Retain & Gain: The Cost of Employee Turnover Blairsville GA

Companies that build and maintain a superior workforce will have a long-term competitive advantage in their marketplaces. Here are some strategies for doing just that.

Atlanta Restaurant Exchange
(404) 892-4999
1708 Peachtree St Nw # 520
Atlanta, GA
SDA Partners
(678) 921-2901
1950 Spectrum Cir SE
Marietta, GA
User Insight
(770) 391-1099
115 Perimeter Ctr Pl NE Ste 440
Atlanta, GA
Regional Transit Partners
(404) 848-5990
2400 Piedmont Rd NE
Atlanta, GA
Ryder Integrated Logistics Inc
(770) 448-3273
6594 Button Gwinnett Dr
Doraville, GA
Lantern Capital Advisors LLC
404 962 4405
1170 Peachtree Street N.E.
Atlanta, GA
Jordan, Jones & Goulding, Inc.
678-333-0453
6801 Governors Lake Parkway
Norcross, GA
Georgis Fleet Consulting, LLC
404-391-3794
4585 Muirwood Cir
Powder Springs, GA
Parables Management & Consulting
404-246-7557
3224 Silver Lake
Atlanta, GA
Techstar Consulting
(404) 869-6333
508 Main St Ne
Atlanta, GA
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Retain & Gain: The Cost of Employee Turnover

Companies that build and maintain a superior workforce will have a long-term competitive advantage in their marketplaces. Here are some strategies for doing just that.

By Mark J. Claypool
12/11/2009

Mark J. Claypool

Over a year ago, after sending out an e-newsletter with an article I wrote listing the words managers typically use when they criticize employees, I was taken to task by a top manager of a large multi-shop operator (MSO). The premise of my article was that you’re going to get further with employees when you carefully choose your words, but the MSO manager vehemently disagreed. He said he and his organization ruled by fear and intimidation and it worked just fine. But I knew from visiting that shop that fear and intimidation showed on the employees’ faces. You could sense it in their lack of enthusiasm. Most importantly, it showed in the organization’s high turnover rate.

In my article, I reasoned that if you point out positives first and then deliver the criticism, and follow that up with another positive (referred to by social psychologists as the “sandwich technique”), you’re more likely to see the change you desire.

Numerous psychological studies have proven that delivering criticism in this manner will make the recipient of that criticism less likely to take it as a personal attack. Rather, he or she will consider it an attempt to help him or her improve, and he or she will listen rather than be defensive.
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