Employee Retention Workshop

For Immediate Release

Contact Jan King
770-860-9464

Growing Worker Shortages Becoming a Crisis
Seminar Addresses Strategies for Employee Retention

Atlanta, GA (January 9, 2007) The high unemployment rate and the growing
demand for skilled workers is creating a crisis for the majority of
employers across the United States. It is getting more difficult to find
and keep talented workers. As a result, organizations placing more
effort in creating better places to work to retain their employees.
Strategies enabling you to retain your best and brightest are available
at the upcoming workshop, Here Today, Here Tomorrow, being held in
Atlanta on January 18th. The one-day seminar sponsored by Chart Your
Course International and People Skills International will be held at the
World Trade Center Club at 303 Peachtree Street from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.

Greg Smith, president of Chart Your Course International and author of
Here Today, Here Tomorrow, says that “Unemployment is the lowest it has
been since 2000 and estimates show 48 to 65 percent of the workforce is
dissatisfied with their current employment situation and could leave for
better positions as the economic situation continues to improve. The
healthcare industry is most at risk. To keep their workforce intact,
employers need solid strategies for employee retention.”

The Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) and the Wall Street
Journal website recently completed the Job Recovery Survey. The key
findings revealed 64 percent of employees said they were extremely likely
to begin or increase the intensity of their job search. An additional 19
percent said they were somewhat likely to increase their search.

“U.S. businesses spend over $200 billion annually recruiting and
replacing employees,” says Karla Brandau, president of People Skills
International and authority in Culture Integrity. “It would make sense
for companies to reduce the money spent replacing employees by spending
the money to retain employees, thus reducing training time for new
employees. When good employees are retained, productivity and innovation
increase as you climb the ladder together rather than putting
productivity on hold as you step down a rung or two to get new employees
up to speed. By retaining your best and brightest, you will reduce
expenses while you make faster progress toward increased market share and
organizational effectiveness.”

Get free articles on employee retention and learn more about the coming
seminar at http://www.chartcourse.com/Employee-Retention-Workshop.html.
Questions can be answered by calling Chart Your Course at 770-860-9464.

XXX

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FW: Google Alert – worker shortage

 
Google Blogs Alert for: worker shortage

GO must resolve labour difficulties – Toronto Star
By Andrae Griffith(Andrae Griffith)
Adding to their post-holiday blues, GO Transit commuters heading to work on the The system has experienced worker-related slowdowns before, most notably Problems arise when there is a shortage of crews – people cannot be moved
Visions For The GTTA – http://gttavisions.blogspot.com/index.html

Illegal Aliens’ Impact On American Jobs – Part II
By One Old Vet
The mainstream media report ad nauseam that illegal aliens are doing work that Americans Besides a legitimate guest worker program for the seasonal agriculture Obviously, there could not have been a shortage but employers simply
One Old Vet – http://oneoldvet.com

A paucity of insight
While worker’s wages went up by an average of 50 percent during other economic ninnies we should be grateful we’re still allowed to work at all. there is a serious and harmful shortage of willing volunteers to fight in Iraq and
Norwegianity – http://www.norwegianity.com/

Labor Department Report – Skilled Worker Shortage Hurts Economy
Today’s Labor Department Report was another in the recent string of CRIES for the HR … tightness will be a problem for business at least into the next decade, … Give your organization a jumpstart on the competition and create your .
Business labor organization – http://zowes.net/blogs/business-labor-organization/

‘Head tax’ modern version
By Susanna Ng
Consultant for Maple Leaf found workers willing to pay $10000 to come to Canada WINNIPEG — Maple Leaf Foods has shut down its program to import workers from China partly because of the widespread labour shortage in Western Canada.
Chinese in Vancouver – http://chineseinvancouver.blogspot.com


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FW: New comment on FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


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Sent: Tuesday, January 02, 2007 6:18 AM
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Subject: New comment on FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

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FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


From: Greg Smith [mailto:greg@chartcourse.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 10:55 AM
To: greg@chartcourse.com
Subject: [Chart Your Course International] FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


From: Greg Smith [mailto:greg@chartcourse.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 10:44 AM
To: greg@chartcourse.com
Subject: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


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Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

FW: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


From: Greg Smith [mailto:greg@chartcourse.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 26, 2006 10:44 AM
To: greg@chartcourse.com
Subject: [Chart Your Course International] FW: New comment on FW: Google Alert – employee turnover

 
 

Gregory P. Smith
Chart Your Course International
Phone(770) 860-9464
http://www.ChartCourse.com
http://www.HighRetention.com
http://www.BehaviorProfile.com

 


From: Anonymous [mailto:anonymous-comment@blogger.com]
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Team Building Techniques that Motivate Employees

Building a Happy, Productive and Talented Workforce

Everyone has had a bad hair day, but how about a bad tie, bad hat or bad shoe day?  More and more companies are putting together contests on the ugliest dressed.  Another company sponsors an annual turkey bowl.  Employees go out on the loading dock, take a frozen turkey, and try to knock down as many empty wine bottles as possible.  This is not evidence of companies gone nuts, but tactics used to ward off a serious business problem.

