2. What Really Makes Employees Leave the Banking Sector?
Employee
turnover is not considered as an accident. Individuals do not just wake
up in the morning and just resign without a reason. Rather, turnover is
typically the result of a complex of job, organizational and external conditions
that accumulate as time goes by. These drivers should be understood when
organizations (especially banks and financial institutions) wish to come up
with effective retention strategies.
It
has been found that job satisfaction, organizational commitment, perceived
alternatives and individual characteristics have a strong correlation with
turnover intention (Hom et al., 2017). Nevertheless, the general concepts are
broken down to the concrete daily lives of employees. This blog discusses the
key drivers that drive the individuals to the exit door and specifically on the
banking positions, which are usually high tension and customer facing.
2.1 Job Stress, Workload and
Emotional Exhaustion.
Job
stress has been rated as one of the most commonly used predictors of turnover.
The intention to quit is likely to emerge in employees who are subjected to
chronic stress particularly when they perceive that the organization is not
offering them appropriate support (Ongori, 2007). The sources of job stress in
the banking industry include:
• Physical confrontations in sales and
performance goals.
• There is constant pressure to sell a
number of products.
• High compliance and documentation
• Documentation and compliance
requirements.
• Month-end/quarter-end peaks.
According
to the job demands/resources model, high job demands, which include workload
and time pressure do not result in burnout and increased turnover intention
when resources such as autonomy, social support and feedback are not provided
(Bakker and Demerouti, 2007). Bank employees who have a direct contact with
customers also undergo emotional labour as they are required to control their
emotions when dealing with complaints, financial anxiety and occasionally
aggressive customers. With the course of time, this depletion of emotional
energy renders the maintenance of less attractiveness.
2.2 Pay, Benefits and Fairness Perceptions
Turnover
is not just caused by money alone and that too it is a major cause. One inquiry
that has been recurring in the literature is that perceived pay unfairness and
not the absolute pay level is highly correlated with turnover intentions (Allen
et al., 2010). Employees also make comparisons externally (with other workers
in the labour market) and internally (with other employees in the same job
category).
Small
or domestic banks might present a disadvantage to the staff that works in the
bigger or multinationals where higher salaries and bonuses are offered. The
literature in the financial services sector has revealed that a lack of
promotion opportunities and poor pay among employees are some of the factors
that influence them to seek opportunities elsewhere (Islam et al., 2019). Pay
systems may even create more stress and dissatisfaction than motivate
performance where incentives are heavily sales directed and are seen to be
unfair or unachievable.
This
can be explained with the help of the equity theory: employees compare the
percentage of what they can contribute (effort, skills, time) and receive (pay,
benefits, recognition) with those received by others. When they perceive that
the ratio is not favorable, motivation to balance the ratio usually involves
quitting the organization.
2.3 Poor Career Development and Dead Ends.
The
second large factor is career development. The employees particularly the
younger graduates venturing into the banking industry require to see visible
advancement as they progress. As soon as the promotion standards are unclear,
training is minimal, and the opportunities within the company are limited, individuals
start to have a plateau in the career. Studies indicate that inadequate
development opportunities and the absence of career advancement are good
predictors of turnover especially among high potential employees (Allen et al.,
2010; Al-Suraihi et al., 2021).
The
human capital theory indicates that people invest in organizations which in
turn invest in their aptitudes and career opportunities. In case employees feel
that they can have better learning and development with another employer, maybe
a rival bank or fintech organization, they might decide to reinvest their human
capital in a different place. The need to keep developing, in particular with
the banking field where a high level of regulatory complexity is accompanied by
a high speed of technological change, is particularly intense.
2.4 Supervision
and Leadership Style and Quality.
Empirical
research has substantially backed the popular maxim that people leave managers
and not organizations. Turnover intentions are always associated with
supervisory behaviour and style of leadership. Unsupportive, abusive or unfair
leadership heightens the psychological pressure and drives the employees to
seek alternatives (Tepper, 2000). On the other hand, the adverse impact of
stress can be mitigated with the help of supportive and ethical leadership and
result in greater commitment.
