Reducing employee turnover starts with understanding the unique work personality of your people and aligning their natural strengths with the right roles and team dynamics.
When you bridge the gap between what an employee is naturally motivated to do and the actual requirements of their daily tasks, you create a foundation for long-term commitment and high performance. High turnover is rarely just about salary – it is often a symptom of a deeper misalignment between individual preferences and organisational culture.
Key takeaways
- Reducing turnover requires a shift from reactive hiring to proactive alignment of work personality with team needs.
- Managers who understand the distinct motivations of their staff can tailor their leadership style to improve engagement.
- Predicting how a new hire will impact existing team dynamics is essential for maintaining a stable, harmonious workplace.
- Creating a culture of belonging involves more than perks; it requires genuine recognition of individual contributions and work styles.
Losing a talented team member is more than just an administrative headache. It disrupts the rhythm of your remaining staff, drains collective knowledge, and places a heavy burden on those left behind to pick up the slack. For mid-market leaders, the financial impact of replacing a skilled professional can be staggering, often costing double the person's annual salary when you factor in recruitment, onboarding, and lost productivity.
We often see businesses treating turnover as an inevitable part of the modern workplace. While some movement is natural, a high rate of departures usually points to a friction point in the employee experience. Perhaps the role wasn't what they expected, or the team environment didn't allow them to work in a way that felt natural. To truly reduce employee turnover, we need to look beyond the exit interview and start examining the very beginning of the employee lifecycle.
At Compono, we believe that retention is won or lost during the selection process. If you can accurately assess how a candidate fits into your specific culture and team structure before they sign the contract, you significantly lower the risk of them leaving six months later. By using a data-driven approach to Compono Hire, you can ensure that every new addition is a long-term match for your organisation's unique needs.
Every person has a dominant preference for how they like to approach their tasks. At Compono, we call this a work personality. Some people are naturally inclined to lead and inspire, while others find their flow in meticulous detail or supporting their colleagues. When an employee is forced to work against their natural grain for extended periods, burnout and disengagement are almost guaranteed.
Consider a person whose natural style is that of The Pioneer – someone who thrives on innovation and imaginative problem-solving. If this person is placed in a role that demands rigid adherence to repetitive, structured tasks with no room for creative input, they will eventually look for the exit. It isn't that they are a 'bad' employee; they are simply in the wrong environment for their specific strengths.
Conversely, The Auditor finds satisfaction in precision, thoroughness, and maintaining order. They provide the steady hand that ensures accuracy and compliance. If you recognise these traits early, you can provide the stability and clear guidelines they need to feel successful. Reducing turnover is about matching these natural inclinations to the work that needs to be done, ensuring that your people feel energised rather than drained by their daily responsibilities.
The old saying that people don't quit jobs, they quit managers, still holds a significant amount of truth. However, management isn't a one-size-fits-all skill. A leadership style that works perfectly for one person might be completely demotivating for another. To reduce employee turnover, managers must learn to flex their approach based on the individuals they lead.
For example, The Helper values harmony, empathy, and supportive relationships. They need a manager who is approachable and inclusive. On the other hand, The Evaluator respects logic, efficiency, and direct communication. They want clear objectives and objective feedback. A manager who treats both of these individuals exactly the same will likely struggle to keep one – or both – of them engaged over the long term.
We've found that giving managers the tools to reveal these team insights is a game-changer for retention. When a leader understands the 'personality wheel' of their entire team, they can manage conflict more effectively and balance work activities to suit everyone's natural preferences. This level of workforce intelligence – which we've built into Compono Engage – empowers leaders to build high-performing cultures where people actually want to stay.
Culture is often described as the 'vibe' of an office, but it's actually much more structural than that. It is the sum of how people interact, how decisions are made, and how success is celebrated. A culture that reduces turnover is one where employees feel their work has purpose and their unique contributions are recognised. It is an environment built on trust rather than micromanagement.
To maintain a stable workforce, you must also consider the 'Organisation Fit'. This involves looking at how an individual's personal values align with the company's mission. If there is a fundamental disconnect here, no amount of free fruit or Friday drinks will prevent them from leaving. We encourage businesses to be radical in their transparency about what it's really like to work there. This ensures you attract people who will thrive in your specific ecosystem.
Regularly checking the pulse of your organisation is vital. You shouldn't wait for a resignation letter to find out that a team is struggling. By consistently measuring engagement and performance through The Compono Culture, Engagement & Performance Model, you can identify hotspots of turnover risk before they become a crisis. This proactive approach allows you to make the small adjustments – whether in workload, communication, or professional development – that keep your best people from looking elsewhere.
One of the top reasons employees cite for leaving is a lack of career progression. However, progression doesn't always have to mean a vertical move up the corporate ladder. For many, it means the opportunity to learn new skills, take on interesting projects, and grow as a professional. When people feel they are stagnating, they begin to look for new challenges outside your walls.
Creating clear pathways for development shows your team that you value their future as much as their current output. This is particularly important for types like The Campaigner, who are driven by future possibilities and the desire to inspire others. If they don't see a path forward, their natural enthusiasm will quickly turn to frustration.
By using Compono Develop, you can map out these growth journeys based on the actual skills and personality traits of your workforce. This ensures that your development initiatives are not just generic training programmes, but meaningful investments in the specific people who drive your business forward. When employees see that you are committed to their long-term success, they are far more likely to remain committed to yours.
Key insights
- Retention is a strategic outcome of matching work personality to daily responsibilities.
- Managers must adapt their leadership style – from directive to democratic – based on the specific needs of their team members.
- Understanding team dynamics before hiring is the most effective way to prevent future turnover.
- Transparent culture and clear development pathways are the primary drivers of long-term employee loyalty.
- Data-driven workforce intelligence allows leaders to identify and fix turnover risks before they lead to resignations.
When you understand a person's natural work personality, you can place them in roles that align with their motivations. People who work in ways that feel natural are more engaged, less stressed, and significantly less likely to leave their jobs compared to those in misaligned roles.
While salary is a factor, the most common reasons are poor management, lack of career progression, and a 'mismatch' between the employee's personality and the team culture. Addressing these structural issues is the key to long-term retention.
Yes, by regularly measuring engagement and monitoring team dynamics, you can identify signs of disengagement. Using workforce intelligence tools helps you see which teams are under pressure or where leadership styles are clashing with employee needs.
Focus on 'soft' factors that have a 'hard' impact: provide more autonomy, offer clear professional development pathways, and ensure managers are trained to lead with empathy and clarity. Recognition of individual work styles goes a long way in building loyalty.
Hiring for 'Organisation Fit' – which includes culture, job, and personality fit – is highly effective. It ensures that the new hire's values and work preferences match the environment they are entering, which is a primary predictor of how long they will stay with the company.