Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Boarding Capital

Recently the SHRM - Globeforce survey 2011 pointed out that most of the companies know about their engagement practices during exit-interviews. Isn't that too late? I am not ruling-out the effectiveness of exit-interviews. But for a company to know the true state of its engagement best only when an employee leaves the company is pretty much the same as letting an opportunity go-by. That brings to the point when a company should start engaging its employees.




In my opinion the most crucial part of en employee stay in any organization is the induction period. Most of the perceptions about the company, its people, its culture, its practices etc. are drawn at this time and consequently majority of the decisions regarding how long an employee decides to stay in the organization is consciously or sub-consciously taken during on-boarding stage. In other words maximum engagement or disengagement happens during this stage. After this whatever the employee experiences is contributory to that state. In short if you fail to engage an employee during the on-boarding stage, then you have missed the bus and rest of the time you are trying to catch the same... You may if ‘sprint’ well but in all likelihood you will miss. And remember, if you keep missing buses, you are less-likely to reach the destination.

3 comments:

Devpriya Dey said...

I will definitely agree with you on the First stage of engaging the employee which is the Induction Period. Infact keeping myself in the shoes of an employee, the engagement of the employee starts when I get the first call from the company for an interview either through the external agencies or through the in-house sourcing staff followed by the perception which develops during the entire selection process. For eg. Subex gives a small memento/ token of appreciation for attending the interview or choosing Subex as their prospective employer irrespective of being selected or not.Moreover this becomes highly effective for the campus recruitment cases typically in an IT organisation scenario when the duration between giving the "letter of intent" to the selected candidates and the actual offer letter generation. Generally the average tenure is 3-6 months by which there is a high probability of the candidates change their minds to join other company.That is when the offer to joining ratio varies.Many IT companies such as TCS, IBM conducts some sort of activities like conducting remote motoring classes for selected candidates on a fortnightly basis or site visits to keep up the enthusiasm level of the candidates till they join thus engaging them from day zero.

Dr. Debashish Sengupta said...

Excellent inputs. Thanks.
Best,
Debashish

Devpriya Dey said...

Many Many thanks for your inspiration. Cheers, Dev