Many
areas of their daily experiences, such as task assignment, feedback, training
access, and informal recognition, are under the control in front-line
supervisors and branch managers in banks. Trust is broken when managers are
viewed to favour some employees at the expense of others by not attending to
the workload considerations or not attending to numbers without considering
people. The social exchange theory posits that in case employees feel that they
are not accorded high rates of support and respect by their leaders, they
retaliate by becoming less committed and willing to turnover more (Blau, 1964;
Eisenberger et al., 2002).
2.5 Job Satisfaction, Values and Person Organization Fit.
Job
satisfaction is another strong predictor of turnover. The studies based on
meta-analyses have been able to repeatedly detect negative associations between
the internet of turnover and satisfaction: the lesser the satisfaction, the
higher the turnover propensity (Hom et al., 2017). Nevertheless, the phenomenon
of satisfaction is dependent on a broad range of factors such as work nature,
recognition, rapport with coworkers, and consistency between individual
principles and organizational culture.
Person-organization
(P-O) fit theory is the theory that posits that individuals have higher chances
of staying longer in organizations whose values and goals they share with those
of the organization (Kristof, 1996). Misfit can arise in banking when the
employees in the organization believe in the value of the advisory and
relationship-based client service but have to operate within a culture
characterized by high transaction; or when employees in the organization
believe in participative decision-making but are faced by high hierarchy and
low voice. In the long run, employees who do not fit into the culture in terms
of identity can develop an internal conflict and disengagement that eventually
causes exit.
2.6 Work-life Balance and Flexibility.
The
work-life balance has turned out to be a key issue in modern HRM. The
work-family conflict is also caused by long working hours, working in the
weekend and the necessity to be always available via email and mobile phones,
which has been observed to fuel turnover intentions (Allen et al., 2000). The
banking products, especially in the corporate and investment departments, have
been linked to heavy workloads and long working hours.
The
exposure to remote and hybrid work models increased during the COVID-19
pandemic. Staff has become more conscious of the opportunities of flexible time
and have been more categorical of cultures which equate physical presence with
commitment. In the cases when banks are slow to provide flexibility in the
right positions, or the workload precludes healthy work-life integration, the
employees might seek out organisations that accommodate their non-work lives
and wellbeing better.
2.7 Respect, Organisational Justice and Politics.
The
sense of fairness is also a significant factor in deciding the turnover.
Organisational justice studies define distributive (fairness of results),
procedural (fairness of procedures) and interactional justice (fairness in the
treatment of others). Perceptions of low justice are linked with low commitment
and high turnover intention (Colquitt et al., 2001).
When
there is something political or biased in the decision making process to give
out promotions, bonuses or assign tasks in a banking environment, employees may
feel exploited or marginalized. Discrimination, harassment or lack of respect
are especially harmful experiences. To other employees, particularly those who
are under-represented, quitting is a means of getting out of a toxic
environment and safeguarding their self-respect.
2.8 External Conditions in
the Labor Market and the other alternative opportunities.
Lastly,
the external labour market conditions are highly influential in turnover. Even
the best employees can be tempted to leave provided they have good offers in
the hands of other employers. According to Hom et al. (2017), perceived job
alternatives and ease of movement have the potential to predict actual
turnover.
Bank
of America and other financial services organizations are also competing with
technology companies and global shared-service centers on the same talent in
data analytics, risk modelling and digital product design. Where such
organizations are in a position to pay more and have more adaptable cultures or
quicker career development, external moves might be viewed by the bank
employees as a logical part of their career plan. Even small internal
frustrations can lead to exit decisions in tight labour markets where the
demand of skills is higher than the supply of skills.
2.9 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.
Allen,
T.D., Herst, D.E.L., Bruck, C.S. and Sutton, M. (2000) ‘Consequences associated
with work-to-family conflict: A review and agenda for future research’, Journal
of Occupational Health Psychology, 5(2), pp. 278–308.
