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Employee turnover as a cost factor of organizations

Employee turnover as a cost factor of organizations
Employee turnover as a cost factor of organizations
The termination of the contract, both official and psychological, is known as employee turnover (Krausz, 2002; Macdonald, 1999) and is considered as an index of organizational effectiveness. It is closely related to firm performance (Chikwe, 2009; Cho et al., 2006). The consequences of employee turnover can have either positive or negative impacts on organizational performance (Price, 1977; Mobley, 1982; Siebert and Zubanov, 2009; Ingersoll and May, 2012). Building up and maintaining a pool of good-quality employees is costly, as there are various costs associated with the human resource, which can be either direct or indirect (recruitment, selection, training, and so on). For instance, Hinkin and Tracey (2000) found that the overall costs of turnover of one front office attendant (including separation costs, replacement costs and lost productivity) ranged from about $6000 to $12,000, in which the loss of productivity accounted for the largest percentage of the cost. The findings from empirical studies have emphatically shown that for any organization to thrive it must hold on to its top talent (Holtom et al., 2005). Thus, it is imperative for the organization to maintain a labour force of employees with robust institutional knowledge, with employee turnover being kept to a minimum.
Turnover
109-126
Edward Elgar Publishing
Mohammed, Anne-Marie
a177e1a2-abaf-4e0e-bd45-eaf59e8bd1bd
Lai, Yanqing
d5cbb9da-5755-4adc-b6e6-bade073a5939
Daskalaki, Maria
6c5ac39d-95f5-4dc1-98cc-ad2f80b3f0fa
Saridakis, George
f215666f-8cd1-402c-8c7a-f9b5fd13767b
Saridakis, George
Cooper, Cary
Mohammed, Anne-Marie
a177e1a2-abaf-4e0e-bd45-eaf59e8bd1bd
Lai, Yanqing
d5cbb9da-5755-4adc-b6e6-bade073a5939
Daskalaki, Maria
6c5ac39d-95f5-4dc1-98cc-ad2f80b3f0fa
Saridakis, George
f215666f-8cd1-402c-8c7a-f9b5fd13767b
Saridakis, George
Cooper, Cary

Mohammed, Anne-Marie, Lai, Yanqing, Daskalaki, Maria and Saridakis, George (2016) Employee turnover as a cost factor of organizations. In, Saridakis, George and Cooper, Cary (eds.) Employee Turnover as a Cost Factor of Organizations. (New Horizons in Management) Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 109-126.

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

The termination of the contract, both official and psychological, is known as employee turnover (Krausz, 2002; Macdonald, 1999) and is considered as an index of organizational effectiveness. It is closely related to firm performance (Chikwe, 2009; Cho et al., 2006). The consequences of employee turnover can have either positive or negative impacts on organizational performance (Price, 1977; Mobley, 1982; Siebert and Zubanov, 2009; Ingersoll and May, 2012). Building up and maintaining a pool of good-quality employees is costly, as there are various costs associated with the human resource, which can be either direct or indirect (recruitment, selection, training, and so on). For instance, Hinkin and Tracey (2000) found that the overall costs of turnover of one front office attendant (including separation costs, replacement costs and lost productivity) ranged from about $6000 to $12,000, in which the loss of productivity accounted for the largest percentage of the cost. The findings from empirical studies have emphatically shown that for any organization to thrive it must hold on to its top talent (Holtom et al., 2005). Thus, it is imperative for the organization to maintain a labour force of employees with robust institutional knowledge, with employee turnover being kept to a minimum.

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More information

Published date: 29 April 2016
Keywords: Turnover

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 443267
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443267
PURE UUID: 371e50f8-799f-4180-b094-b188fc5e7f4d
ORCID for Maria Daskalaki: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7860-1955

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Aug 2020 16:32
Last modified: 15 Jan 2024 17:42

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Contributors

Author: Anne-Marie Mohammed
Author: Yanqing Lai
Author: Maria Daskalaki ORCID iD
Author: George Saridakis
Editor: George Saridakis
Editor: Cary Cooper

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