1. Introduction
According to Becker (1975) and Mark (2003) staff turnover is a major
challenge for all organizations and it could either be voluntary turnover where
an employee chooses to leave an organization willingly or through involuntary
turnover where the organization compels the employee to leave. Ongori (2017)
introduces employee turnover as a concept that create implication on the
performance of an organization and the sources of employee turnover should be
identified since those sources could be unique to each organization. As per
Mark (2018), there is a direct correlation between employee motivation and
employee turnover that recognizes the need for organizations to comprehend the
effects and various strategies which can be used by the leadership of the
organizations to ensure that there is employee continuity to enhance
organizational competitiveness.
Company invests a great deal of time and resources in its employees'
education and training, as well as in retaining employees inside the company.
As a result, managers should make every effort to minimize employee attrition.
Even if there is no common framework for comprehending the entire process of
human turnover, a broad range of characteristics have been shown to be
effective in the beginning stages of staff turnover (Kevin, et al. 2004). It's
perhaps not a matter of just being dissatisfied at work that prompts
individuals to switch companies. A greater salary, a better benefits package,
or a higher career development opportunity may tempt someone away from their
current employer. The company's satisfaction and the productivity of its
workers cannot be influenced by external factors such as how much competing
firms pay and whether incentives competitors provide, but internal factors such
as these may be improved. Workers who quit since they are dissatisfied should
be distinguished from those who depart for many other causes (Nelson, 2021).
A company's staff turnover is a fraction of the overall workers that
must be replaced over a certain period of time (Agnes, 1999). A major issue for
most businesses, staff turnover is costly, particularly in low-dispensing jobs,
where the turnover rate is greatest (Samuel, 2012). "Employer
turnover" is defined by Carley (1992) as "any movement of workers
across companies, agreements and occupations,". He explained that staff
turnover is influenced by variables such as salaries, business incentives,
worker punctuality, and performance outcomes. Other causes include poor
employment satisfaction, dissatisfaction with employer's conditions and an
absence of opportunity for advancement. Employee recruitment methods, economic
situation, and the interaction among staff and management may all be influenced
by such factors (Gerhart, 1990). Specifically, in this study, we will
investigate the staff turnover issues in global service centers in private
banks in south Asia after a full training period.
Petrongolo and Pissarides (2001) reiterates that optimizing the rate
of employee turnover could be identified as one of the key factors that performance
of an organization which is also embedded in the managerial objectives most
often. Furthermore, this study establishes an argument that employee turnover
could lead to legal restrictions and obligations in recruitment and dismissal
that could prohibit firms from maintaining a flexible workforce size, a
situation more common in unionized sectors. In this regard, the industrial
reforms have been identified to be vital in increasing the flexibility of
labour markets and to positively impact on optimizing the rate of staff
turnover in an organization.
We can list the impacts of high employee turnover in the global context as follows,
1. It is
expensive
Employee turnover can be very costly for an organization, particularly if it is a voluntary resignation of human capital investment from the organization and the subsequent replacement process. These replacement costs may include the search of the external labor market for a possible substitute, selection between competing substitutes, induction, formal and informal training of the replacement until he or she attains a reasonable level of performance that is equivalent to that of the individual who quit.
2. It results
in the loss of experienced employees
Building a culture that encourages knowledge transfer and succession is a mission-critical strategy for the growth and sustainability of an organization.
3. It affects
productivity
Employee productivity and general firm performance can be negatively affected when there is high employee turnover. Employee turnover leads to the loss of experienced and trained staff that know the policies and goals of the organization and their individual roles in achieving these goals. However, a new employee may require some time to learn these roles. Therefore, high employee turnover means having many inexperienced employees, which will eventually lead to lower employee productivity.
4. It affects
profit
The cost settlement of employees’ benefits (gratuity and others) and the cost of litigations, as some separations may lead to legal disputes, all combine to affect company performance, which ultimately affects the overall profit of the firm.
Anything that
tends to increase costs or reduce productivity or revenue will almost certainly
reduce profit. A new business often takes months or years to achieve
profitability and unexpected costs like high turnover can increase the time it
takes a new venture to make a profit or break even.
Reference
Alex. (2021). Causes and effects of employee turnover. [online]. Available from: https://matterapp.com/blog/causes-and-effects-employee-turnover. Accessed on 12th December 2021.
Insight Worldwide
Team. (no date). The Hidden Costs of Employee Turnover. [online].
Available from: https://insightww.com/2019/02/the-hidden-costs-of-employee-turnover/.
Accessed on 12th December 2021.

Hi Sushini,
ReplyDeleteThis is a good article that detailly explains the negative impacts of turnover. Apart from the negative consequences there can be positive impacts to the organizations such as possibility of losing a toxic employee, gaining new ideas from new hires, and benefitting from more diversified recruiting tactics. However, the occurrence of positive or negative impacts will be dependent on the nature of the business and it is important to reduce the rate of turnover by adopting suitable strategies since negative impacts are higher than the positive effects.
Yes Kasun since the negative impact is high for the organization it is important to reduce the rate of turnover by adopting suitable strategies
ReplyDeleteHi Sushini, as you explained staff turnover is the major HR issue in organisation since the Human reaource is the back bone of every organisation
ReplyDeleteAgree The HR department in any organization plays a crucial role in employee retention. Employee retention efforts may include employee training, internal promotion opportunities, issuing bonus, and improving workplace policies and procedures.
DeleteThe HR department is responsible for conducting, recommending and implementing employee retention strategies during restructuring.
Valuable article
ReplyDeleteAs you mentioned loss of experience staff is a huge cost to the organization,it will impact overall performance in the organization
Fathima There are many reasons why employees leave a department or an organization, and while some reasons for turnover are negative, some turnover is expected and perfectly normal. What’s bad is when turnover happens for negative reasons and/or when turnover happens at an unexpected rate it will impact the overall organization performance as well
Delete