Employees may decide to leave an organization due to various
reasons. In earlier studies it was emphasized that employees will leave only
when there is a ‘perceived desirability to do so and when there is a perceived
possibility of such ease of movement’ (March and Simon 1958) According to this
theory, for an employee to quit a job two factors had to be satisfied. The
first, he should have a desirability to quit the job due to some reason. secondly
there should be ease of movement from the job. If there are no job
opportunities in the market, if the employee cannot leave the job due to some
legal or other binding factor such as bonds or loans, even if there is a desire,
the employee will not be able to leave the job.
Employees intention to turnover or desire to quit may trigger
due to various reasons, Salary expectations, job dissatisfaction, stress, skills
and ability, difficulty to balance work with family life, carrier development,
poor working conditions, internal politics, superior’s attitude, government
policy are some examples for the reasons that people intend to leave their
jobs. The reasons for an
individual’s turnover intention may vary according to age, gender, marriage,
education levels and years of working in the organization (Liu and Wang, 2006).
Previous studies found that the rate of female employee turnover is higher, as
compared to male employees. This may be attributed mainly due their family
commitments and child birth. According to Ma et al. (2003), ‘Employees who are young, inexperienced
and with high education level tend to have low level of satisfaction about jobs
and careers, and have lower commitment to the organization, these negative
attitudes are associated with turnover intention’.
By studying the reasons for the voluntary turnover intentions
We can categories them into three main blocks based on the ability of controlling the factor that affect the turnover.
1)
Individual
factors affecting turnover.
2)
Institutional
factors affecting employee turn over
3)
External
factors affecting turnover.
Voluntary turnover
Individual Factors Institutional Factors External Factors
1) Individual factors affecting turnover.
Individual factors leading to
turnover intentions refer to the personal characteristics of an employee. These
characteristics could be those which are ingrained in the individual, such as
personality, or those which are learnt, such as skill, ability etc. Studies
indicate that various cognitive and non-cognitive factors do influence,
directly or indirectly to an employee’s intention and then finally the decision
to actually quit the organization.
Stagner(1948) defines personality as "the organization within the individual of those perceptual, cognitive,
emotional and motivational systems which determine his or her unique responses
to the environment‟ (Jha 2009). Friedman
& Rosenman’s (1959) theory of Type A & Type B personality, motivated
researchers to unearth the relationship between personality and turnover
intentions among individuals. However, a significant relationship between
personality and turnover intentions could not be established from the
researches. (Dole et al. 2001).
Going beyond the cognitive factors,
researchers tried to find out the relationship between non-cognitive factors
like ability, gender, number of years of experience, etc on the one hand and
turnover intentions amongst employees on the other. Ability refers to the
capacity of an individual to perform tasks on a job. The overall ability of an
individual is essentially composed of two sets of factors: intellectual ability
and physical ability. Jackofsky & Peters (1983) hypothesized that ability
has an indirect and multifaceted effect on the desirability of movement.
Further, the model hypothesized that as people with high ability are
dissatisfied working on routine tasks, they have a high desirability to move to
an alternative job. However, a further study on Jackofsky & Peter’s (1983)
model showed that ability has only a marginal effect on an individual’s
perceived desirability of movement from his current organization (Rosse, 1987).
Scholars have also attempted to
establish a connection between ethnicity, gender, personality, and hierarchical
position on the one hand and turnover intentions on the other. The obtained
results however negated any such connection (Dole et al. 2001). But it is commonly
believed that there is a relationship between gender and turnover as statistics
show a higher turnover among female employees in certain industries. Eg :
apparel industry, education sector and retail sector in Sri Lanka.
1. Institutional factors affecting turnover
As discussed earlier there are many
factors that would make an employee want to quit the job they are doing, but
could be controlled by the organization if they knew the reason for the
quitting. These factors are known as the institutional factors effecting
turnover.
