Should they stay or should they go?

Why The Stay Interview is the New Exit Interview

Should they stay or should they go?
The Stay Interview

Johannesburg, 26 July 2022: With more and more high-performing employees leaving companies for ‘greener pastures’, HR Departments, CEOs and Team Managers find themselves desperately seeking out sustainable solutions to combating “The Great Resignation”.  According to studies, a high performer specifically, can deliver as much work as up to four “average” employees and apart from having a direct impact on performance, can have a pivotal knock-on effect of influencing and contributing to your company culture, too. Hence, there should be urgency in retaining your best-in-class talent. But is money the driver for an A-class employee? Not anymore.

Aside from the obvious persuasion strategies like salary increases (which is a dwindling solution in the year 2022) and implementing more Casual Fridays slash Salad Wednesdays slash Anything-to-Bring-the-Team-Together-Days, High performers – even the lighter weight employees – are needing more: more voice, more time, more trust, more understanding and more one-on-one attention from their Managers.

Cue: The Stay Interview.

The new ‘exit interview’ that has nothing to do with exiting at all. The Stay Interview is not like an Exit Interview in its measure of challenges and final truths. Instead, the Stay Interview takes its seat as a pin-drop of vital conversations along the employee’s journey. It’s an honest, open approach to tapping into all things real and human between employer and employee. It’s personal and it matters – and more and more leaders in business are cottoning onto this method as the bridge that links ‘the more’ with your ‘retention strategy’. Why is this so important? Because according to studies, 42% of employees plan to change jobs in the next year and replacing an employee can cost an average of 33% of the employee’s salary.

“The Great Resignation is an unpleasant era for all business owners to be experiencing right now, but it also wakes us up to the deeper truth and the underlying needs of our employees,” says Kerry Morris, CEO of leading recruitment firm, The Tower Group. “Implementing more one-on-one conversations throughout the year, like a Stay Interview, is a wonderful way for the leader to get in touch – not just with an employee but with the company as well,” says Morris.

Here, we round up how the Stay Interview works in light of combating #thegreatresignation, and guarding against dissatisfied employees, for the longer term.

  1. It can only be The Manager

Stay interviews should always be led by the employee’s direct manager. Research shows that the top reason employees quit is due to a lack of trust in their manager. A Stay Interview helps to cultivate a relationship founded on trust and open communication.

  1. Go for the intel

Focus on interviewing your most high-performing employees first: those who have been with your company the longest and will help you understand what’s kept them coming back. This has a dual effect of learning what is also enticing for new hires joining the company.

  1. Don’t call it a Stay Interview

Rather than calling it a “Stay Interview,” invite your employee to share their perspective on how things are going at work or in the company. Call it a Conversation Session. You want to make your employee as comfortable as possible so they’re more inclined to share honest feedback.

  1. Take it off site

There’s merit in the power of a “coffee meeting”. Step out the office and take them off-site to a favourite coffee shop if you feel it would make them more comfortable; or, at least, give them the choice! This evokes feelings of ease for both employee and manager, and shows a more social interest in their opinion, which goes a long way.

  1. Make it a Pindrop meeting

Aim to conduct your Stay Interviews with high-performing employees every 6 months. This will help you keep an eye on changing attitudes, which may help you intervene more quickly to resolve a rising problem. Schedule them months away from annual performance reviews to keep the goals distinct.

The Caveat? Of course there is always one. “In order for Stay Interviews to be effective and yield honest feedback, employees need to trust management. Stay Interviews only work if honest, two-way communication is a core part of your culture. That said, Stay Interviews can go a long way in developing a culture of authenticity, accountability, diversity, empathy, and agility that will, in turn, work towards creating a company where everyone is motivated, engaged and working towards a common goal,” says Morris.

The Final S(t)ay

When done correctly, Stay Interviews can have an extremely positive impact not only on retaining your employees but on impacting the overall ‘human connection’ of the business. The key, however, is to use the information you collect. Failing to act on what your employees have to say will make you appear disingenuous and cheapen the value of that ‘connection’.

For more staffing solutions and industry resources visit www.towergroup.co.za

 

ABOUT THE TOWER GROUP:

Tower Group is a leading South African brand in the staffing services industry — with a 40-year track record, vast experience in the staffing services industry and a wealth of expertise to meet the total Human Capital requirements of the most discerning companies seeking a fresh approach to staffing solutions — and driving the future job needs of the twenty-first Century. With the guiding philosophy of “Quality First”, Tower Group has a people-centric value system embedded into the DNA of the company and a commitment to transformation proven by its Level 1 BB-BEE certification. Tower is also a long-standing member of APSO (Federation of African Professional Staffing Associations).

PRESS CONTACT:

Mantis Communications

Kerry Simpson

Tel: 079 438 3252

Email: [email protected]