The biggest problem facing business today is how to motivate and engage workers.  The other problem slapping them in the face is high turnover.  Today’s mobile employees are loyal only to themselves, and jump ship for better benefits, higher pay, and greater opportunity.

Pay and benefits are important, but you have to do something different in order to attract and retain the best people. That something may equate to a fun, flexible workplace that gives them more freedom and responsibility.  Wouldn’t it be great if you enjoyed going to work?  What if your supervisors showed appreciation for what you did?

The front line is the bottom line. A company experiencing high turnover has a serious financial problem.  It costs anywhere from $4,000-$15,000 to recruit, hire and train an entry level employee.  One company lost 420 of the 431 employees they hired in one year.  If it costs $4,000 per employee, that equates to a $1.7 million loss.  Unfortunately, most employers are not aware how much their turnover is costing the bottom line.

Here are a few examples of team building techniques that motivate employees:

Humor Corner
Give employees one corner of a break room or other area to post cartoons, illustrations, and other items designed to relieve stress.  At the end of each week, the staff can award a prize for the best submission.

The Talking Stick
Try introducing the “talking stick” into your office.  This idea originated from a Native American tradition.  Each month a different person in the office receives the talking stick, which provides that person certain rights and privileges for the month.  For example, the “owner” could provide fellow employees one hour a month administrative leave.

Employee Dollars
At Phoenix Solutions Inc. employees award an “employee dollar” to fellow employees who do something special or exceed company expectations.  Each month the employee with the most dollars gets movie tickets, dinner, and a plaque with their name as “Employee of the Month.”

Management by Fooling Around
Herb Kelleher, the chairman, co-founder and former CEO of Southwest Airlines, combined fun and hard work into something he calls “management by fooling around.” At the nonconformist airline, everything—from the tickets and boarding passes to the casual dress and occasional costumes attendants wear— clearly demonstrates that something is different.

Payday
A Milwaukee office manager doesnÂ’t just give out paychecks on payday—employees also receive a “Payday” candy bar with their check.

Man Overboard Award
CIGNA believes in rewarding employees who go above and beyond for their customers.  The Man Overboard Award is a life-saving ring, which the president presents to an employee at a special ceremony.  CIGNA also pays teams for implementing ideas that improve productivity with awards as high as $25,000.

Choose Your Own Reward
A Miami-based business owner rewards her employees with parties, expensive dinners, chauffeured shopping sprees, spa sessions, and cooking lessons with Chef Paul Prodhomme.  She lets her employees decide what they want, then figures out how much their package costs and also how much additional business they have to generate to cover those costs.  Choose your own reward—sounds like fun!

Engineering Bucks
The technicians at Weather Channel in Atlanta created their own recognition system called Tech Bucks.  All they did was Xerox a dollar bill and give five of them out at the beginning of each month.  They give them to each other for doing a good job.  At the end of the month they tally up who got the most and the winner gets a special prize.

Dancing the Macarena
Employees at PeopleSoft, Inc. still haven’t forgotten the day that former CEO David Duffield danced the Macarena in front of 500 happy coworkers.  Duffield does not act like a boss.  His office is a cubicle, he answers his own phone and opens his own mail.  Annual employee turnover is three percent or one quarter of the national average.  Employees who earn outstanding service awards get either $500 in cash or stock options.

The Extra Mile
United Services Automobile Association (USAA) provides blank “Thank You” note stationary to their workers for a program called The Extra Mile.  Employees are encouraged to say “Thank You” to each other for the help they receive at work.  The most surprising thing happened on the first day USAA printed the notes.  .  .  They ran out!  The company couldn’t keep up with the demand.

Fat Friday
Just about everybody loves to eat, right?  At Texas A&M the first Friday of each month is celebration time.  Everyone brings food to share, and they celebrate birthdays for that month as well as work anniversaries.  Surprise Celebrations Often it’s the unexpected and informal that employees enjoy as much as formal awards.  Conduct frequent, unannounced recognition and award celebrations, such as having a pizza party.  If you don’t know of a reason to have a get-together for the work force, invent one.

Gold Stars and Frogs
At Wachovia Bank, each Monday morning they set milestones for the week with input from staff members.  On Friday, employees receive a Gold Star and $2.00 (funny money) for each milestone met.  Employees can also recognize their peers with a sticker of a frog, which is worth $1.00. Staff members display the gold stars and frogs on a white cardboard poster.  At the end of each month, they hold a random drawing for a dinner ($50.00) and movies ($25.00).

Having Fun
Hal Rosenbluth, CEO of Rosenbluth International (the nation’s fourth-largest travel services company) believes in creating a fun work environment.  He starts by hiring “nice people,” since he believes nice people like to work together and they like to have fun.  Officers dedicate every Tuesday afternoon to serving high tea and discussing corporate values and other matters of importance to new recruits at the company’s Philadelphia headquarters.  There’s a toll-free 800 number for any associate to contact Rosenbluth.

