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Gartner says Australian employees staying put as concerns about the economy grow

Announcement posted by Gartner 24 Sep 2019

Experts advise employers to continue investing in talent development despite budget pressures
Australian employees’ intent to stay with their current employer rose 13.4% and active job seeking behaviour decreased by nearly 7% in the second quarter of 2019, according to Gartner, Inc.
 
Data from Gartner’s 2Q19 Global Talent Monitor report revealed 19% of Australian employees are actively job seeking, down from 25.9% last quarter; while 43.7 percent of employees report a high intent to stay, up from 30.3 percent last quarter. Australian employees’ confidence in near-term business conditions and long-term economic prospects fell 8% from the previous quarter. Their perception of employment opportunities also declined.
 
At the same time, discretionary effort levels – the willingness of Australian workers to go above and beyond at work – increased 3.9%, a reversal of the downward trajectory that started in early 2018. However, this increase in effort is unlikely to be good news for employers.
 
“Don’t be lulled into a false sense of security,” said Aaron McEwan, vice president in the HR practice at Gartner. “While the research indicates employees are working hard and job seeking activity is down, the decline in business confidence is very telling.”
 
In normal conditions, a rise in discretionary effort would be viewed positively, but with talks of a recession growing louder and a fear that job cuts are on the horizon, motivated and talented workers are staying put while readying themselves to jump ship.
 
“It’s apparent that in the midst of economic uncertainty, workers are going into self-preservation mode, digging in while they hone their skills and increase their employability,” Mr. McEwan said.
 
Continue to invest in top talent
According to Mr. McEwan, the next three months will be critical for organisations to secure the trust and commitment of their top talent. In the list of reasons employees gave for leaving a job, future career opportunity came in at No. 2 (up three places) and development opportunity ranked fourth (up four places).
 
“With bonus and pay freezes on the horizon, organisations should use development opportunities as recognition to encourage good people to stay. Investing in the career development of your high performers can help to stabilise the organisation during a challenging climate and ensure the business is prepared to take advantage of an upturn,” said Mr. McEwan. “Be wary of cutting too deeply. You risk losing your best people.”
 
Gartner research shows high potential (HIPO) employees bring 91% more value to the organisation than non-HIPOs and exert 21% more effort than their peers.
 
In an uncertain economic climate, employers must establish strategies to better engage, retain and reward their current workforce. Organisations can make progress on these goals by ensuring they prioritise the delivery of a robust Employee Value Proposition (EVP) that focuses on the attributes driving both employee attraction and attrition, including work-life balance, and future career opportunities.
 
Table 1. Highlights from the Q2 2019 Global Talent Monitor 
Talent Monitor Australian International Average
High Intent to Stay 43.7% 39.6%
High Discretionary Effort 19.6% 16.8%
Job Opportunities 47.6% 50.2%
Drivers of Attraction
  1. Work-Life Balance
  2. Location
  3. Respect
  1. Compensation
  2. Work-Life Balance
  3. Stability
Drivers of Attrition
  1. People Management
  2. Future Career Opportunity
  3. Recognition
  1. Compensation
  2. Future Career Opportunity
  3. People Management
Source: Gartner (September 2019)
 
Global Talent Monitor data is drawn from the larger Gartner Global Labour Market Survey which is made up of more than 40,000 employees in 40 countries, including 1,851 in Australia this quarter. The survey is conducted quarterly and is reflective of market conditions during the quarter preceding publication.
 
About the Gartner HR Practice
The Gartner HR practice brings together the best, relevant content approaches across Gartner to offer individual decision makers strategic business advice on the mission-critical priorities that cut across the HR function. Additional information is available at https://www.gartner.com/en/human-resources.
 
About Gartner
Gartner, Inc. (NYSE: IT) is the world's leading research and advisory company and a member of the S&P 500. We equip business leaders with indispensable insights, advice and tools to achieve their mission-critical priorities and build the successful organisations of tomorrow.
 
Our unmatched combination of expert-led, practitioner-sourced and data-driven research steers clients toward the right decisions on the issues that matter most. We are a trusted advisor and objective resource for more than 15,000 organisations in more than 100 countries — across all major functions, in every industry and enterprise size.
 
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