盡管對(duì)于經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退的恐慌甚囂塵上,但大辭職潮似乎在短時(shí)間內(nèi)也沒(méi)有任何放緩的跡象,。5月份,,又有430萬(wàn)員工辭去了工作,而且麥肯錫(McKinsey)的新報(bào)告指出,,40%的員工依然對(duì)自己的工作非常不滿,,并在尋找新的機(jī)會(huì)。這對(duì)于招聘經(jīng)理來(lái)說(shuō)并不是什么好消息,。該報(bào)告的一位作者伯尼·道靈告訴美國(guó)消費(fèi)者新聞與商業(yè)頻道(CNBC):“這不只是一個(gè)轉(zhuǎn)瞬即逝的趨勢(shì),,或者與疫情相關(guān)的勞動(dòng)力市場(chǎng)變化。員工的思維和意愿出現(xiàn)了根本性的轉(zhuǎn)變,,因?yàn)闊o(wú)論從事什么工作,,他們都認(rèn)為自己生活中有其他更為重要的事情?!?/p>
然而,,促使員工跳槽的并非只是他們對(duì)遠(yuǎn)程工作或更高薪資的向往,。在麥肯錫的報(bào)告中,41%的受調(diào)對(duì)象稱缺乏上升機(jī)會(huì)是他們離職的首要原因,。該報(bào)告調(diào)查了美國(guó),、加拿大、英國(guó),、澳大利亞、印度和新加坡超過(guò)1.2萬(wàn)名員工,。麥肯錫的人力與運(yùn)營(yíng)績(jī)效實(shí)踐負(fù)責(zé)人比爾·沙寧格與麥肯錫全球研究所(McKinsey Global Institute)合伙人阿努·馬德加夫卡爾上個(gè)月在《財(cái)富》雜志中寫道,,員工正“日益流向那些能夠在當(dāng)前為其提供公允待遇,并在未來(lái)為其提供更好職業(yè)發(fā)展機(jī)會(huì)的企業(yè),。對(duì)于雇主來(lái)說(shuō),,如果要吸引新人才并防止過(guò)多的人員流失,他們就得在這兩方面下功夫,?!?/p>
員工給出的其他跳槽原因包括工作乏味或者領(lǐng)導(dǎo)沒(méi)有人情味,再就是缺乏有意義的工作,、不可持續(xù)的工作期許,、缺乏支持和靈活性。報(bào)告的作者寫道,,“很多雇員稱自己看不到職業(yè)或個(gè)人成長(zhǎng)空間,,認(rèn)為自己還有更好的賺錢去處,并覺(jué)得上司不夠關(guān)心自己,。誠(chéng)然,,這些都是引發(fā)不滿的常見(jiàn)原因,但這些原因如今都成了主要的跳槽動(dòng)機(jī),?!薄?/p>
麥肯錫的發(fā)現(xiàn)與其他研究相一致,,該研究認(rèn)為,,眾多員工,尤其是較為年輕的員工,,在尋找工作時(shí)都更加看重職業(yè)發(fā)展機(jī)會(huì),,而不是其他常見(jiàn)的待遇,例如靈活的工作時(shí)間或混合工作,。
在最近領(lǐng)英(LinkedIn)的調(diào)查中,,40%的Z世代員工稱,只要工作能夠提供大量的職業(yè)成長(zhǎng)機(jī)會(huì),,哪怕削減5%的薪酬他們也愿意接受,。
2022年大學(xué)畢業(yè)生奧利弗·普爾在5月對(duì)《財(cái)富》說(shuō):“人們希望成長(zhǎng),而且是快速成長(zhǎng)。師徒輔導(dǎo)機(jī)制異常重要,,也就是能夠與經(jīng)理或總監(jiān)進(jìn)行更加個(gè)人層面的溝通,。”
麥肯錫的道靈在CFO Daily的采訪中對(duì)《財(cái)富》的謝麗爾·埃斯特拉達(dá)說(shuō),,將持續(xù)成長(zhǎng)和發(fā)展作為公司文化的基石是留住員工的最好方法,。“薪酬很重要,,但如果你的領(lǐng)導(dǎo)難以激勵(lì)下屬,,無(wú)法發(fā)揮員工的主動(dòng)性,也沒(méi)有去培養(yǎng)員工,,那么光有薪酬是不夠的,。”(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:馮豐
審校:夏林
盡管對(duì)于經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退的恐慌甚囂塵上,,但大辭職潮似乎在短時(shí)間內(nèi)也沒(méi)有任何放緩的跡象,。5月份,又有430萬(wàn)員工辭去了工作,,而且麥肯錫(McKinsey)的新報(bào)告指出,,40%的員工依然對(duì)自己的工作非常不滿,并在尋找新的機(jī)會(huì),。這對(duì)于招聘經(jīng)理來(lái)說(shuō)并不是什么好消息,。該報(bào)告的一位作者伯尼·道靈告訴美國(guó)消費(fèi)者新聞與商業(yè)頻道(CNBC):“這不只是一個(gè)轉(zhuǎn)瞬即逝的趨勢(shì),或者與疫情相關(guān)的勞動(dòng)力市場(chǎng)變化,。員工的思維和意愿出現(xiàn)了根本性的轉(zhuǎn)變,,因?yàn)闊o(wú)論從事什么工作,他們都認(rèn)為自己生活中有其他更為重要的事情,?!?/p>
然而,促使員工跳槽的并非只是他們對(duì)遠(yuǎn)程工作或更高薪資的向往,。在麥肯錫的報(bào)告中,,41%的受調(diào)對(duì)象稱缺乏上升機(jī)會(huì)是他們離職的首要原因。該報(bào)告調(diào)查了美國(guó),、加拿大,、英國(guó)、澳大利亞,、印度和新加坡超過(guò)1.2萬(wàn)名員工,。麥肯錫的人力與運(yùn)營(yíng)績(jī)效實(shí)踐負(fù)責(zé)人比爾·沙寧格與麥肯錫全球研究所(McKinsey Global Institute)合伙人阿努·馬德加夫卡爾上個(gè)月在《財(cái)富》雜志中寫道,員工正“日益流向那些能夠在當(dāng)前為其提供公允待遇,,并在未來(lái)為其提供更好職業(yè)發(fā)展機(jī)會(huì)的企業(yè),。對(duì)于雇主來(lái)說(shuō),,如果要吸引新人才并防止過(guò)多的人員流失,他們就得在這兩方面下功夫,?!?/p>
員工給出的其他跳槽原因包括工作乏味或者領(lǐng)導(dǎo)沒(méi)有人情味,再就是缺乏有意義的工作,、不可持續(xù)的工作期許,、缺乏支持和靈活性。報(bào)告的作者寫道,,“很多雇員稱自己看不到職業(yè)或個(gè)人成長(zhǎng)空間,,認(rèn)為自己還有更好的賺錢去處,并覺(jué)得上司不夠關(guān)心自己,。誠(chéng)然,這些都是引發(fā)不滿的常見(jiàn)原因,,但這些原因如今都成了主要的跳槽動(dòng)機(jī),。”,。
麥肯錫的發(fā)現(xiàn)與其他研究相一致,,該研究認(rèn)為,眾多員工,,尤其是較為年輕的員工,,在尋找工作時(shí)都更加看重職業(yè)發(fā)展機(jī)會(huì),而不是其他常見(jiàn)的待遇,,例如靈活的工作時(shí)間或混合工作,。
在最近領(lǐng)英(LinkedIn)的調(diào)查中,40%的Z世代員工稱,,只要工作能夠提供大量的職業(yè)成長(zhǎng)機(jī)會(huì),,哪怕削減5%的薪酬他們也愿意接受。
2022年大學(xué)畢業(yè)生奧利弗·普爾在5月對(duì)《財(cái)富》說(shuō):“人們希望成長(zhǎng),,而且是快速成長(zhǎng),。師徒輔導(dǎo)機(jī)制異常重要,也就是能夠與經(jīng)理或總監(jiān)進(jìn)行更加個(gè)人層面的溝通,?!?/p>
