The labor shortage in parts of Australia has reached a point where employers are trying to find any way to entice their staff to stay on the job - including good old-fashioned bribery.
How does an employer keep their best workers without offering them huge raises or spending a fortune increasing the benefits program?
A lack of career opportunities means that a third of American workers expect to quit their jobs by the end of the year.
Employees in booming Asian economies are demanding more money and better jobs - and they're happy to move and move again if they don't get what they want.
If you want to know how an apparently competent manager can preside over the destruction of team morale and productivity and the exodus of their best staff, this true story provides some salutary lessons.
Workers in Europe and Asia may have itchier feet than their counterparts in the U.S, but American employers still have plenty to worry about.
Senior British managers claim they are happy enough with their jobs and salaries, yet that hasn't stopped more than a quarter of them looking for a new job in the past year.
Accurate job descriptions are like stealth secret weapons for hiring, training, and retaining great employees. I guarantee whatever effort you put forth will save you hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars.
For many human resources professionals, one wish that might well appear near the top of their list of new year's resolutions is to reduce employee turnover in the year ahead.
China's economy may be booming, but its managers are increasingly dissatisfied with their lot and ready to jump ship if they don't get what they want.
Germans, French and Greeks swear by it. The British and Irish think it is over-rated. And for Americans it is virtually unheard of. What are we talking about? Job loyalty, of course.
As you may have noticed, they're demanding, don't take kindly to authority, expect high salaries and rapid promotion but want to work flexibly. Welcome to the 'Generation Y' workforce.
Employers complain about not being able to hang on to top-performers, yet most don't make any effort to understand why staff join or leave.
Few British managers are enlightened enough to encourage an atmosphere where workers feel free to discuss their aspirations.
Look around the average workplace and it's a sobering thought that the proportion of employees who are uncommitted and likely to leave within two years outnumbers those who are truly loyal.
Only a minority of American employers go the extra mile to help recruits settle in to their new jobs, meaning many walk out the door within a year.
The granting of stock remains one of corporate America's most powerful financial thank-yous, with some executive teams now owning as much as eight per cent of the company.
So, can it be proven just how much a bad boss can affect a working environment? A study from Florida State University has attempted to quantify exactly that.
So what is Microsoft's secret weapon in the battle to attract the brightest and best minds from across the globe? The answer is cricket.
Has it ever struck you that the way organisations behave when they are attempting to retain staff is very similar to the way that mobile phone and utility companies carry on when they're threatened with the possibility of losing a customer?
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