The core of all business
success is employee talent.
Without a talented team,
you may work long and hard but never accomplish much of anything.
But how do you keep your
team together, once you have attracted the right kind of talent?
Ego, ambition, real
financial concerns and the quest for bigger challenges all conspire to chip
away at your talent base.
Here’s how to retain
talented employees:
1. Cultivate differences,
rather than similarities.
All talented employees are
not the same.
One craves attention, and
another abhors it.
One is driven by
compensation alone, another is driven by purpose.
If you adopt a
one-size-fits-all approach to employee retention, you will retain just one kind
of person.
Over time, your team will
become a set of clones, who all think the same.
When that happens, you no
longer have a talented team.
2. Reward people the way they
want to be rewarded.
Once you understand how
different we all are, the logical next step is to treat different employees differently.
For example, if you have a
shy genius on your team who prefers to work behind-the-scenes, let him or her
work away from the glare of public meetings and presentations.
Get to know your best
performers personally, otherwise you will have no idea what motivates each
person.
3. Give employees choices.
There are two strategies
for gathering insights that enable a personalized approach: implicit or
explicit data collection.
The former is where you
observe what people do and draw your own conclusions; the latter is where you
ask them.
Each has its advantages –
explicit is more accurate, but generally has a lower response rate – so you
need to utilize both.
Literally ask people
whether money or flexibility is more important to them. Ask whether an overseas
assignment would be a plus or a negative.
4. Reward honesty,
never penalize it.
If there is just one path
to success in your firm, you will have a hard time retaining a diverse group of
talented employees.
Even worse, you will not
be able to reward honesty.
For example, when an
employee admits he would rather have more time with his family than more money,
you cannot conclude he lacks ambition and decide he has little growth
potential.
Some employees love
to travel three days a week; other employees hate it.
Neither preference tells
you anything about a person’s talent or potential.
5. Grow.
If one of your key
priorities is to retain a talented team, then you have no choice but to pursue
a growth strategy in your business.
Many – not all (see no. 1)
– employees crave fresh challenges.
They want both personal
and professional growth.
You can’t provide these if
your business is growing one percent a year, because every year will be pretty
much the same as the one before it.
Recognizing this, you will
need to lean towards growth and the decisions that power it: entering new
businesses, expanding your product and service lines, creating new services
that appeal to your best customers… and finding new customers who are similar
to your best customers.
The best teams are
diverse, multi-talented and collaborative.
To attract and retain such
talent, you need to celebrate the differences between your employees.
All should have equal
opportunity, but that doesn’t mean that all have to opt in to the same career
path
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