Welcome to this week's issue of The Total View.
Donald Trump has turned "you're fired" into a national
past time. But he's no match for the many managers
who are churning through employees and as a result
burning through profits. Today's story is a case study
of one employer's "enlightenment" of the high cost of
churning employees.
"Your book has shaken my soul
and said to me there is more in life and yes i can do
it." Saten Sharma, Mercury Energy
Written in "a Blanchard style of getting information
across in an easy, understandable and practical way."
John Rose, The Horst Group
"Ira describes simply and elegantly how to
understand what people value." Eric Dombach, Action
International Business Coaching
Order your copies below and save $3 off the cost
of each book (Retail - $12.95) - Plus! Receive a
Business Values and Motivators Report - valued at $49 -
at no cost during this pre-publication offer.
Les and his management team have exceeded
projections in each of the past seven years. The
business has nearly doubled in size during that time and
increased profitability - until this past year. They
contributed the break-even year to a general economic
slowdown and increasing turnover in their hourly labor
force.
While stopping short of a recruitment and retention
overhaul, they did offer signing bonuses and more
competitive wages in an attempt
to stop no-shows, change bad attitudes, and boost
morale. These changes met with moderate success
and helped retain a few more employees for nearly a
year.
Employee churn for new hires nevertheless
increased by 33 percent for the third straight year. At
a cost of nearly $6,000 for recruiting, hiring and training
every
new employee, Les was watching his profits go up min
smoke. Likewise he was puzzled and frustrated by the
attitudes and ethics of
the new workers.
Unfortunately Les and his team have fallen prey to
the "industry-average syndrome". By virtue of the
latest industry survey, they deemed their turnover rate
acceptable compared to their industry cohorts.
That thinking may be acceptable as long if you
believe it is
okay to be the last ship to sink, but it's
unacceptable if you want to stay afloat in today's
competitive markets.
A fatal flaw in Les' team strategies is ignoring the
hard cold facts that every churned employee is a loss
right off the bottom line. Without controlling churnover,
(turnover of twelve months or less - six
months may be acceptable in some industries)
most if not all of the revenue projections will be offset
by rising costs to recruit and replace workers without
any increase in productivity.
Churn-over, not
turnover, is grinding up the profits of businesses
unwilling to stop the turnstile of employees who come
and go. Turnover is inevitable. Churn-over is
unacceptable. The costs of mis-hiring are staggering.
The effort and sales needed to pay for these costs and
still make a profit are crushing.
Case Study:The High Cost of Churnover
Les's business generated revenues of $6.6 million in
2003. Profit margins were 14%. His 2004 projected
increase in revenues (an eight percent increase) is
$528,000.
Last year, Les's company produced sixty-four W-
2's for 35 positions. Essentially they hired 64 new
employees for twenty positions; 15 employees were
employed more than 12 months.
On the surface, turnover appears to be
83 percent, less than the 92 percent industry average.
Churn-over, the number of employees hired and gone in
less than one-year, was a whopping 320 percent (64
attempts at hiring for 20 positions)!
At the cost of $6,000 per employee, these 64
employees cost the company $384,000. Even at the
same clip this year, churn-over will eat up nearly
seventy-two percent of the projected revenue gains.
What's worse - much worse - is how much revenue
has to increase to sustain the 14 percent profit
margin. At fourteen percent profit margin, nearly
$2,743,000 in additional revenues need to be brought in
just to keep pace with the lost costs of churn-over.
Increasing revenues shouldn't be Les' primary focus
unless he likes to just work harder and harder with not
a lot to show for it. If Les and his team would only put
a plan in motion
to reduce annual hourly turnover to 25%, they would
find it much less painful to grow the business at the top
line and the bottom line.
The cost of 16 churned employees would be
$96,000, a savings of $288,000 in the human resource
line item. Re-funneling a portion of the savings for
wages, benefits and training back to the remaining
employees would certainly be a good idea too as the
return on retaining employees is clearly much greater
than recruiting new ones.
Of even greater importance will be the increased
profit margin from revenue growth. Although the
revenues required to foot the bill for even 25 percent
turnover is still over $600,000, Les's company will
increase profits due to increased productivity and
quality from a more experienced workforce, lower
administrative and training costs for new hires, and less
stress on supervisors, managers and co-workers.
Avoid Hiring and Promoting the Wrong Employee with The Whole Person Approach - CriteriaOne Training for managers and consultants who want to learn to identify, select and retain talent- April 21-23, 2004
Perfect Labor Storm Alerts #100 to #105
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fact #101
Only one in ten workers has a clear line of sight
between his or her task and company goals.
Fact #102
Only 50 percent of employees feel they follow
through with discipline on their key priorities. (What
would you pay a taxi driver who spent only 50% of the
time trying to reach your destination?)
Source: Stephen Covey and Harris Interactive
Fact #103
The cost of replacing a senior executive averages
two to five times his or her annual salary.
Source: Training and Development, February 2004
Fact #104
17 percent of employees are actively disengaged
from their job - they don't see the link between their
performance and company profitability. Source:
U.S. Employee Engagement Index
Fact #105
By 2010, nearly 30% or 765,000 of our nation's
public school teachers will retire.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Education
In 1998 McKinsey and Company described a United
States workplace phenomenon as the "War for Talent",
a result of the shortage of workers to fill skilled jobs.
