Even in Current Economy, Employee Retention Top Concern, Survey Shows
December 17 2008 - 8:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
MENLO PARK, Calif., Dec. 17 /PRNewswire/ -- A recent survey
suggests today's employers are most worried about hanging on to
good employees and bringing in new ones, even in the current
economy. When asked about their greatest staffing concern, nearly
four out of 10 (39 percent) senior executives interviewed cited
employee retention, while 22 percent said recruitment. Productivity
and employee morale were each named by 17 percent of respondents.
The survey was developed by Robert Half International, the world's
first and largest staffing services firm specializing in accounting
and finance. It was conducted by an independent research firm from
Sept. 15 to Oct. 15, 2008, and is based on interviews with 150
senior executives from the nation's 1,000 largest companies.
Executives were asked, "What is your greatest staffing concern?"
Their responses: Retention.................. 39%
Recruitment................ 22% Productivity............... 17%
Staff morale............... 17% Other...................... 3%
Don't know................. 2% 100% "Many firms are operating with
lean teams in which every staff member plays a key role in the
business, making retention a greater concern," said Max Messmer,
chairman and CEO of Robert Half International and author of Human
Resources Kit For Dummies(R), 2nd Edition (John Wiley & Sons,
Inc.). "Companies that lose top performers may not only experience
declines in productivity but also incur significant costs in
replacing these professionals." Messmer added that within a few
specialties, recruiting in-demand skills remains a challenge.
"There continues to be a shortage of skilled job candidates for
positions such as credit and collections specialists and staff and
senior accountants, and companies may not be able to offer generous
perks and incentives to attract them." Robert Half International
has more than 360 staffing locations worldwide and offers online
job search services at http://www.rhi.com/. DATASOURCE: Robert Half
International CONTACT: Michael Weiss of Robert Half International,
+1-650-234-6383, Web site: http://www.rhi.com/
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