The cost of employee turnover is a threat to every company’s bottom line. The negative effects of turnover eat away budgets, add pressure to retained team members, and even damage morale. However, there are several strategies companies can deploy to reduce turnover costs and improve employee retention and satisfaction.
Contents
- 1 1. Know What Influences Turnover at Your Company
- 2 2. Hire for Cultural Fit Alongside Tactical Capabilities
- 3 3. Offer the Best Compensation and Benefits Package You Can
- 4 4. Create a Robust and Consistent Onboarding and Training Plan
- 5 5. Invest in Employee Development and Growth
- 6 Make Working at Your Company So Rewarding That Leaving Doesn’t Make Sense
1. Know What Influences Turnover at Your Company
The monthly headcount report shows the numbers in a clear table, with your turnover rate increasing with each version. However, if you don’t know the “why” behind your high turnover rate, you can’t fix it.
Leaders using HR analytics to understand and analyze turnover trends can spot patterns and at-risk employees. If your software developers typically exit after annual bonuses are paid out, that’s a signal that compensation may be off.
With data on your side, you can proactively address turnover triggers, intervening before your top performer makes their exit plan. Spot management flaws, offer career development, or correct compensation in alignment with peer data and value add.
2. Hire for Cultural Fit Alongside Tactical Capabilities
If your interview process strictly confirms that the candidate can do the job, you’re missing the mark. Strive to get to know candidates as the humans they are and let them get to know you, the team, and the organization. Most people spend the majority of their day at work, so ensuring your team meshes well is critical for retention.
Share your company values beyond the boilerplate, sharing how your team works together and their personality. If you have a robust employee engagement effort, share that now so the candidate can see what it’s like.
Encourage interviewers to be themselves instead of their idea of a rigid, formal interviewer.
When a candidate can experience your company as it is, they can get a better feel for what joining your team will be like.
Extend the expectation that candidates resonate with your company’s values and include that as part of your recruitment strategy. Use predictive analytics to identify candidates’ work styles and how they match or conflict with the role. This will help you hire more strategically and support managers in supervising and setting expectations.
3. Offer the Best Compensation and Benefits Package You Can
There’s no sense in ignoring the compensation factor in employee turnover. With current inflation rates, employees must factor in their financial commitments, even if they love their jobs.
Strive to offer the best compensation and benefits you can while maintaining a healthy organization. Benchmark compensation data in your industry and the cost of living for your employees.
Nonprofits often face challenges in competing with private firms, so enhance your total compensation outside of monetary values. Increase flexibility for employees by offering remote or hybrid work schedules, even allowing autonomous work. Offer discounts or free products and services your company produces, enhancing compensation and allowing employees to experience your brand.
Find out what your employees value most regarding compensation and benefits to inform your program. Some employees value lower healthcare costs more than salary while others may prioritize job flexibility and creativity. Understand what keeps your team inspired, engaged, and on board, and use that information to improve your total compensation.
4. Create a Robust and Consistent Onboarding and Training Plan
A new employee is excited for their first day, but if their onboarding experience is nonexistent, turnover risk skyrockets. When their new team seems less than ready for them, it’s a blow to the ego and decreases their motivation to stay. Combat this turnover risk by developing a robust and consistent onboarding plan for all new hires.
With HR, use management best practices to offer consistent training and mentoring for your new hire. Incorporate social and tactical sessions, allowing them to integrate with the organization and make connections.
Create a checklist for essential steps like reviewing policies and procedures as well as lighter ones, like having lunch with the team. Check in on their progress and sentiment by analyzing deadlines and extending a survey with quantitative and qualitative questions.
Establish an open feedback loop between their new supervisor, mentor, and HR, letting them know their voice is valued. Be open to adjusting your program over time while customizing the experience for the employee’s needs and their role’s requirements.
5. Invest in Employee Development and Growth
When you’re growing, you’re learning, and when you’re learning, you’re motivated and inspired. Inspired employees are often engaged employees, which can mean lower turnover and better results in your business.
Invest in employee development and growth through traditional education, formal mentorships, and coaching. Recognize achievements through crystal awards, which can serve as a tangible symbol of growth and success. Reduce barriers and requirements to access these resources, which increases equity and encourages participation.
Pay for program costs upfront, which is often a barrier to individual affordability. Encourage employees to grow within their role and outside of it, gaining transferable skills that help their internal mobility.
A customer service representative may be interested in program management, so ensure her current role doesn’t restrict her potential learning. She’ll grow internally and may be less likely to seek employment elsewhere thanks to your investment in her growth.
Make Working at Your Company So Rewarding That Leaving Doesn’t Make Sense
By crafting an employee experience that supports team members at work and home, the idea of leaving seems outlandish. When you’re appreciated, compensated, and cared for at work, you’re more likely to stay on board.
Work to identify the unique needs of your team and craft your HR policies to meet them. When your work culture supports the people who make your success possible, your turnover cost decreases, and employee engagement soars.

