When Not to Worry About Turnover

Most HR professionals would agree that turnover is a source of stress. Losing an employee can feel like losing an investment, and replacing that person has its own costs—advertising, onboarding, training, and coverage to name a few. But we also know that turnover is a manageable cost of doing business, and sometimes even welcome. In short, turnover is a metric to take seriously, but also realistically.

Let’s examine a few potentially stressful situations related to turnover and explore whether they’re really something you should be worried about.

Potential Stressor: Your Turnover Rate Seems High

Whether a given turnover rate is high or low depends on many factors—both in and out of your control. If ineffective or toxic managers are scaring away talent, you should prioritize fixing that. If a bunch of employees resign about the same time, definitely pause and seek to understand why.

But if most of your workforce consists of students who typically leave after graduation or entry level workers who usually put in only a year or two before moving on, it’s prudent to prepare for those departures, but the effect of these departures on your turnover rate needn’t keep you up at night. Don’t stress too much about a number—it’s information that can be helpful, but also a distraction from what’s really important.

Potential Stressor: New Hire Quits

It never feels good when a new hire leaves within the first few months of their tenure with you, but unless it happens repeatedly, it’s probably not a red flag.

That said, digging into your recruitment and onboarding processes may help you tighten any loose ends. Look for disconnects between what is advertised and what the job actually entails. Conduct exit interviews if the departing employee is willing and ask open-ended questions about their experience. If you feel like you’re getting only “safe” answers, be more pointed in trying to determine if the role was as they imagined based on how it was advertised, and whether there were any processes or people that contributed to their decision to leave.

Building a process that creates a true job preview for candidates should prevent them from feeling like they’ve been “had.” New employees who come in with a clear picture of what to expect and then have an experience that matches those expectations are more likely to stick around.

Potential Stressor: One Team Has Much Higher Turnover

As you track turnover, you may notice spikes within one or more teams rather than throughout the whole company. Higher than average turnover rates among certain teams may point to bad management practices or unusually stressful working situations, but they also may be a sign of normal and good things happening. Approach the situation with curiosity.

You may find that teams with higher turnover operate with more entry-level or transitional positions that employees don’t typically spend a lot of time in. Perhaps you have a manager who’s regularly helping their reports move up in the organization or setting higher (but still reasonable) performance standards than their predecessor. You may also find that the work that team does is more stressful, grueling, or monotonous than work elsewhere in the organization. You’d expect higher turnover in these situations. It’s not necessarily a problem you need to solve, but it’s definitely something to account for.

Parting Thought

If you work in HR, you may have some sleepless nights. It’s the nature of the job. You’re constantly putting out fires, addressing emotionally challenging situations, and taking steps to make every hire a good investment for the company. When people leave, it can feel like you’ve failed.

But be kind to yourself. Turnover is always important—but it isn’t always a problem. Turnover is normal and expected. Some turnover is good! Approach employee departures with curiosity and patience. They may indicate that something needs to be fixed or tweaked, but they may also be a sign that everything is working as it should.

Take 10 minutes and find out how you can build a more cohesive team.

Strong Managers, Strong Businesses

Ever notice that great managers always seem to have great people working under them? Dedicated, happy, more productive and their goals tend to parallel the organizational goals. Strong managers enable companies to prosper during difficult times.

Does your company have a system that facilitates the development of new talent from within? At AllMyHR, we feel effective professional development of your team shouldn’t be complicated, difficult to administer and it shouldn’t break the bank. Our Learning Management System is inexpensive, easy to administer, and the materials are both pertinent and compelling. We even provide you time with a training consultant who will help design a program that best fits your company’s needs.

To find out how AllMyHR can make growing your own talent a manageable process, click here and schedule a brief call/or demonstration and start developing your management from within. You cannot afford to have your managers get their degrees from the “School of Hard Knocks”.

The Advantages of Skill-Based Training

Often, when employers hear about on-the-job training, the training pertains either to general knowledge or to policies and procedures that are unique to the companySkill-based training is somewhat different — it focuses on how to do something specific and results in a learned skill that can be put to immediate use. Here are some examples of how this training mechanism can be used:

  • Hazard communications
  • Performance management
  • Keeping your cool during a hostile phone conversation
  • Writing concise emails
  • Cybersecurity

This type of training is beneficial for most companies, but since good courses are often, but not always, an investment, HR professionals should focus on where they can maximize value. Two types of employees come to mind as the best candidates: those who want to succeed but are struggling to meet expectations, and top performers who you feel might be a flight risk.

