Yellow Arrow

Retain before you have to replace

I don’t know what happened…one minute it was going fine, and then the next, they had gone!

If you are a manager or employer who has found yourself saying this, in all likelihood, it wasn’t all going fine for a while. But a critical member of your team has resigned, and you’re left wondering what happened – and even worse, you have to move fast to replace them and their expertise.

Wouldn’t it be easier to retain your talent in the first place?

According to Bonusly, “Employee engagement is already one of the most important differentiators for modern organisations, and it’s on the minds of nearly every organisational leader”.

So, what can you do to help keep your top talent?

Creating strong employee morale and job satisfaction is key to ensuring you remain competitive in the market. After all, your employees could be the ones who bring in business, deal with customers and add to brand value. Your employees allow your company to grow and are crucial to business success.

Richard Branson is quoted as saying: “Clients do not come first. Employees come first. If you take care of your employees, they will take care of the clients”.

Hopefully, the following points are useful in your pursuit of retention:

Make the employee feel special. Ensure that your employees feel they are contributing to the company’s success. If possible, involve them in decision-making, let them take ownership of their role, and trust them to do their job. Recognise and reward achievements and motivate them to seek opportunities to learn. Continuing professional development is a key tool in ensuring job satisfaction, so creating an environment where learning is central will help you keep employees engaged.

Make sure that the package on offer is competitive in your industry. Notice I say package and not just salary. Nonfinancial benefits can include bonuses, recognition, on-site opportunities, training, work-from-home options, vacations, company shares, involvement in decision-making etc. All of the above can have a major bearing on employee retention. Combine this with a fair and transparent policy on promotions and you’ll help encourage your team to stay around.

Be flexible. I suppose this is the new mantra of lots of organisations regardless of size or sector. Given the changes to the global job market over the last few years it’s for the most part now an expectation that companies offer opportunities for a better work-life balance.

According to Owl Labs, “Companies supporting work-from-home have 25% lower employee turnover than the organisations that don’t.”

Try to match headcount to workload. It makes more sense to grow your team rather than put undue pressure on existing employees. Not an easy task in the current climate I know, but it will help to ensure that your current team remain focused on their core activities. You should forecast your team size along with your planned growth. Not only will this make for smoother running of the business should you unexpectedly lose a team member, but it will allow you to take on more work as it arises.

Be supportive and empathetic. Never forget that your team are people and, as people, are unique. Each will have different aspirations, motivations, attitudes, challenges, distractions, and frustrations so it’s rarely a one size fits all approach which works. However, ensuring that you spot when someone needs support for whatever reason and then doing something about it can mean a lot in terms of continued motivation.

Have a clear vision or mission statement. For your organisation that your employees understand, believe, and are committed to. Having a clear vision or mission statement is important for aligning employees towards a common goal, increasing motivation and engagement, establishing the organisation’s brand identity, and providing a framework for decision-making.

Of course, having a good employee retention strategy requires an understanding of real-life statistics and data. It is through analysing the trends within your business that you can identify the areas where you can improve.

Retaining top talent is crucial for the success of any organisation. To achieve this, companies need to create a positive work environment that supports employee morale and job satisfaction. By following these steps, organisations can increase employee engagement and reduce turnover, ensuring long-term success.

At Corvus People, we have a clear purpose – we want to see people succeed. We offer support across the entire employee lifecycle, and our range of solutions fits seamlessly into your business. Please get in touch if you feel we can help.

 

Written by Myles McKeown


You May Also Like...

What Hiring Teams Get Wrong About Ambition

What Hiring Teams Get Wrong About Ambition

Aug 05, 2025 | Business Advice, Recruitment, Retention

What Hiring Teams Get Wrong About Ambition Ambition: a word that should signal energy, drive, and growth potential yet too often, hiring teams misinterpret or even mistrust it. In their article, “Ambition Isn’t a Dirty Word”, Harvard Business Review highlights how ambition gets unfairly judged, especially in environments where it’s viewed as self-serving or aggressive. […]

read more
When the Role Can’t Hold the Candidate: Why Executive Hires Fail (and How to Get It Right)

When the Role Can’t Hold the Candidate: Why Executive Hires Fail (and How to Get It Right)

Aug 05, 2025 | Business Advice, Executive Search

When the Role Can’t Hold the Candidate: Why Executive Hires Fail (and How to Get It Right) We’ve all heard it before: “They looked perfect on paper.” The CV was impeccable, the interview was smooth, their experience, impressive, even enviable and yet, six months in, something’s not working. The reason, the role simply couldn’t hold […]

read more
There’s a shift that I’ve spotted at the senior level

There’s a shift that I’ve spotted at the senior level

Jul 02, 2025 | Business Advice, Career Advice, Executive Search, Recruitment

More of the CVs I see tick every box. They quantify impact, they tell the story, properly and that would usually mean, “they’re worth a screening call”

read more
The 5 Human Skills You Need to Thrive in the Age of AI

The 5 Human Skills You Need to Thrive in the Age of AI

Jul 02, 2025 | Business Advice, Executive Search, Recruitment

AI is no longer a future concept, it’s here, embedded in our workspaces, reshaping roles, and redefining what it means to be “employable.” What do we bring to the table that AI can’t replicate?

read more
From Awareness to Action: How to Measure and Develop Human Skills in the Age of AI

From Awareness to Action: How to Measure and Develop Human Skills in the Age of AI

Jul 02, 2025 | Business Advice, Executive Search, HR Consulting, Recruitment

In a world increasingly augmented by AI, the spotlight is shifting to the human skills machines can’t replicate; imagination, creativity, emotional intelligence, ethical reasoning, and storytelling. These aren’t just “nice to have” anymore. They are becoming the core skills of high-performance teams and resilient organisations.

read more
Why Fractional Leadership Could be the Smart Hire for Growth-Stage Owner-Led Businesses

Why Fractional Leadership Could be the Smart Hire for Growth-Stage Owner-Led Businesses

Jul 02, 2025 | Business Advice, Business News, Executive Search

In today’s fast-moving often unpredictable business climate owner-led and privately held firms face a unique leadership dilemma. They’re scaling quickly, investing in new markets or navigating periods of transformation but, don’t always have the capacity or confidence to bring in full-time senior executives.

read more

Sign up to our mailing list

Let’s stay in touch

Keep up to date with the latest insights from Corvus with our newsletter. We'll never spam you and will only send you the good stuff. We'll never share your email address.