Soft Costs Are Costlier
Then there are the harder-to-measure soft costs. These represent the more subtle effects and costs of talent lost. Which of these have you seen? And what did it really cost you and your organization?
You’ll lose time interviewing.
If you weren’t interviewing all those candidates for the job your terrific employee left, what would you be doing instead? You’d be building, selling, designing, leading, brainstorming, connecting, teaching … and more. We rest our case.
Productivity plummets during a job search.
You start losing money the moment your talented employees disengage. Instead of working for you, they’re updating their résumés, logging on to job boards and social media, responding to potential employers, interviewing, negotiating, accepting the new job—and then celebrating. Their departure is a pricey proposition.
When someone leaves, the work doesn’t.
Work doesn’t go away just because the person handling it leaves. It simply gets put on hold or redistributed until a replacement is found. And very often that replacement never materializes. The image of a hamster on a treadmill is all too accurate. The result is burnout and lower morale for all those who’ve stayed.
When one goes, others follow.
Talented people find greener grass and then call their buddies, enticing them to follow. This happens even more often today, particularly among younger workers, who highly value both flexibility and friendships.
They’ll take their brilliance and (perhaps) your customers with them.
Have you ever had a loyal customer follow you to your next job? What did that cost the organization you left? And what about the brilliance and the institutional knowledge that wanders out the door with that person you cannot afford to lose? Tally that.
No one enters fully ready.
How long does it take to teach new employees the ropes? How long before they know how to navigate your organization, talk to your customers, integrate with other business units, or move an idea? Meanwhile, the team carries the load … at what cost?
New hires don’t always measure up.
It’s a risk you take when you’re replacing a great employee. If the new hire isn’t as productive, personable, or knowledgeable as the one you lost, what is the cost?
Run the numbers
There’s only so much you can do without the people you need to get the job done. There’s only so far you can reach, only so many fires you can put out, and only so many projects you can take on. The next time you wonder whether stay interviews are worth your time and effort, run the numbers. Calculate both the hard and the soft costs of talent loss. Then call your employees in and find out what will keep them engaged and on your team. Do you wonder how to do that? Read on.