Retention Employee – Access Code Part 2
January 17th, 2010Hire Good Staff, Keep Good Staff, Manage Staff, Staff Management No CommentsAt HRwisdom, we regularly recommend to our free subscribers that they actively plan ahead to improve employee retention and today’s blog post is some further food for thought. By actively planning ahead you’ll not only decrease staff turnover, you also:
- Recruit better quality people who actually do what they say they will do.
- Expand your pipeline of good employee candidates.
- Improve employee morale.
- Boost management confidence.
- Increase in business efficiency and profitability.
- Raise your reputation in the marketplace.
So today we draw your attention to some interesting thoughts from Kevin Wheeler’s online comments (part 2) where he discusses the importance of developing people as a requirement for success.
Remember, for instantly downloadable employee retention support, click on the following toolkit code: retention employee.
Kevin Wheeler: Developing People is a Requirement for Success
I spent many years working in the semiconductor industry when it faced a labor shortage of skilled process engineers and equipment operators. We eventually devised training programs that took basic electrical engineers and developed them into capable process engineers quickly. IBM trained thousands of programmers throughout the 1960s and 1970s to meet its own huge needs. At the same time, IBM and other companies quietly worked with academic institutions to develop today’s academic computer curricula.
This training and development does not have to be of the same type that a person would receive at an ordinary academic institution. In most every case, corporate training can concentrate on skills that are needed right now and forego the theoretical, the basics, and the nice-to-have-but-not-critical things. Whether or not a person goes back at some point to get those basics remains a question, but I believe that efficient training can address the labor shortage issue quickly.
Access Code: Retention Employee
In both world wars, the U.S. Armed Forces reverted to intensive training programs to fill critical positions. They have learned that this can be as efficient a process as having a huge standing army.
The trick is in accepting that there is a responsibility on the part of employers to develop the people they need. Employers should be willing to provide the training and development for the jobs they have a need to get done. Waiting for the school system or the government to do your job for you has never been a very good strategy.
Toolkit Code: Retention Employee
As always, HRwisdom has world class support instantly available to you to help you retain employees. To retain good employees, click on the following access code: retention employee.
Kind regards,
HRwisdom Support






