One of the leading executive job search firms and job placement agencies in Thane, India
Time management tips and more
How Do We Quantify the Impact of Faulty Hiring?
Q: We're trying to polish our recruiting efforts after some bad hires. How
can we measure the impact, both in dollars and other costs, of poor hiring
decisions?
A: Employee turnover is an important tool to use in measuring a company's
success. But let's be honest: There are different costs associated with
"good turnover," in which underachievers are separated, and "bad turnover,"
in which quality performers leave for other opportunities. Therefore the
data alone does not tell a whole story. Radical as it may seem, some
turnover can be good even desirable, in some instances.
But let's start with the basics. There are certain quantifiable costs
involved in filling a vacancy, whether it's caused by good or bad turnover.
These costs are composed of employment advertising fees (print or online),
recruiter fees (contingency or executive search), assessment tools and
background checks, travel and relocation costs, HR staff time, and new
employee orientation and training. Additionally, turnover will have a
qualitative impact on productivity, with work being reassigned and new hires
needing time to learn their new jobs.
Now let's take the analysis one step further and distinguish the
differences between good and bad turnover. When a valued employee leaves,
not only do you incur obvious costs, but the company also loses that
employee's internal corporate knowledge and experience, external client
contacts and sources and it faces the possibility that the employee will use
his or her skills to work for a competitor. Alternatively, when a marginal
employee leaves, a company has the opportunity either to incur a savings by
not filling the job or to recruit an employee that adds more value than the
one who has left.
The obvious question from human resources' perspective is how to avoid bad
turnover, rather than how to avoid turnover in general. In order to fight
bad turnover, every manager in your company should be trained in employee
relations, conflict resolution and the implementation of equitable corporate
policies and procedures. An employee-retention program that is geared toward
maintaining a positive corporate culture and employee well-being always
attracts job applicants. However, discouraging bad turnover requires
properly trained managers working with human resource strategists to
recognize telltale signs of frustration among employees, especially in areas
within their direct control. In the end, it is frontline supervisors who are
accountable for employee satisfaction within individual departments. Success
means giving those managers the proper tools.
|
|
|