Employee turnover is usually driven by poor management, a lack of growth, and a mismatch between a person's work personality and their daily job. Pay matters, but the manager relationship and cultural fit are the factors that most often push good people to leave.
Last reviewed July 2026.
By the time someone is explaining their resignation in an exit interview, the damage is done. Turnover is not just a number on a dashboard; it means lost institutional knowledge, a dip in team morale, and a real financial hit. Replacing a mid-level employee can cost anywhere from 50 to 150 percent of their annual salary once you count recruitment, onboarding, and the ramp-up to full productivity. The goal is not to fill seats but to build a place where talent stays and grows.
The old line that people leave managers, not jobs, holds up. A manager who gives no direction, feedback, or support quickly becomes the reason a department's turnover climbs. Different situations need different approaches: a crisis may call for a directive style, while a creative project needs room to breathe. Helping leaders understand their natural tendencies and flex their style is central to retention, and Compono Develop turns that self-awareness into practical habits.
One of the most overlooked drivers of turnover is a mismatch between a person's work personality and their role. Hire a Pioneer who thrives on new ideas and spontaneity, then put them in a role built on rigid routine, and they will feel stifled. Put an Auditor into a chaotic startup with no clear processes and they will feel overwhelmed. Working against your natural inclinations all day is exhausting, and over time it becomes disengagement. Assessing organisation fit and personality fit before someone joins helps you avoid that mismatch.
High performers rarely settle for standing still. When someone feels they have hit a ceiling in skills, responsibility, or pay, they start looking elsewhere, so visible career pathways matter. Belonging matters too. If a workplace feels cold, exclusionary, or overly competitive, loyalty fades. Compono Engage lets you read the pulse of your organisation and spot where engagement is dipping before it turns into a resignation.
See where engagement is slipping across your teams, so you can act on the real drivers of turnover instead of reading exit interviews.
Talk to usMost people leave because of poor management, a lack of career advancement, and a sense that their work is not valued. Cultural misalignment and limited flexibility are also significant factors.
Signs of disengagement include falling productivity, pulling back from team activities, and a change in communication patterns. Regular engagement surveys help you spot these trends early across the organisation.
Salary needs to be competitive, but it is rarely the sole reason people leave. Most will stay for slightly less pay if they feel supported, have room to grow, and enjoy a positive environment.
When a person's work personality matches their role, they are more energised and engaged. A mismatch leads to burnout, because they have to work harder at tasks that do not come naturally.