A few tips on retaining quality employees in your team

Every manager naturally wants to have productive and quality workers in their team and retaining these top talents is one of the key tasks of every team leader. According to a general rule, most of the income of any company comes from the work of just a few percent of the most effective workers. This is why you must be able to detect such employees and pay sufficient attention to them, so they are not lured elsewhere – either to a completely different company, or to another team within your enterprise. Even if you try simply to pay these people the maximum possible remuneration, it may not be enough. Money is not the only decisive factor, which is why you need to know also other, non-financial ways to retain these employees in the long term.

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Empowerment

Successful and ambitious workers often seek an extension of their power. If there is no room for giving them a raise, there is certainly at least a way to expand their power and allow them to work more independently so they see a certain progress in their work.

Praise for specific successes

According to the Harvard Business Review, people still underestimate simple praise from a boss or a representative of management. Such praise must not be just general; it should specifically describe a concrete example of success the given employee has achieved.

Recognition in front of others

Praise and recognition should take place publicly, not just in private between manager and employee. No matter what anybody says, we are all a little bit egoistic, and we are happy if our qualities are recognised publicly. A quality employee should therefore be praised publicly and presented as a role model.

Transparent consultations about further development

Top workers should be regarded rather like opinion leaders and their insights and ideas should be taken into account. Engage the employees whom you value, incorporate them into the decision making processes in your team, listen to their ideas and give them the opportunity to influence the running of the company more.

 

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Article source Harvard Business Review - flagship magazine of Harvard Business School
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