McKinsey conducted a yearlong study of 77 companies
and 6,600 managers, who concluded that the most
significant business challenge over the next 20 years
will be recruiting, retaining, and inspiring talent.
In 1999 Ira Wolfe described the "Perfect Labor Storm".
In 2004, "The Perfect Labor Storm Fact Book: Why
Worker Shortages Won't Go Away" arrives - available
March 15, 2004! Order your copies today - limited
number of pre-publication orders available at only $4.95
each.
Order your copy of The Perfect Labor Storm Fact Book today!
Preview Understanding Business Values and Motivators here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't miss out on the pre-publication savings to Ira
Wolfe's long awaited book on "Understanding Business
Values and Motivators". Orders will be shipped
beginning March 10.
Understanding Business Values and Motivators is
an introduction to understanding how people are
already motivated and how to tap into those motivators
for their success and yours in the workplace.
Order today and save $3.00 per book off the regular
price of $12.95 - no limit. (Additional volume discounts
available for orders of 25 or more).
Preview Understanding Business Values and Motivators today.
New! TotalView Corporate Coach
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
TotalView Corporate Coach reports provide information
that will assist a manager or coach in understanding
an employee's unique profile. It also provides each
employee with a better understanding of him or herself.
The report provides insight into the employee's
personality profile and important work related
characteristics such as their:
Leadership Style
Preference for change
Approach to Conflict
Approach to Self-Promotion
Preference for Salary or Commission
Approach to Listening
and more -
TotalView Corporate Coach is intended to assist
the coaching or mentoring relationship by providing a
starting
point for meaningful discussion about an employee's
values, needs and objectives. Further, the
report assists the Coach in asking pertinent questions
and providing relative feedback and ideas
that are tailored for the employee.
The TotalView Corporate Coach Assessment was
specifically designed to provide general work related
information that will initiate a positive and effective
coaching or mentoring experience.
TotalView Corporate Coach produces two unique
reports: one for the coach and one for the
employee/mentee.
View the TotalView Corporate Coach Sample Report here.
Set the right climate for coaching- A Core Competency for the 21st Century Manager
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coaching involves much more than identifying an
opportunity, working out what a person's
particular needs are, and "going for it." There might be
a lot of temptation to jump in and make
adjustments as you go, but most people who have tried
to establish a coaching relationship by
doing just that will tell you that it's not the smart way
to go about things.
Follow the link below for tips on "Setting the right
climate for coaching" and view one sample page that is
available in the Janus
Performance Management System.
Begin to improve your employee appraisal and
performance management process
today with the Janus Performance Management System.
More tips for managers on setting the right climate for coaching. Click here to download a one page excerpt from the Janus Performance Management System.
Create a Competency-Based Behavioral Interview Guide for as little as $60
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Interviewers need to know what to look for in a
candidate's response. Online Interview Generator(r)
pairs specific "target behaviors" with each interview
question.
Online Interview Generator(r) (IG) provides users
with highly customized behavioral interview guides for
interviewing job candidates. IG users are hiring
managers, employers, human resources professionals,
and consultants.
As an IG user, you can choose an already-
developed interview guide from our Job Library of over
40 standard job titles, then quickly and easily edit to fit
your open job. Or, you can choose to design your own
interview guide from "scratch" using our extensive
database of 65 competencies, and over 1,500 different
target behaviors (interview "answers"), and
corresponding interview questions.
IG is extremely versatile and flexible - it can be
used for selection in every industry, business and
organizational environment. IG is inexpensive and cost-
effective; clients can purchase interview units
separately, or through a site license.
View a sample Interview Guide created with Interview Generator.
What do employees value?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One of the great benefits of understanding people's
values and motivators is that we can recognize
their "hot buttons," what "turns them on" and makes
them run. It's how a particular person is "wired."
Learn more here about what employees values with Business Values and Motivators and how to order your personalized report.
SELECT Employees with A Positive Attitude!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The SELECT Associate System is a pre-employment
screening system to identify work-related behaviors
such as Positive Service Attitude, Accountability,
Frustration Tolerance, Acceptance of Diversity, Multi-
taskingand more.... plus a Validity Check and
Integrity Index.
Each customized report includes a step by step
interview guide including recommended interview
questions.
SELECT is available on-line, paper, or fax.
The following report versions are available:
Customer Service
Administrative Support
Retail Sales Associates
Entry Level Retail Management
Call Centers
Production & Distribution
Healthcare
Personal Service
Convenience Store Associates
Hospitality
Office Staffing
More on SELECT - view sample reports here.
Just the facts: Don't just stand there!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Statues:
If a statue in the park of a person on a horse has
both
front legs in the air, a person died in battle; if the horse
has one front leg in the air, the person died as a result
of wounds received in battle; if the horse has all four
legs on the ground, the person died of natural causes.
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
email: iwolfe@super-solutions.com
voice: 717.656.4632
web: http://www.super-solutions.com