Need a Lift?
How to retain employees when pay raises and job security are but a memory
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2003/january/58006.html
If you're like most employers, you had pretty severe layoffs
about a year ago, and are just thankful you haven't had to let
anyone go since. But look around. The all-for-one attitude among
surviving employees has likely dissipated. You're left with a
stressed, overworked staff who can't remember their last
raises.
Don't kid yourself-people won't work under these
conditions forever, notes Richard Hadden, employee relations expert
and author of Contented Cows Give Better Milk (Saltillo
Press). "Even though there's a cease-fire in the talent
war, in the next few years, there will be far more jobs than people
to fill them. People working [long hours], [who've] neglected
their family and neglected their health-those people [will be] the
first to jump ship."
Short of giving raises you can't afford, Hadden suggests
being more flexible with schedules-as in not freaking when an
employee takes time to care for a child or comes in late. "If
leaders ask a whole lot more, they need to provide additional
support," says Hadden. Consider organizing a group to pool
child-care resources or adopting flex hours.
Employers also need to offer a light at the end of the tunnel by
formulating a plan for hiring new staff to ease the burden. Share
the plan with employees, "whether it's based on revenue
per head, when overtime gets bad, when the bill from the temp
agency gets too high, etc.," says Marc Drizin, vice president
and employee loyalty specialist at Walker Information Inc. in
Indianapolis. Communication is the key here; employees need to know
not only what the problems are, but what solutions are being
applied.
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