Retaining top talent requires a shift from reactive perks to proactive alignment between an employee’s natural work personality and their daily responsibilities.
While competitive salaries and flexible working arrangements are now standard expectations, the modern workforce stays where they feel understood, challenged, and culturally aligned. At Compono, we believe that understanding the 'why' behind employee behaviour is the first step toward building a resilient, high-performing team that chooses to stay for the long term.
Key takeaways
- Retention starts with alignment between an individual’s work personality and the specific demands of their role.
- Creating a culture of belonging requires moving beyond surface-level engagement to deep psychological safety and purpose.
- Managers who adapt their leadership style to suit different personality types see significantly higher team stability.
- Data-driven insights into team dynamics allow leaders to identify and fix friction points before they lead to resignations.
When a high performer leaves, they take more than just their productivity with them. They take institutional knowledge, client relationships, and a piece of your team’s morale. The cost of replacing a mid-level employee can be up to 150% of their annual salary, once you factor in recruitment, onboarding, and the 'ramp-up' time required for a new starter to reach full proficiency. But the financial hit is only part of the story.
Constant turnover creates a culture of uncertainty. When your best people look for the exit, those who remain often start questioning their own future with the business. This creates a cycle where the remaining staff are overworked, leading to burnout and further resignations. To break this cycle, we must look deeper than the exit interview. We need to understand what makes people want to stay in the first place.
One of the most common reasons top talent leaves is a mismatch between their natural strengths and their daily tasks. Imagine hiring The Pioneer – someone who thrives on innovation and creative problem-solving – and then burying them in repetitive, administrative work. No matter how much you pay them, they will eventually feel stifled and seek a role that allows them to explore new possibilities.
At Compono, we’ve spent years researching how work personality impacts long-term engagement. When people are given the space to work in ways that feel natural to them, they aren't just more productive – they are more satisfied. Retaining top talent isn't about making everyone fit a specific mould; it's about understanding the unique contribution of each individual and ensuring their role allows those traits to shine.
For example, The Helper is motivated by supporting others and building harmony. If they are placed in a hyper-competitive, siloed environment, their engagement will plummet. By using the Compono platform to map these natural preferences, leaders can ensure that the work being done actually fuels the person doing it, rather than draining them.
Culture is often talked about as if it’s a fixed asset – something you 'have' or 'don't have'. In reality, culture is the sum of every interaction, decision, and behaviour within your organisation. To retain top talent, you need a culture that is intentional and evidence-based. It’s about creating an environment where people feel they belong and where their work has a clear impact on the bigger picture.
We often refer to The Compono Culture, Engagement & Performance Model when discussing retention. This model shows that high performance is a byproduct of high engagement, which itself is rooted in a supportive culture. If you focus solely on performance metrics without nurturing the underlying culture, you'll find that your top talent will eventually burn out or move to a competitor who prioritises their well-being.
Recognition plays a massive part here, but it must be tailored. A public shout-out might delight The Campaigner, but it could make The Auditor feel deeply uncomfortable. Real retention happens when managers understand these nuances and provide feedback and recognition in a way that resonates with the individual’s specific needs and values.
The old saying that 'people don't leave companies, they leave managers' still holds a lot of weight. A manager is the primary lens through which an employee experiences the organisation. If that lens is blurred by poor communication or a lack of empathy, the employee’s connection to the company will fray. To retain top talent, managers must become highly adaptable leaders who can flex their style to suit the situation and the person.
Consider a scenario where a team is facing a tight deadline. A manager might naturally lean toward a directive leadership style to ensure the task is completed. While this might work for The Doer, who appreciates clear instructions, it could frustrate The Advisor, who prefers collaboration and shared decision-making. Great managers recognise these differences and adjust their approach to keep everyone engaged and motivated.
This is where workforce intelligence becomes invaluable. Tools like Compono Engage provide managers with real-time insights into team sentiment and individual motivations. By understanding the 'pulse' of the team, leaders can address friction points – such as a lack of autonomy or unclear career pathways – before they escalate into a resignation letter. It’s about moving from 'guessing' how your team feels to 'knowing' exactly what they need to stay.
Top talent is, by definition, ambitious. They want to know that their current role is a stepping stone to something greater. If they feel like they’ve hit a ceiling, they will look elsewhere for their next challenge. Retention is therefore deeply linked to development. This doesn't always mean a promotion; it can mean lateral moves, skill-building projects, or mentorship opportunities that align with their long-term goals.
When you invest in an employee’s growth, you are sending a clear signal that you value their future with the business. We use Compono Develop to help organisations bridge the gap between where an employee is and where they want to be. By identifying skill gaps and providing targeted learning pathways, you can keep your best people challenged and engaged, ensuring they see a future within your walls rather than outside them.
Key insights
- Retention is an ongoing process of alignment, not a one-time recruitment success.
- Psychological fit between an employee and their work environment is the strongest predictor of long-term tenure.
- Managers must be equipped with workforce intelligence to adapt their leadership style to individual personality types.
- A culture of recognition and growth must be personalised to be effective across diverse teams.
Retaining your best people starts with understanding them. When you align work personality with organisational goals, you create a workplace where people don't just work – they thrive.
The most effective way is to ensure a high level of alignment between an individual’s natural work personality and their job responsibilities. When people do work that suits their strengths, they are naturally more engaged and less likely to leave.
Culture is the foundation of the employee experience. A culture that prioritises psychological safety, belonging, and purpose creates a strong emotional bond between the employee and the organisation, which is much harder for competitors to break than a simple salary offer.
High performers often leave because of a lack of growth opportunities, poor management, or a misalignment with the company culture. While salary is important, it is rarely the primary driver of long-term loyalty for top-tier talent.
Yes, leadership style is a critical factor. Managers who can adapt their style – whether that’s being more directive or more collaborative – based on the needs of their team members will build stronger, more resilient relationships that encourage retention.
Data provides a clear picture of team sentiment and engagement levels. By using workforce intelligence tools, leaders can identify trends, such as rising burnout or declining morale, and take action to fix these issues before they lead to turnover.