For the strugglers, your clients must first find out what they need to learn to reach their potential. Are they spending way too much time trying to figure out Excel on their own? Are they a new manager that doesn’t know how to coach? Giving these people access to skill-based training could make a huge difference in both their efficiency and happiness—as well as your clients’ bottom line.

The high achievers, on the other hand, should be asked what they want to learn. Likely, they’ve already thought about next steps at your organization and in what new ways they could contribute. Your clients should give them a chance to shine! Their investment in their employees’ futures won’t go unnoticed; employees who receive training are more likely to be engaged and less likely to leave.

Whatever your clients’ training strategy, AllMyHR is here to ensure compliance, reduce risk, and drive engagement. Our extensive course library covers topics from employee onboarding and workplace safety to harassment prevention and cybersecurity. Expand your offerings through a partnership with AllMyHR. Request a consultation today!

Onboarding Starts Before a New Hire’s First Day

new hire

Pre-Employment Communication

New hires are often overwhelmed on their first day – especially when the orientation program includes long lists of procedures, tasks, company policies, introductions to co-workers, compliance requirements, and all the technical aspects of employment. It’s difficult for new hires to absorb and retain much of the information conveyed during orientation, this is why follow up is critical.

So first-day orientation, while important, isn’t the end of onboarding. Onboarding is a larger process that begins before the start date and continues through most of the first year, done properly it will provide a seamless, efficient and effective new hire experience.

It All Begins Here

Remember when you started. When did you receive and sign your offer letter? How soon did you start? Did you have communication between your hire and start dates? If there was communication, what form was it in? What did it say? What materials were provided? Hopefully you received a reminder to bring valid identification as well as signed copies of employment documentation (offer letter, employee handbook acknowledgment, I9, and a W4).

Onboarding documents, such as a Welcome Packet, are sent as part of the series of communication before your employee’s start date. These documents provide an overview to help set expectations. They also give your new hire time to review information and arrive for their first day prepared and ready!

Standardized new hire onboarding communication decreases the work and relieves much of the effort creating this experience for each new hire. This will also help you build a consistently reinforced employer brand with each new employee.

While some items in the onboarding process can be conveyed via bullet points in an email (direct deposit setup, background check, dress code, etc.) others need to be more thoroughly and clearly communicated. The Welcome Packet you create does just that.

A Good Heads-up Will Lower Anxiety

We like the Golden Rule when it comes to a new employee orientation checklist: When starting a new job, would you want your new company to send you a generic welcome email before your first day, or more personalized and detailed information to get you ready for your new position.

Provide new employees with a sense of transparency with the materials your company provides in their Welcome Packet. Include information to give them a heads-up (maybe refrigerator lunchroom rules or the temperature in the office). When appropriate an email introduction to team members or a request for a short personal bio for a welcome announcement to the company.

Providing a snapshot of coworkers (just the basics) first name, face, and function. These basic three can prove to be helpful when your new hire first meets their coworkers. This information can also help lower anxiety.

Day 1

New hire expects an HR orientation on their first day. How long will orientation take 60 minutes, a full workday? What needs to be covered? What questions should be asked? These are the types of things new hires are thinking about. Introductions, new hire paperwork, lines of communication, different team members, understanding the new role and expectations of performance are all unanswered question new hires want and need to know.

Start by sending Welcome Packets a week before the new hire start date. This provides basic information and answers questions and concerns before that often stressful first day.

As we all know, first impressions matter! The first day is a major part of the onboarding process. This is where your company makes its first impression. This is why it’s essential to get things off to a proper start. Providing a detailed look at the agenda will keep you and your new hire on the same page and help ease the stresses of day one.

Six Months

Onboarding is about employee perception and experience, providing a platform for successful employment. It doesn’t stop after the first day. It’s not unusual for new hires to take as much as 6 months to a year to fully get up and running in all aspects of their new employment. The all important 90 day review should include a review with not just the employees manager but with the HR department. This provides the perfect opportunity to ask about their experience and opinion of the onboarding process.

This is why it’s important to have a plan that extends out 90 days to as long as 6 months.

Conclusion

Once the onboarding is complete, check for understanding, track your results, examine any gaps, incorporate feedback to improve your future Welcome Packets.

Our tools are designed to streamline your workday.

Schedule a Demo and see how AllMyHR works for you.