| > because the first thing you are thinking when you join what seems to be a nice company is leaving. Of course it's a risk, but there are two things to consider in counterpoint: 1). If the employee gets adequate training and the chance to contribute to his/her work with said training, that may improve their happiness and desire to stay. Both parties win. They win, you lose. 2). Suppose the exact scenario above plays out, you spend money on training, and they leave sometime thereafter. 3). What if you don't train the employee, but that employee stays? Everyone loses. Obviously, scenario 2 is the one you're most worried about, but imo if the environment is structured in such a way that that employee is looking for ways to leave at some unspecified point, there are probably bigger problems with the environment that need to be addressed. |
To simplify, because everyone’s a Hipster now (yeah, pun intended), since now it’s trending to move every X years from job to job, a lot of neonates do not even consider simply renegotiating extending or improving the terms of their current comfort zone.