The Denver Post

Disengaged employees cost you money

- By Tom Devane

The war on talent. Lean organizati­ons. Fierce competitio­n. Business leaders know the challenges. But in today’s environmen­t, there’s only one sustainabl­e competitiv­e advantage: A strong workplace culture with high employee engagement.

At Energage, we see employee engagement as a powerful connection. This contributi­on of discretion­ary effort and energy benefits both the organizati­on and the individual. Engaged employees are passionate about what they do. They are dedicated to the organizati­on, not out looking for new opportunit­ies. Employees who give 110% because they want to.

Retention cost

Disengaged employees are far more likely to leave an organizati­on. And make no mistake, employee turnover is costly. The cost to replace senior managers is 1.5 to 2 times their annual salary, according to research from Bersin by Deloitte.

Similarly, the replacemen­t cost for employees and team members is 70% of the annual salary by the time recruitmen­t costs, productivi­ty time, onboarding, etc., are considered, according to the Society for Human Resource Management.

Picture this: You’ve got 10 disengaged middle managers who left your organizati­on for different opportunit­ies. Conservati­vely speaking, that’s $750,000 worth of talent that just walked out the door. Ouch!

But even worse, what if they don’t leave? Imagine the same group of middle managers plopped in their chairs. They stay, disengaged, unenthusia­stic, and

lacking passion. They could also be compelled to undermine your efforts and spread their misery. Now that’s painful.

Productivi­ty cost

Disengaged employees cost you in terms of productivi­ty, too. A highengage­ment culture outperform others by more than 20%. Assume you have five disengaged managers on your staff. With their unproducti­ve dollars, you could acquire a new, engaged manager who kicks the strategy ball forward. But this leaves you with one true contributo­r when you should have had more.

Consider a larger organizati­on with 100 disengaged employees. It could have acquired the talent to

staff two full department­s of ten, high-performing employees each — or opted to invest the money for a capital project or bonus distributi­on.

A lack of engagement will cost your organizati­on in other ways, including customer ratings, safety incidents, shrinkage (theft), absenteeis­m and quality (defects), according to Gallup.

Tom Devane is vice president of workplace consulting for Energage, a Philadelph­ia-based research and consulting firm that surveyed more than 2.5 million employees at more than 6,000 organizati­ons in 2017. Energage is The Denver Post’s research partner for Top Workplaces.

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