Why the Great Resignation is a good thing

Why the Great Resignation is a good thing

Across America last year almost 20 million people quit their jobs. The trend continues and has spread to other developed economies as well. The cost to companies has been enormous in terms of hiring, training and inefficiency losses from having posts vacant and the time it takes for newcomers to get up to speed.

Speculation about causes is widespread. An article in Harvard Business Review suggest that difficulties in rehiring stem in large part form inadequate, over-automated hiring platforms. This may or not be the case, but why did people leave in the first place?

Three reasons stand out from a sample of conversations with employees and with senior HR executives in a study I co-led for The Conference Board earlier this year. One is that the relative freedom and psychological safety of working from home at a time of crisis, when bosses were obliged to be sympathetic hasn’t carried over into post-Covid working. Instead of seizing the opportunity to develop new, more inclusive leadership styles and more collegiate team cultures, many leaders have reverted to type. The situation is made worse by an epidemic of imposter syndrome, with many mangers desperately trying to exert more control over the uncontrollable – and creating environments of low psychological safety.

A second reason relates to social isolation. During the Covid crisis, people were prepared to accept a degree of loneliness. As life returns slowly to something like normal, however, they need greater sense of companionship and belonging. When this hasn’t been forthcoming, it’s not surprising that they will seek a change in circumstances.

The third reason relates to the model I created several decades ago. Most people’s jobs have three components: stretch, where we are doing new things and accumulating significant learning, exploit, where we are applying that experience to other situations (so learning is still happening but less intensely) and coast or freewheel, where there is little or no learning. The balance we require between these evolves over time and with changes in circumstance. When the proportions we want are those that we have, we feel motivated, in balance and engaged. When there is persistent insufficient balance, people feel reduced job satisfaction and are likely to think about moving on.?

The solutions to each of these problems are not simple, but some practical steps include:

1.?????Making it safer for leaders, who can’t let go, to seek help. This has to start with reassurances and support from above – an open recognition that the transition isn’t easy. Expert coaching and mentoring can help the executives plan a gradual relaxation of the fear they are afraid to acknowledge. With this support, team coaching can enable the team and the leader to work together to create a different, inclusive, environment where leadership responsibilities are shared.

2.?????Teams that thrived through the epidemic learned how to extend emotional and practical support to colleagues from a distance. It’s not that difficult – showing interest in each other’s work and well-being, having regular check-ins as a team and as pairs within a team can have a massive positive impact.

3.?????As the role of an effective leader moves more and more towards coaching and away from controlling, it’s possible to have much more open conversations about the work a direct report is doing and the work they will find most fulfilling. These conversations can be both one to one and collective.?

And what about the perspective of the employee? In many cases, the experience has been a jump from one uncomfortable position to another. A simple mind-shift can be of real help here. Instead of emphasising getting away from the current role – which may precipitate a hasty move – it may be more productive to have clarity about the ideal role you seek. Being upfront and open about this ambition may have several positive results:

·??????People in your network may point you towards suitable opportunities

·??????You can have conversations with senior people in the same organisation about creating your dream role

·??????Your boss might surprise you by offering changes that make you want to stay,

More generally a question for the top team in an organisation and for HR is: “What has to happen for talent to value a longer term working here?” Or to put it another way: “How can we turn the Great Resignation into the Great Stay?”

??David Clutterbuck 2022

Tineke Tammes

Helping female change makers, (hidden) creatives and multi-passionate women to unleash their creativity and do the work that matters | Career & Creativity Coach | Podcast guest speaker | Enthusiastic doodler | Book lover

2 年

Thank you for this article, Prof David Clutterbuck. What strikes me are two things in particular: 1. The lack of training for (new) managers. So much has been said about the attributes of good leaders and managers. But so many do not get the right support, are promoted on the basis of their technical skills instead of their people skills, and do not receive adequate training to create these safe spaces and to use coaching as a tool. 2. Employees leaving. As one of the comments below says. You change. What you want changes. And yes, stating that out loud will help you make your move (as people will respond to requests). But very often the tension, the stress, the lack of safety does not allow the employee to express their discomfort - let alone talk about what they want to do next. I often see people just wanting 'out', with no clarity on 'where to'.

Joel Summerhayes

Transitioning technical people through to people management. Occasional author. Helping people/ firms do better things by creatively approaching everything they do

2 年

Thank you for this. I've been searching for something informative, or someone, who can deep dive into this topic.

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Sa?a Kerec, ACC, MBA

Executive & Leadership Coaching | Here to help business frontrunners reach a sweet spot of leadership | People leading & business management acceleration | Success catalyst who made corporate career & kept his human side

2 年

Great article Prof David Clutterbuck! Building business leaders to become great people leaders looks like the only way forward to better future in organisations. Coaching is a great tool to help through this journey. I am blessed with my 5 years being a coach, seeing how powerful it is in helping leaders transform. You gave super clear picture why this is so important. Thank you!

Mike Bedford ?????

Unlocking ??Neurodivergent Talent & Potential ?? I'm Your Success Enabler! DM for: Neurodiversity Training, HR Consultancy, Speaker ??, Coaching, Executive Coaching & Mentoring for neuroSpicy ??? Leaders & Professionals

2 年

Great post ?? Prof David Clutterbuck thank you ??

Dave Stitt PCC

Leadership team coach and content creator

2 年

Very good Prof David Clutterbuck “As the role of an effective leader moves more and more towards coaching and away from controlling, it’s possible to have much more open conversations about the work a direct report is doing and the work they will find most fulfilling. These conversations can be both one to one and collective” The rational behind my book and course of the same name - “Coach for Results” And It’s complex but sometimes I wonder that folk perceive everything seems to be going so wrong they say to themselves ‘WTF, I’m leaving, it can’t be any worse than this!’ And of course it can.

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