麥肯錫的道靈在CFO Daily的采訪中對(duì)《財(cái)富》的謝麗爾·埃斯特拉達(dá)說(shuō),將持續(xù)成長(zhǎng)和發(fā)展作為公司文化的基石是留住員工的最好方法,?!靶匠旰苤匾绻愕念I(lǐng)導(dǎo)難以激勵(lì)下屬,,無(wú)法發(fā)揮員工的主動(dòng)性,,也沒(méi)有去培養(yǎng)員工,,那么光有薪酬是不夠的?!保ㄘ?cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:馮豐
審校:夏林
Despite a lot of recession fears, it doesn't seem like the Great Resignation will be slowing anytime soon. Another 4.3 million workers quit their jobs in May—and a new McKinsey report suggests that 40% of the workforce are still very unhappy with their jobs and looking for new opportunities. This is bad news for hiring managers.
“This isn’t just a passing trend, or a pandemic-related change to the labor market,” Bonnie Dowling, one of the report’s authors, told CNBC. “There’s been a fundamental shift in workers’ mentality, and their willingness to prioritize other things in their life beyond whatever job they hold.”
But it isn’t just the desire for remote work or higher pay that’s driving workers to look for new roles. In the McKinsey report, which surveyed more than 12,000 individuals in the U.S., Canada, U.K., Australia, India, and Singapore, 41% said that the lack of opportunity for upward mobility was the number-one reason why they left.
Workers are “increasingly moving to companies that give them both fair terms today and the chance to add experience that will better their prospects in the future,” Bill Schaninger, leader of McKinsey’s people and operational performance practice, and Anu Madgavkar, partner at the McKinsey Global Institute, wrote in?Fortune last month. “The way for employers to attract a flow of new talent and stem the drain of attrition is to deliver on both fronts.”
The other reasons workers gave for leaving a job were uninspiring or uncaring leaders, followed by lack of meaningful work, unsustainable work expectations, lack of support, and lack of flexibility.
“[P]lenty of employees say that they see no room for professional or personal growth, believe that there is better money to be made elsewhere, and think that leaders don’t care enough about them—tried-and-true reasons for disgruntlement, to be sure, but ones that are now being acted upon broadly,” the report authors wrote.
McKinsey’s findings align with other research that suggests that workers—especially the younger generations—are looking for jobs that offer career advancement above many other popular perks, like flexible hours or hybrid work.
In a recent LinkedIn survey, 40% of Gen Z workers said they’d be willing to accept a 5% pay cut for a job offering significant career growth opportunities.
“People want to grow; they want to grow quickly,” Oliver Pour, a 2022 college graduate, told?Fortune in May. “The mentorship aspect is extremely important, being able to connect with the manager or director on a more personal level.”
Promoting continuous growth and development as a cornerstone of company culture is the best bet for keeping people around, McKinsey's Dowling told?Fortune’s Sheryl Estrada in an interview for CFO Daily. “Compensation is important, but if your leaders are not inspiring and they aren’t engaging and developing employees, compensation won’t be enough."