Employees would leave the job when they are
dissatisfied. Below are some of the main reasons that would make an employee
dissatisfied with the job that they are doing for which the organization is
responsible and therefore could be controlled by it if they provide an
acceptable solution to these reasons. In most of the organizations today when
an employee tenders a resignation an “exit interview” is held and the reasons
for the resignation is discussed. Based on the outcome of this interview the
employer provides alternative solutions for the employees reasons for
resignation and if the it is acceptable the resignation is revoked. Some such
alternative solutions are salary increments, transfers, providing other benefits,
offering a flexi working schedule etc.
Smith (2009)
listed out twelve major reasons for employees to leave from their Jobs. Those
were rude behavior, work-life imbalance, inability to meet expectations,
employee misalignment, feeling undervalued, lack of coaching and feedback, lack
of decision making ability, inadequate skills, organization’s instability,
stagnation, lack of growth opportunities and lack of appreciation. We can also
add remuneration, working environment, job stress supervisor attitude, other
benefits available other than the salary as other institutional factors
affecting employee turnover.
2. External factors affecting turnover
These are the factors that cause
employee turnover but the causes cannot be controlled neither by the employee or
the institution. Employees may be forced to leave their jobs and shift to other
geographies due to political unrest, due to natural disasters or plagues. This
type of reasons can be termed as external factors. Some examples for this type
of turnover is employees resigning jobs in war tone areas, natural disaster
prone areas.
References
1. Dole,
C. and Schroeder, R.G. (2001). The impact of various factors on the
personality, job satisfaction and turnover intentions of professional
accountants. Managerial accounting
Journal, Vol 16, No 4, pp 234-45.
2.
Friedman,
M. and Rosenman. (1974), Type A Behavior
and Your Heart. Knopf, New York, NY.
3. Jackofsy,
E. and Peters, L. (1983). The hypothesized effects of ability in turnover
process, Academy of Management Review,
Vol 8, pp 46-49.
4. Jha, S. (2009). Determinants of employee
turnover intentions: A review. Management
Today, VoL.9, No. 2, pp. 26-33.
5 Liu, Y.A. and Wang, F. (2006). A Study on the Influence Factors of Employee Turnover Intention, Enterprise Economy, Vol 6, pp. 42-44.
6 Ma, S.J., Chen, J.Q. and Wang, L. (2003). A Study on the Causes of Employee Turnover. China Human Resources De[1]velopment, 9, pp. 18-20.
6. Rosse, J.G. (1987), Job-related ability and turnover, Journal of Business and Psychology, Vol 1, No 4, pp 326-36.
Employee Turnover is a very important and challenging fact in an organization. Adding to the fact that you have mentioned about Women turnover ratio being higher than the male turnover ratio according to Cotton and Tuttle's (1986), meta-analysis indicated that there is higher organizational turnover for women than for men and that gender is more strongly related to turnover of professional than nonprofessional employees. Also in one of the first articles to highlight gender differences in managerial turnover, Schwartz (1989) described the results of a corporate study as showing that "the rate of turnover in management positions is 2'/2 times higher among top-performing women than it is among men" (p. 65).
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment Naomi.
ReplyDeleteYes, lot of research and studies have been conducted on the relationship of turnover and gender, and the results have been similar.
"The results establish that women had greater rates of actual turnover than men, but no differences were found in the intent to leave. Both groups perceived their work environment similarly." was the conclusion of a research done on gender and turnover by Weisberg and Kischenbaum in 1993.
But the reasons for the turnover may differ from geography to geography and culture to culture.
I agree with you Amal. As you mentioned the reasons for high ratio of women turnover over men can be affected by different geographies and cultures.
ReplyDeleteThank you and agree with you.
DeleteAgreed with this blog. this blog is good since you have gathered all the factors of voluntary turnover into 3 main categorizes. The publications you have referred are also very educational.
ReplyDeleteThank you Chaturika.
DeleteEmployee turnover has become a global issue affecting all organizations around the world which needs to be dealt with using human resource strategies which will improve work environment and the needs of the employee (Anvari, JianFu and Chermahini, 2014).
ReplyDeleteAnvari, R., JianFu, Z. and Chermahini, S.H. (2014). Effective strategy for solving voluntary turnover problem among employees. Procedia-Social and Behavioral Sciences, 129, pp.186-190.