Faux Paus Award
Sometimes it’s fun to recognize an employee’s goof.  Try the “Faux Paus Award”—a plaque or trophy passed around the organization at a monthly social event with the current recipient’s name engraved.  The “keeper” of the award is responsible for selecting the next deserving recipient.

After Dinner Phone Call
Even though you took time during the work day to thank the employee who went “above and beyond,” go a step further and call them at home after dinner to say thanks.  You might be surprised how much this can mean.

Breakfast with the President
The Human Resources Department of Nations Healthcare, Inc. initiated a “Breakfast with the President” program to improve communications between employees and the CEO.  Each breakfast begins at approximately 8:15 a.m., with coffee and biscuits served by the staff, and ends when the discussion ends.  Results—higher morale and a sense of open communication.

More team building techniques and ideas on my website

 

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Skill Shortages Create a Perfect Storm in the Labor Pool

The Perfect Storm:
The Impending Workforce Crisis

In the movie, Perfect Storm, a small fishing vessel has the misfortune of encountering the worst Mother Nature has to offer. Just like this boat, today’s employers are facing a combination of conditions just as threatening as this boat faced on the high seas. If businesses don’t prepare today they could face a similar misfortune.

Over the next decade the leadership talent pool (35-44) will be reduced by 9%. That number will further shrink to 10% by 2020 according to the U.S. Census Bureau, International Database.

Tamara J. Erickson, co-author of Workforce Crisis delivered a thought provoking presentation at the recent Society of Human Resource Management (SHRM) conference in June. In her presentation, “New Models of Work: Avoiding the Coming Crisis of the Changing Workforce,” she points to five issues all employers should be concerned with:

Issue One: Not enough bodies. The growth in the working-age population is �screeching to a halt.�

Issue Two: The workforce is getting older. The U.S. population 2000-2010 shows a rapid growth in the over-55 workforce. This means the leadership pool is shrinking.

Issue Three: Inappropriately skilled workers. Over the next decade only 30% of the 21-year-olds will obtain a college degree, while over 90% of the new jobs created in the U.S. will require a college degree.  There are plenty of people looking for jobs, but they don’t have the right skills.

Issue Four: A highly diverse workforce. The emerging workforce has diverse values across the following generational groups: Traditionalist; Leading-edge Boomer; Trailing-edge Boomer; Generation X and Generation Y.

Issue Five: Less desire for a leg up. All groups are showing a decline in their desire for greater responsibility.

Some Perspective

With a pattern of declining birthrates, skill shortages, and an increasingly older population, we see a common pattern affecting the workforce of the industrialized world. In the U.S., we have the added situation of �boomers� and �echo-boomers� which indicates changes in the workforce are not going away in this century.

Compounding the issue during the next decade only 30% of twenty-year-olds will obtain a college degree. The bottom line is HR will have to change the �requirements� of job descriptions to �desires,� and employers will need to spend more time educating and training their workforce. That is according to Tamara J. Erickson, co-author of Workforce Crisis.

Additionally, organizations face increased ethnic, generational, and racial diversity. These diverse values and generational differences place greater demand on managers and leaders. They need to be managed and led in a different manner. Sadly, the educational system is not prepared for a knowledge economy needed to produce high-performance in organizations. Employers will have to fill the gap. They also need to be looking at ways to converge HR and training as a standard practice to keep pace in a highly complex labor market. Organizations need to be gearing up for this now.

Are your managers and leaders able to cultivate the diverse talents of diversity, generational differences, and shifting talents?

Will they be able to lead teams to increased productivity and high-performance?

Have you put plans in place to increase professional development in your organization? If your answer is no, or you are not sure, you may have a greater reason to be concerned.

A Solution

Cultivate the potential of each person. Build greater flexibility in your work hours. Discover what satisfies and dissatisfies each generation. I assured a client recently that engaging in a retention plan to address this issue would put her organization in a better position to gain than lose her workforce to retirement or the competition. Her organization is already seeing the boomers looking for greater flexibility in taking time off for leisure. But, at the same time, they want to stay employed. Meanwhile, the 35-45 year olds are looking for more family time and are less willing to take on greater responsibility.

I recommended a plan that combines the following:

1. Start with a sound hiring strategy for the best talent that meets or exceeds current and future needs.

2. Create a plan for retaining new and identified existing talent in the organization.

3.Examine workplace dimensions such as leadership, communication, training, and recognition.

4. Examine, train, and coach with a leadership style for existing managers and for up-and-coming leaders in the 25-34 year-old group that focuses on:

–Maintaining and enhancing team member self- esteem.
–Focusing on behavior (what team members do rather than their attitudes or personal characteristics).
–Encourage team member participation in decision making and problem solving.

Fortunately, there is still time to act in putting your organizational plan in place.

Recognize the world around you is changing. It includes the new millennium workforce that has totally different needs and expectations. It is about adapting. Prepare now and avoid being caught in the skilled labor storm.

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