1. What is Employee Turnover?
1.1 Introduction
Employee
turnover in normal language merely refers to people moving out of the
organization. The term is however more specific and strategic in the context of
Human Resource Management (HRM). Turnover is not only the issue of departures;
rather the flow of people over the borders of the organization, and what this
flow tells us about culture and leadership and competitiveness.
The
traditional definitions include those by Price, who explained employee turnover
as the proportion of the members leaving within a particular period to the mean
number of employees within the period (Price, 1977). As a calculation, a like
turnover rate is typically determined by the HR departments of an organization:
number of people who leave divided by the average number of individuals, in
percentage. This may initially seem a mere statistic but decades of research
have indicated that turnover has a close relationship with performance, costs
and talent management (Ongori, 2007; Al-Suraihi et al., 2021).
1.2 Various
categories of employee turnover.
The
modern HRM does not consider turnover to be homogeneous. Several types are
distinguished both in research and practice.
The
first difference is voluntary and involuntary turnover. Voluntary turnover
occurs when employees voluntarily choose to exit the company as in the case of
a better job, to avoid stress or study abroad. Involuntary turnover takes place
when an organisation causes the separation, which can be termed as in
performance, restructuring, or redundancy (Mobley, 1982; Ongori, 2007).
Strategically, voluntary turnover is normally more disturbing in that it
indicates that the organisation is not perceived by the employees as the right
place to invest their career anymore.
The
second difference is that of functional and dysfunctional turnover. When poor
performers or individuals with poor fit exit the organisation, a functional
turnover takes place. This is in fact healthy in some instances, as it
liberates space and resources to greater talent. Conversely, dysfunctional
turnover occurs when excellent employees, employees with potential or the ones
in key positions exit the company; dysfunctional turnover destroys service
quality, expertise, relationship with clients (Dalton et al., 1982; Hausknecht and
Trevor, 2011). In the banking sector, the death of a knowledgeable relationship
manager who works with large corporate accounts would be defined as definitely
dysfunctional.
Turnover
may also be external or internal. Internal turnover refers to the movement of
employees within the same organisation between jobs like the case where a
teller gets a job as a credit officer. This brings about certain disturbance on
the team level but saves human capital on the whole. External turnover refers
to the instances where employees exit the organisation altogether usually to
compete with the organization, fintech companies or other sectors. The HR
professionals are particularly worried about the external, dysfunctional,
voluntary turnover of key talent groups (QIC-WD, 2022).
Lastly,
researchers and managers distinguish between preventable and inevitable
turnover. Unavoidable turnovers entail retirement, prolonged sickness, family
or career change that the organisation can not reasonably avoid. Preventable
turnover, in its turn, is attributed to aspects that can be affected by the
organisation, including pay, workload, leadership, development prospects and
culture (Al-Suraihi et al., 2021). Through effective HR strategy, this is an
aspect that is avoided by diagnosis and avoidance.
1.3 The
Psychological Process, not the Single Event, of Turnover.
Traditional
paradigms by Mobley draw attention to the fact that turnover is not an
immediate decision, it is rather a mental process. Mobley is an intermediate
linkages model in which employees shift between job dissatisfaction,
contemplating quitting their jobs, thought on alternatives to quitting their
jobs, actual intention to quit and then resigning (Mobley, 1977; Mobley, 1982).
Subsequent reviews affirm that the perceived job alternatives and movement
facilitation are the determinants in this process (Hom et al., 2017).
This
process view is significant to practice. It means that managers and HR teams
can find the opportunity to intervene: redesigning work, resolving conflict, providing
development avenues or just listening to employee issues. The organisations
when they disregard the initial clues, the process goes on unconsciously until
it manifests itself in the form of resignation letter.
1.4 The
reasons why Turnover is a Strategic HRM Indicator.
Strategic
HRM perspective and the resource-based perspective of the firm will also
consider employees as not only a cost, but also as valuable, rare and difficult
to copy resources that can provide a competitive advantage. By losing talented
individuals, especially within a mass scale, the organisation ends up losing
human capital, social capital and most of the time, customer confidence
(Hausknecht and Trevor, 2011; Allen et al., 2010). This loss may be especially
harmful in industries that require a substantial number of people, such as
banking, hospitality or consulting.
The study of collective turnover indicates that the high unit-level turnover rates are frequently correlated with the lack of productivity, the poor quality of service and the increased failure rates (Hausknecht, 2017). Simultaneously, researchers caution that one should not make the assumption that turnover is always bad. An average functional turnover is beneficial to refresh the workforce and avoid sluggishness in case the organization does not lose key contributors (Dalton et al., 1982; Hom et al., 2017). However, the challenge that is really facing HR is not to pursue zero turnover, but to control turnover, who is leaving and why.
1.5 A
Purpose of Learning Turnover in HRM Students.
To
HRM students and practitioners, employee turnover can be viewed as a formidable
scope of understanding the quality of the employment relationship. On the
individual level, every exit is a kind of personal narration of the expectations,
experiences, and choices. At organisational level, turnover trends indicate
more issues on reward systems, leadership, work load, job design, fairness and
culture.
