Thread regarding Whole Foods Market Inc. layoffs

7 Reasons the Best Employees Quit, Even When They Like Their Job

http://www.inc.com/lolly-daskal/7-reasons-the-best-employees-quit-even-when-they-like-their-job.html 7 Reasons the Best Employees Quit, Even When They Like Their Job

To win at being the best company, you must first win over your best employees.

BY LOLLY DASKAL

Losing a great employee is a terrible thing. There's the expense of finding, onboarding, and training a replacement. There's the uncertainty of how a new employee will work out. There's the hardship on the rest of your staff until the position can be filled.

Sometimes there's a solid reason--the person was a bad fit for the team, or moved away for personal reasons, or was offered an opportunity too great to pass up. In those cases, even if it's a difficult transition, it feels fundamentally right.

But what about the rest?

Keeping your best employees starts with understanding why people leave. Here are seven of the

  1. Stagnation

People don't want to think they're locked into a groove and will come to the same place and do the same thing every day for the next 20 or 40 years. People want to feel that they're still moving forward and growing in their professional life. They want to have something to aspire to. If there's no career ladder or structure for advancement, they know they'll need to seek it somewhere else. In the meantime, they're far more likely to be bored, unhappy, and resentful--things that effect performance and the entire team's morale.

  1. Overwork

Some periods of stress and feeling overwhelmed come with most jobs, but nothing burns out great employees faster than overwork. And often it's the best employees--the most capable and committed, your most trusted--you overload the most. If they find themselves constantly taking on more and more, especially in the absence of recognition such as promotions and raises, they come to feel they're being taken advantage of. And who could blame them? You'd feel the same.

  1. Vague visions

There's nothing more frustrating than a workplace filled with visions and big dreams, but no translation of those aspirations into the strategic goals that make them achievable. Without that connection, it's all just talk. What talented person wants to spend his or her time and energy in support of something undefined? People like to know that they're working to create something, not just spinning their wheels.

  1. Profits over people

When an organization values its bottom line more than its people, the best people go elsewhere, leaving behind those who are too mediocre or apathetic to find a better position. The result is a culture of underperformance, low morale, and even disciplinary issues. Of course, things like profit, output, pleasing stakeholders, and productivity are important--but success ultimately depends on the people who do the work.

  1. Lack of recognition

Even the most selfless people want to be recognized and rewarded for a job well done. It is part of who we are as human beings. When you fail to recognize employees, you're not only failing to motivate them but also missing out on the most effective way to reinforce great performance. Even if you don't have the budget for raises or bonuses, there are lots of low-cost ways to provide recognition--and a word of appreciation is free. People won't care if they don't feel noticed.

  1. Lack of trust

Your employees have a vantage point for viewing your behavior and weigh it against your commitments. If they see you dealing unethically with vendors, lying to stakeholders, cheating clients, or failing to keep your word, the best and most principled of them will leave. The rest, even worse, will stay behind and follow your lead.

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Post ID: @OP+IY5Nfga

5 replies (most recent on top)

And i still see our prices going higher...

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Post ID: @1orm+IY5Nfga

There is no team member happiness only mild slavery, with a side of unrecognition, topped with depressing results. Wake up though guys. These are changes dying companies make. Whole foods will be sold off within the next 2 years mark my words.

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Post ID: @uct+IY5Nfga

The new message is that our past business model is no longer viable, take it or leave it.

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Post ID: @oac+IY5Nfga

I would like to say " I hope someone making decisions reads this." But I think we are far past the point of the board genuinely caring about retention or TM happiness.

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Post ID: @bae+IY5Nfga

Oh. My. F---ing. God!!! How many ways can I say F--- YES!!! That article had to have been written by a whole foods employee!!! The portion about vague vision was everything I feel everyday!!!!!

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Post ID: @uvc+IY5Nfga

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