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Retention: Forget Exit
Interviews
By J. Leslie McKeown
...well..., forget exit interviews ON THEIR OWN, anyway. Grappling with retention issues starts with understanding **why**
people are leaving, right? Well, that's what all the books and magazine articles say...And
they're **wrong**. Here's why exit interviews ON THEIR OWN don't
work:
1. There's little point spending a lot of time finding out why
people leave without an understanding of why they JOINED in the
first place. It's important to map what people say when they're
LEAVING against what they said when they JOIN, to see what has
CHANGED in between.
2. People leaving jobs RATIONALIZE the decision, just as we do
when we by a new car or house. We think of all the positive
reasons why we made this purchase (or took the new job) to avoid
feeling 'buyers remorse'. This makes the responses to the classic
exit interview question 'Why are you leaving?' somewhat suspect.
What can you do about this?
A. Conduct ENTRY interviews, as well as exit interviews.
Have an external party consistently interview new hires to find
out why they JOINED your company. (You can do this during your
orientation program, which you hold at least every month,
right...?)
Assure the new hires that information will be kept confidential
by the third party, but that you will receive composite summaries
of what is being said.
Use that information to track correlations between why people are
joining and why they are leaving. For example:
* 5% of your new hires say one of the reasons they join you is
because of the company's reputation as a 'fun place to work.'
* At exit interview, 62% say they one of the reasons they are
Leaving is because of 'a negative atmosphere in their workplace'.
This tells you something crucial about the messages being given
Out at recruitment time, compared to the reality internally.
B. Don't ask 'Why are you leaving?'
Even if your employees respond by telling the truth, you still
won't get the answers you want.
Instead, ask 'Why didn't you stay?'
This is a crucially different question, even though it may seem
semantically similar. Here's the difference:
Let's say you ask Joe Leaver 'Why are you leaving?'. He thinks
long, gulps and says: 'My supervisor was a bully.' Is that what
you really need to know? Let's say you ask instead 'Well, why
didn't you stay?' The answer is 'Because you wouldn't do anything
about my bullying supervisor when I complained.'
See the difference? 'Why are you leaving?' will uncover the
AILMENT.
'Why didn't you stay?' uncovers the CURE you need to
implement.
J. Leslie McKeown is the President & CEO of Yellowbrick, which provides employee development solutions for
organizations of all sizes, particularly in the areas of retention, orientation and mentoring and coaching.
Click here to find to find out more about
their employee retention strategy.
ExpertMagazine.com 2001
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