In
this perspective, turnover is far beyond an HR measurement that can be reported
at the end of the year. It is an early-warning mechanism, which links
day-to-day reality of people to long-term sustainability of organisations. The
fine-tuning of the concept meaning, its definition, and its types, the
psychological processes behind it and the strategic meaning is, thus, a key
stepping stone before investigating the particular reasons behind turnover or
establishing a retention plan in an industry like the global banking sector. In
a labour market that provides skilled workers with more choices than at that
point ever before, this understanding of clarity tends to aid HR professionals
to develop evidence-based solutions rather than the predictive reliance on a
short-term fix. Finally, the way an organisation perceives and quantifies
turnover determines the decision on employee engagement, investment in employee
retention and medium-term workforce planning.
1.6 References
Allen,
D.G., Bryant, P.C. and Vardaman, J.M. (2010) ‘Retaining talent: Replacing
misconceptions with evidence-based strategies’, Academy of Management
Perspectives, 24(2), pp. 48–64.
Al-Suraihi,
W.A., Samar, M., Ibrahim, I. and Alshaibani, A. (2021) ‘Employee turnover:
Causes, importance and retention strategies’, European Journal of Business
and Management Research, 6(3), pp. 1–10.
Dalton,
D.R., Todor, W.D. and Krackhardt, D. (1982) ‘Turnover overstated: The
functional taxonomy’, Academy of Management Review, 7(1), pp. 117–123.
Hausknecht,
J.P. (2017) ‘Collective turnover at the group, unit, and organizational levels:
Evidence, issues, and implications’, Annual Review of Organizational
Psychology and Organizational Behavior, 4, pp. 527–550.
Hausknecht,
J.P. and Trevor, C.O. (2011) ‘Collective turnover at the group, unit, and
organizational levels: Evidence, issues, and implications’, Journal of
Management, 37(1), pp. 352–388.
Hom,
P.W., Lee, T.W., Shaw, J.D. and Hausknecht, J.P. (2017) ‘One hundred years of
employee turnover theory and research’, Journal of Applied Psychology,
102(3), pp. 530–545.
Mobley,
W.H. (1977) ‘Intermediate linkages in the relationship between job satisfaction
and employee turnover’, Journal of Applied Psychology, 62(2), pp.
237–240.
Mobley,
W.H. (1982) Employee turnover: Causes, consequences, and control.
Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
Ongori,
H. (2007) ‘A review of the literature on employee turnover’, African Journal
of Business Management, 1(3), pp. 49–54.
Price,
J.L. (1977) The study of turnover. Ames, IA: Iowa State University
Press.
QIC-WD
(2022) Turnover: Umbrella summary. Quality Improvement Center for
Workforce Development. Available at: https://qic-wd.org (Accessed: 18 November 2025).

A comprehensive and insightful explanation of employee turnover and its importance in HRM. You clearly describe the different types voluntary, involuntary, functional, dysfunctional, internal, external, preventable, and unavoidable and explain why understanding these nuances is essential for strategic HR planning. The psychological process you outline emphasizes that turnover is rarely sudden, giving HR teams opportunities to address issues before they escalate. Excellent discussion on how turnover serves as both a warning signal and a guide for building more resilient organizations, especially in sectors like banking. Well done!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your thoughtful and encouraging feedback. I'm glad my explanation effectively highlighted the different dimensions of employee turnover and its importance in HRM. Your acknowledgement of the psychological process and strategic value of turnover analysis is truly motivating. It reinforces the importance of viewing turnover not just as a challenge, but also as an opportunity for improvement and organizational growth.
DeleteThis section gives a clear and detailed explanation of what employee turnover means and why it is a major issue in HRM. It breaks down the different types of turnover and shows how each one affects organisations differently. The discussion on the psychological process and strategic implications adds strong depth and practical value. Overall, it provides an excellent foundation for understanding turnover as both an HR metric and a strategic indicator.
ReplyDeleteThank you very much for your valuable feedback Rahal. I’m glad the explanation succeeded in clearly defining employee turnover while also highlighting its strategic importance in HRM. Your recognition of the psychological process and its practical implications is very encouraging, as it reinforces the value of understanding turnover beyond just numbers seeing it as a meaningful indicator for organizational health, employee satisfaction, and long term planning. I truly appreciate your kind words and insightful reflection.
DeleteRishani, you really nail the big picture here. Instead of treating turnover like just another HR metric, you make it clear it’s a core strategic issue in HRM. The way you talk about turnover as the “flow of people over the borders” and tie it to culture, leadership, and competitiveness makes it obvious that we’re not just dealing with a one-off event it’s a whole psychological process.
ReplyDeleteDear Rishani, This introduction provides a strong foundation for understanding employee turnover as a strategic HRM issue rather than just a numerical indicator. By clearly distinguishing between different types of turnover and highlighting the psychological processes behind employees’ decisions to leave, it underscores why turnover must be studied in depth and managed proactively.
ReplyDeleteThis section provides a comprehensive and well-structured introduction to employee turnover, clearly distinguishing between voluntary, involuntary, functional, dysfunctional, internal, external, preventable, and inevitable types of turnover in relation to their strategic implications, especially within an HRM and banking context. I like the way it represents turnover not as one particular event, yet rather a psychological process, reinforcing the opportunity for proactive HR intervention. Moreover, linking turnover to organizational performance and competitive advantage, through strategic workforce planning, helps illustrate that it is not merely a measure but is an important indicator in general HR strategy and organizational health. Overall, the content combines theoretical issues with practical examples and strategic insights.
ReplyDelete