image:pinterest.com
culled from:www.mindtools.com
Eric Jackson, a
fellow Forbes blogger I follow and find both funny and astute, wrote a really
spot-on post last month about why top talent leaves large corporations. He
offered ten reasons, all of which I agreed with – and all of which I’ve seen
played out again and again, over the course of 25 years of coaching and
consulting. The post was wildly popular
– over 1.5 million views at this writing.
So why do we find
this topic so interesting? I suspect
it’s because we’re genuinely curious: What would make a very senior executive –
someone who most certainly has been courted by his or her organization and then
paid huge sums of money to join – decide to pack it in? Is it greed (an even richer offer down the
street)? Hubris? Short attention
span? Or do 1%ers actually leave jobs
for the same reasons as the average Joe
or Josie?
According to
Jackson (and, again, I agree with him) top talent does indeed leave for the
same reasons everyone else does. If I
were to distill his ‘top ten reasons’ down to one, it’s this:
The 7 Habits of
Spectacularly Unsuccessful Executives Eric Jackson Eric Jackson Contributor
Why Some
Companies Lose Their Best People - And Others Don't Erika Andersen Erika
Andersen Contributor
How The Best
Leaders Are Kicking Everyone Else's...Results Erika Andersen Erika Andersen
Contributor
Top talent leave
an organization when they’re badly managed and the organization is confusing
and uninspiring.
About half of
Eric’s ten reasons are about poor people management – either systemically, as
in poor performance feedback, or individually, as in, my boss sucks. And the other half are about organizational
lameness: shifting priorities, no vision, close-mindedness.
It really is that
simple. Not easy, mind you, but remarkably simple. If you want to keep your
best people:
1) Create an
organization where those who manage others are hired for their ability to
manage well, supported to get even
better at managing, and held accountable and rewarded for doing so.
2) Then be clear
about what you’re trying to accomplish as an organization – not only in terms
of financial goals, but in a more three-dimensional way. What’s your purpose;
what do you aspire to bring to the world? What kind of a culture do you want to
create in order to do that? What will
the organization look, feel and sound like if you’re embodying that mission and
culture? How will you measure success? And then, once you’ve clarified your
hoped-for future, consistently focus on keeping that vision top of mind and
working together to achieve it.
I’ve worked with
client organizations that do those two things, and people stay and thrive. I’ve worked with and observed client
organizations that don’t – and it’s a revolving door. And that’s true at all levels – not just for
“top talent.”
It’s fascinating
to me: Why don’t more CEOs and their teams make sure these two things happen in
their organizations? What do you think?
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