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How Employee Stress Affects Risk Factors & Financial Results

Back to blog homepage for: Strategic Employee Recognition: by Derek Irvine

Recognise This! –If employee retention is important enough to list as  a substantial risk factor to meeting financial expectations, then it should be important enough to find ways  to reduce employee stress.

I just read an interesting story in Forbes, which noted that a common phrase included in the risk factors on 10-Q forms for public:

If we are unable to retain our existing senior management and key personnel and hire new highly skilled personnel, we may not be able to execute our business plan.

Employee retention is a big enough issue, public companies list it as a significant risk factor that could prevent the organisation from reaching financial targets. Yet, organisation leaders do not see the primary problem behind retention issues.

There’s some evidence that companies are starting to pay attention to the dangers of overworking employees. But many organisations, it seems, fail to recognise the risks. “Work-related stress” was the reason top-performing employees in the U.S. most frequently cited for why they would leave their organisation, according to a recent report by consulting firm Towers Watson & Co. and professional association WorldatWork. However, when employers were asked about reasons high performers would jump ship, stress didn’t even rank among their top five most frequent responses, according to The 2011/2012 Talent Management and Rewards Study, North America.

That disconnect helps explain why more organisations are struggling to hold on to key talent. The percentage of U.S. companies that are having difficulty retaining critical-skill employees has risen from 16 per cent in 2009 to 31 per cent in 2010 to 36 per cent in 2011, according to Towers Watson’s report.

That mirrors results of our own Workforce Mood Tracker survey from September 2011 showing 38% of US employees are actively looking for work (up from 36% in January 2011).

Employees are clearly stressed and clearly communicating that up through the ranks, mostly through disengaging from the work simply because they can’t keep up any more. But leaders aren’t listening. And that puts your organisation at risk.

What can you do about it? Star t listening. Read the tips I offered a few weeks ago on Compensation Café.

Are your employees visibly stressed? What are you doing about it?

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Editor's Welcome

 

Hello! I'm a great believer in the power of stories, whether they be folk tales, novels, films or TV dramas.
 
They have a wonderful ability to get complex moral or social issues over to us in a palatable, easy-to-understand way and can provide many lessons if only we care to look just a little bit below the surface.
 
But they can also act as a fun starting point for discussion and debate on rather more serious topics that are all too often brushed under the carpet and ignored.
 

Hence our decision to start up a Review slot on the site to look at those everyday stories that are all around us from an HR perspective.

Although we've been publishing book reviews (take a look at our Book Club list of suggested possible non-fiction works for evaluation here) for some time, you may also have noticed that we've been running a weekly home page blog on The Apprentice courtesy of The Chemistry Group for a while now.

And Pauline Wood, managing director at specialist retail headhunter, court & spark consulting, was likewise kind enough to write our first film review on the Headhunters movie.

But the big question is, why don't you give it a go yourself? There's a world of choice out there and I, like the rest of the community, would love to hear your thoughts and insights.

So next time you watch a movie, see a TV drama or read a novel that you think has an HR message worth sharing, send your review to me at cath.everett@siftmedia.co.uk or post it directly to our blogs section at www.hrzone.co.uk/blogs.

So get critiquing and look forward to hearing from you very soon.....

Cath Everett
HRZone Editor 
 
 
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