Personal
disposition - Tasks and roles - Supervisors and
coworkers - Pay and benefits
Manifestations of job withdrawal - Behavioral
change - Physical job withdrawal -
Psychological job withdrawal
Job Dissatisfaction
Job Withdrawal
12Physical Withdrawal
- There are several ways a dissatisfied worker can
physically withdrawal from the organization - Leave the job
- Internal transfer
- Absenteeism
- Tardiness
13- Case discussion
- I have one friend, he is a boss of an animal
pharmaceutical Group Co., Ltd, at the same time,
he is a professor in one university. His group
company has 11 subsidiaries. One night, he called
me and told me what happened in his company
recently. The 11 general managers put forward to
resign their job at the same day. What they did
surprised him, he felt sad, then he didnt know
how to deal with those issues. So he called me
and asked for suggestions. Firstly, I recommended
him to investigate background of the 11 generals
second, investigate the reason why they prefer to
resign their job, what are the factors caused
them unsatisfied with their job? Third, let him
investigate what they will do after resignation.
After two days, he talked to me about the
information he had investigated. As for these 11
general managers, all of them are his students,
who were excellent students he taught before, he
selected them and educated them, after them
graduated, he recruited them in his company, at
beginning, all of them must work in the sales
department, according to their working behavior,
he promoted them step by step, finally, they were
promoted to the current general manager. On the
other hand, he knew most of them would run their
own company after leaving his company, because
the threshold of entering this industry was not
too high, if you had 500,000RMB, that was ok for
you to run the new company. - If you were this boss, think about how to
deal with this problem.
14Sources of job dissatisfaction
15Sources of Job Dissatisfaction
Personal Dispositions
Pay and Benefits
Tasks and Roles
Supervisors and Coworkers
16Sources of Job Dissatisfaction
- Personal Dispositions
- Negative affectivity
- Tasks and Roles
- Job enrichment
- Job rotation
17Sources of Job Dissatisfaction
- Tasks and Roles (continued)
- Role
- Role ambiguity
- Role conflict
- Role overload
- Role-analysis technique
18Sources of Job Dissatisfaction
- Supervisors and Coworkers
- A person may be satisfied with his or her
supervisor and coworkers for one of three
reasons - shared values, attitudes, and philosophies,
- strong social support,
- help in attaining some valued outcome.
- Pay and Benefits
- For many people, pay is a reflection of self
worth, so pay satisfaction takes on critical
significance when it comes to retention.
19Survey Feedback Interventions
- Reasons for routinely surveying employee
attitudes include the following - It allows the company to monitor trends over
time. - It provides a means of assessing change impacts
in policy. - If a company uses a standardized scale, it can
compare itself with others in the same industry. - If a company provides feedback and a
corresponding action plan to deal with problems,
dissatisfaction can become a plus.
20Survey Feedback Interventions
- Surveys
- emphasize overall satisfaction.
- assess the impact of changes in policy.
- allow the company to compare itself with others
in the same industry. - allow the company to check for differences
between units and benchmark best practices that
might be generalized across units. - Give employees a constructive outlet for voicing
their concerns and frustrations. Voicing is a
formal opportunity to complain about ones work
situation.
21Discussion question
- Organizational turnover is generally considered a
negative outcome, and many organizations spend a
great deal of time and money trying to reduce it.
Can you think of some situations in which an
increase in turnover might be just what an
organization needs? Given the difficulty of
terminating employees, can you think of any
organizational policies that might promote the
retention of high performing workers but promote
voluntary turnover among low performers?