New Hire Programs
Getting new employees on board is formalized for 88.4%.
It is an ongoing process during the first 1 to 3 months of employment for 22.3%
and involves 1 to 2 hours of orientation for 18.3%. Multiple sessions spread
across several days within the first week of employment is the norm for 17.4%,
and a single, full day is the process for 10.7%. A half-day is utilized by
16.1%. Benefits enrollment occurs during orientation for 36.2%. It is during
the first week of employment for 17% and during the first month for 25.5%.
Management team members participate in the onboarding
process for 75.3%. Training on how to successfully onboard new employees is
received by 46.8% (up from 38.3% in 2013), and mentors or buddies for new
employees are provided by 43.2%.
Retention
Employee turnover is tracked by 73.2%, with management
turnover at 1% to 10% for 38.6% and for professionals, it’s the same rate for
37.1%. Turnover of mid-level employees is below 10% for 37.1% and 11% to 25%
for 15.6%. The rate of turnover for entry-level employees is under 10% for 25.8%
and 11% to 25% for 18.5%.
This survey looked at retention from two different
perspectives. First, we asked participants to select the options they use to
retain qualified employees from a list of common practices. Here are their top
10 selections:
1
|
Adequate benefits
|
83.6%
|
2
|
A safe, healthy work
environment
|
69.4%
|
3
|
Fair and equitable
treatment
|
61.3%
|
4
|
Training and development
opportunities
|
60.6%
|
5
|
Pay at or above market rate
|
55.1%
|
6
|
Employer trust, respect,
and consideration
|
51.5%
|
7
|
Opportunity for advancement
|
51.2%
|
8
|
Appropriate and fair
discipline for rule breakers
|
50.9%
|
9
|
Engagement between
employers and managers
|
49.7%
|
10
|
Incentives such as bonuses
and profit-sharing
|
49.1%
|
Next, we asked survey participants to select, from the
same list, which practices are most effective when it comes to retaining
employees. Here’s the top 10:
1
|
Adequate benefits
|
67.6%
|
2
|
Pay at or above market rate
|
65.2%
|
3
|
Employer trust, respect,
and consideration
|
65.3%
|
4
|
Fair and equitable
treatment
|
63%
|
5
|
Effective management
|
58.6%
|
6
|
Engagement between
employers and managers
|
57.9%
|
7
|
Opportunity for advancement
|
57.3%
|
8
|
Training and development
opportunities
|
52.2%
|
9
|
Performance recognition and
reward
|
50.9%
|
10
|
Work/life balance through
telecommuting, flextime, etc.
|
50.1%
|
As you can see, many of the selections were the same and,
realistically, to be expected. What might not be expected, however, is what’s
different. For example, a safe and healthy work environment came in second for
methods used but didn’t make the cut for what works to retain employees. Also,
the items that came in tenth show that cash incentives are used but providing
work/life balance is more effective.
Survey
Participants
A total of 919 individuals participated in this survey,
which was conducted in November 2014. Of those who identified themselves, 58.5%
represent privately owned companies, 21.3% are with nonprofit organizations,
10.7% are with public entities, and 9.5% work for government organizations.
The majority (56.2%) of our survey respondents provide HR
services to a workforce of 1 to 250 employees. Another 14.3% provide guidance
to 251 to 500 employees at their organizations, and 11.3% have a workforce of
501 to 1,000 employees. Companies with more than 1,000 employees account for
18.3% of survey participants.
A little below 25% of survey respondents (24.1%) have a
workforce that is more than 50% exempt employees. As for unions, less than 10%
of the employers surveyed have a workforce that is 50% to 100% unionized, and
85.5% have a workforce where less than 25% are union employees.
Over half (65%) of the participants are in service
industries; 21% are in agriculture, forestry, construction, manufacturing, or
mining; 10% are in wholesale, retail, transportation, or warehousing; and 3%
are in real estate or utilities.
Managers account for 54.6% of the survey participants who self-identified, VP or higher make up 23.5%, supervisors are 5.7%, and staff-level employees round out the field of survey participants at 16.1%.
Thanks again to all who participated!
Recruiting and retention will be a top challenge for
2015. Now more than ever, it is imperative that recruiters have access to the
tools & techniques that allow them to support a growing company and ensure
a continuous pipeline of qualified candidates.
Source: HR
Daily Adviser
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