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> "But I'll spend money to train my employees and they'll just take those skills to go work for a competitor or start their own business!" Yes, that's a feature of the system, not a bug. Pay your employees well, listen to their problems and fix them, and they won't leave the company for a competitor. People leave for a handful of main reasons to competitors: 1. Money - this is the most obvious. Most employers simply don't want to give pay rises, to the point where they would rather hire a new person at 50-100% higher than your current salary, to do the same job, than to give you a 25-30% raise. 2. Bad management - second most common reason I see people leave, even for lesser paying jobs, just to be rid of bad managers. And for some reason most companies would rather hire _yet another_ manager to "fix things" rather than listen to the actual workers' problems. So the worker leaves when all they see is manager upon manager upon manager getting paid 2-3-5x as much as they are, who either don't do jackshit, or are overbearing micro-managers. Oh and of course these managers often claim any success of their managed people, while pushing any blame on them simultaneously. 3. No way to progress, either professionally, or within the company hierarchy. A lot of professionals end up doing the exact same job for years upon years, without going anywhere. They don't get promoted to a new position (but get new responsibilities continuously, without any financial renumeration of course), they can't go to another project, they're stuck in one place. And nobody likes feeling stuck. Overall, a company can easily ensure that people they invest in, stay with the company to use those skills - just freaking listen to them. Not the managers, not some external "corporate coach", the people you invested in. Make sure they're happy, and they'll stay with you. Oh, also, let's debunk that whole "I invested money in you therefore you can't work for my competitors" bullshit - all that investment, that's actually net zero for the company, since they can do tax writeoffs on those, as an expense. So at the end, that argument is pure BS, and restricting (ex) employees from working for the competition is pure pettiness. |