Key skills retention and motivation: the war for talent still rages and retention is the high ground
Abstract
Purpose
The paper sets out to examine effective, practical and holistic people strategies that address key skills retention, employee engagement, employee motivation and attendance gaps, with a view to positively impacting on organization costs, productivity and business performance. The paper also seeks to examine the value of assessment and feedback in talent engagement and retention, and to look at developing employees via experience‐based development initiatives.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper commences with an assessment of a matrix of the “hot buttons” or “predictors”, which need to be consciously managed – with significant potential returns, where managed well. The paper examines a holistic matrix of nine employee engagement predictors: process; role challenge; values; work‐life balance; information; stake/leverage/reward/recognition; management; work environment; and product. Reference is made to a case study in which this matrix formed the basis of the organization's people management strategy.
Findings
Workplace context is key. Take a holistic view of the key elements of the business most likely to impact team engagement, motivation, attendance and retention, link individual assessment directly to the key drivers of the business, and recognize that key talent is likely to thrive on experience‐based career leverage opportunities.
Originality/value
Provides practical guidance to senior HR professionals and business leaders for developing a successful strategy for key skills retention and employee engagement.
Keywords
Citation
Glen, C. (2006), "Key skills retention and motivation: the war for talent still rages and retention is the high ground", Industrial and Commercial Training, Vol. 38 No. 1, pp. 37-45. https://doi.org/10.1108/00197850610646034
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited