Attracting and Retaining the Best Employees
BigStock Photo 128918942

Attracting and Retaining the Best Employees

It’s no revelation that great organizations are made up of great people. That means it’s imperative that organizations of all types and sizes have a firm strategy in hand for identifying, attracting and retaining top talent.

But for Anticipatory Organizations, hiring the “best” goes further than an appealing pitch, followed by a welcome aboard handshake. Bringing the best people into your organization and keeping them also mandates that, once talented people are on the job, their skills not only prove a suitable match to their responsibilities, but that those talents continually serve to help move the organization forward.

That puts the challenge of hiring the best people in a completely different context.

What Matters to Employees

The expense of having to replace employees who, for whatever reason, don’t remain with an organization is, frankly, hard to pin down. But what is clear is that it can prove exceedingly costly. One study by the Center for American Progress found that, for mid-level employees, the typical cost of turnover was 20 percent of salary. For a mid-level worker making $50,000 a year, that’s $8,000.

It would be easy to assume that money—enough of it, that is—is the defining factor in happy, committed employees. But that’s not necessarily the case. For instance, in one study, researchers found that more than three-quarters of all employees value career growth. In another compelling finding from a study by the Society for Human Resource Management, employees also stressed the value of an environment of trust between all employees and senior management.

What an Anticipatory Organization Can Do

Making certain your employees receive competitive wages and benefits is a solid strategy for attracting premier talent. But equally valuable are other components that not only pinpoint the right hire but also help keep valued employees engaged and rewarded:

  • Make your organization inclusive. One central caveat in my Anticipatory Organization Model™ is what I refer to as ending the war between young and old—the many divisions that come between younger and older employees. When looking to hire the best person, bear in mind the balance of your workforce between experienced employees and newcomers eager to learn all they can. Further, make certain that your organization recognizes the value that the experience and wisdom of older employees brings as well as the open mind and knowledge of new technology younger employees bring to the table.
  • A focus on re-inventing products, services and processes. If new employees feel that they are entering a time machine backward when they work for you, the best and the brightest won’t stay long. On the other hand, if they feel like you are actively reinventing the business in order to thrive in the years ahead and believe that the business needs new thinking and innovative ideas to do that, they will be far more likely to stay and to tell a talented friend about job openings. 
  • Keep your technology current. Employees willing to join and remain with an organization naturally want the best tools available with which to do their jobs. Ask yourself if this describes your organization’s technology. Is it as current as possible or an ongoing headache for employees? An organization willing to invest sufficiently in productive technology sends the message that talented employees warrant the means with which to leverage that talent.
  • Make innovation an across-the-board job description. An Anticipatory Organization doesn’t break out innovation as the purview of one person or group. Rather, it encourages people at all levels to employ anticipatory thinking by identifying and pre-solving predictable problems and looking for ways to make everything they do even better. From there, it fosters a culture of innovation in which everyone is a stakeholder, rather than just a select few.
  • Reward desired behavior. This is another bedrock of an Anticipatory Organization. The dynamic is simple—for instance, if you want employees to pursue innovation, make certain suitable rewards are in place to encourage that. If you want to boost collaboration, make certain that’s suitably rewarded as well.  

Build a culture of trust. The Society for Human Resource Management study was definitely on to something when it identified trust as a bona fide value, both for current as well as prospective employees. Trust, of course, has to be earned. Trust is earned through values, delivering on promises, honesty, integrity, mutual respect and other similar core attributes.

Looked at in an anticipatory framework, hiring the best people is a decidedly win-win scenario. If you get the best people, chances are good that you have the means in place to keep them on board. 

================================================

Thanks for reading. You can find my previous Linkedin articles here, and you can also connect with me on Twitter at @DanielBurrus

DANIEL BURRUS is considered one of the World's Leading Futurists on Global Trends and Innovation, and is the founder and CEO of Burrus Research, a research and consulting firm that monitors global advancements in technology driven trends to help clients understand how technological, social and business forces are converging to create enormous untapped opportunities. He is the author of six books including New York Times & Wall Street Journal best seller Flash Foresight.   

Daniel Burrus is also the creator of The Anticipatory Organization™ Learning Systemnamed a Top 10 Product of the Year.

The AO Learning System is a training process for executives and their teams to develop the skills to accurately foresee and take critical actions before disruption strikes.

Aleksandr Namai

Partner, Investor, MB Alekso Namai.

7y

Few enterprises of great labour or hazard would be undertaken if we had not the power of magnifying the advantages we expect from them.

Like
Reply
Krystle Howald

Owner and Physical Therapist at Empower Movement Physical Therapy

7y

Great article. Right on. Creating a culture. For me as I grow it will imperative to nurturing that culture and creating goals with employees. Setting aside time to review these and collaborate with staff on how to achieve is a task I struggle with as a small business but it has to happen for growth to happen. It is not easy to find the talent and most of all communication skills I was looking for in a staffed therapist! But now that we found one its easier to keep her happy than to start this process over. Makes me tired just thinking of it. Cheers Daniel.

Like
Reply
David Koltz

Senior Environmental Engineer at Barr Engineering Co.

7y

From grade school onward, thanks again for continuing to inspire personal growth!

Like
Reply
Sara Heikkinen

Producer at Boutique Animation Oy

7y

There were many interesting insights in this article, however, I need to disagree with the view point that "Trust, of course, has to be earned.". When our company hires a person, trusting that person comes automatically, it is not something that needs to be earned or proven. Hiring someone means that we trust that person fully, unless he/she proves us wrong.

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Explore topics