What Does Low Tenure Say About Your Company?
What is job tenure?
Job tenure refers to the length of time an employee has been continuously employed by the same employer or within the same job position. It is often measured in years or months and is an important metric for assessing an individual's work history and commitment to a particular job or organisation. Job tenure can be categorised into several types:
Short-term tenure: Employees with short job tenure have worked in a particular role or organisation for a relatively brief period, typically less than one year. Short-term tenure may indicate a lack of stability or a series of temporary or contract positions.
Medium-term tenure: Medium-term job tenure typically spans several years, usually between one and five years. Employees with medium-term tenure have shown a degree of commitment to their roles or employers, and their experience may be seen as more substantial than those with short-term tenure.
Long-term tenure: Long-term job tenure refers to employees who have remained with the same employer or in the same role for an extended period, often exceeding five years. Long-term employees are often considered loyal, experienced, and highly committed to their organisations.
Long-term tenure is becoming more of a rarity, with the average tenure in one role being four years (the economic news release) with people moving for various reasons; however, the tenure varies depending on what role and industry people work in. The highest employee turnovers reportedly being Technology, Retail and Media.
So, what does it say about your company when you have a high turnover rate?
A hire and fire organisation?
You don’t support employees?
Your culture and internal opportunities are not good?
Technology now makes information about internal organisational affairs much easier to obtain, with anonymous platforms such as Glassdoor making issues transparent to the public – including those who are considering joining your organisation. Platforms such as LinkedIn also show the average tenure of employees within the company so there is nowhere to hide.
If you have a high turnover, people will know about it.
High turnover can often be industry-specific with higher turnover being more closely linked with sales positions and target-driven environments.
What can high turnover say about your company?
You are not passionate about internal development
People automatically assume you have issues when turnover is high – and they are correct to think so. According to indeed.com, the top reason people move and seek new roles is career advancement and compensation/benefits. According to research, people find better career development when they move companies, gaining an average of 11% salary increase compared to only 2% if they stay in a position.
Over half of workers say they would consider a new opportunity for more money.
If you are passionate about internal development, then this is something you should action – monthly reviews, bonuses, and promotions are all things which should be available to your employees to prevent them from looking for new positions in other companies.
Running competitor salary reviews and benchmarking again industry standards is also highly important.
Your employees are unhappy
If people leave your company, you automatically think they are unhappy – and it’s the same for outsiders. High employee turnover = employee unhappiness. It may not be the case, but with reviews of your company so readily available on places like Glass Door, it’s challenging to hide employee unhappiness if the only thoughts you have are from dissatisfied ex-employees.
Encourage current employees to write reviews about your workplace to attract new talent. If people aren’t happy within your company, you must address their issues and work towards employee satisfaction.
Conduct regular reviews and anonymous surveys to collected data. These surveys can offer insight into what people are really thinking about your company and their work environment. They will also give you information about what you need to change and improve. If you don’t ask, you will never know.
You are not an exciting company
As a tech company, everything you do should be exciting and innovative. You should be constantly evolving, growing and attracting new talent. A high turnover of employees could mean that people don’t think your company is interesting enough to work for. If you offer exciting products, prospects and opportunities to employees – make sure people know about it, make sure your current employees know about it, or there is no reason they should stay with you.
If you’re unable to be exciting with your products and services, make your workplace and exciting place to be. Team events, feedback and collaboration keep and environment energetic and exciting.
Low tenure isn’t always bad – great companies such as Google have a meagre retention rate (average of 1.1 years); however, they offer all the benefits, perks and company attraction to all their employees. You may be a well-established company, but the people within it might prefer a risky start-up that offers a more challenging environment.
Tenure all comes down to the right hire, which takes time, planning and action (including finding the right recruitment partner). If you need assistance finding the right talent for your business, get in touch!