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.
Bakker,
A.B. and Demerouti, E. (2007) ‘The job demands–resources model: State of the
art’, Journal of Managerial Psychology, 22(3), pp. 309–328.
Blau,
P.M. (1964) Exchange and power in social life. New York: Wiley.
Colquitt,
J.A., Conlon, D.E., Wesson, M.J., Porter, C.O.L.H. and Ng, K.Y. (2001) ‘Justice
at the millennium: A meta-analytic review of 25 years of organizational justice
research’, Journal of Applied Psychology, 86(3), pp. 425–445.
Eisenberger,
R., Stinglhamber, F., Vandenberghe, C., Sucharski, I.L. and Rhoades, L. (2002)
‘Perceived supervisor support: Contributions to perceived organizational
support and employee retention’, Journal of Applied Psychology, 87(3),
pp. 565–573.
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.
Islam,
M.A., Munyoro, G. and Ganyaupfu, E.M. (2019) ‘Factors influencing employee
turnover in the banking sector’, International Journal of Management,
10(5), pp. 34–45.
Kristof,
A.L. (1996) ‘Person–organization fit: An integrative review of its
conceptualizations, measurement, and implications’, Personnel Psychology,
49(1), pp. 1–49.
Ongori,
H. (2007) ‘A review of the literature on employee turnover’, African Journal
of Business Management, 1(3), pp. 49–54.
Tepper,
B.J. (2000) ‘Consequences of abusive supervision’, Academy of Management
Journal, 43(2), pp. 178–190.

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ReplyDeleteThis is consistently cited as a leading cause of attrition, especially in retail, sales, and investment banking segments.The culture often demands long working hours, which can extend past official branch closing or trading hours due to compliance, reporting, and high sales targets.
ReplyDeleteHigh Pressure and Stress: Roles, particularly in retail banking (teller/branch manager), often involve aggressive sales targets for loans, insurance, and other products, creating immense stress and leading to burnout.
Lack of Flexibility: While some corporate banking roles have adapted to hybrid work, many customer-facing branch roles require strict, in-office presence and less scheduling flexibility compared to other industries, which is unattractive to modern workers.
Thank you Tashmi for your comment. You have very accurately described how the long hours, maximum pressure demands, and lack of flexibility make the jobs particularly stressful. Your point that modern employees are becoming more and more concerned with work-life balance and flexibility is useful to me, as it actually supports my idea that it is necessary to focus on these aspects when enhancing retention in the banking industry.
DeleteA well-researched and insightful breakdown of the real reasons employees leave the banking sector. You cover a wide spectrum from job stress and lack of work-life balance to unfair pay, limited career growth, poor leadership, and cultural misfit. The integration of relevant theories and recent trends, like flexible work models, adds depth and clarity. Highlighting both internal factors and external opportunities gives a realistic, actionable picture for HR leaders working to improve retention. Excellent summary of the complex drivers behind turnover in banking!
ReplyDeleteThank you Sachithra for your valuable comment. I appreciate this kind of positive feedback. I wanted to establish an objective and holistic picture of the reasons that make employees quit the banking industry by combining theory with practical and present trends. It is wonderful to know that the combination of such aspects as stress, leadership, culture, compensation, and external opportunities was made understandable and substance-filled. It was deliberate to emphasize on both the internal and external drivers because retention strategies cannot operate efficiently when there is a lack of awareness on the whole environment.
DeleteThis section gives a clear and well-structured explanation of the many factors that influence employee turnover, especially in the banking industry. It connects strong academic theories with practical, real-world challenges faced by employees. Each driver is explained in a way that shows how job stress, leadership, pay, culture, and external opportunities all interact. Overall, it provides a thorough and insightful foundation for understanding why turnover happens and how HR can address it.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much Rahal for your valuable comment. My intention was to present employee turnover not as a single cause issue but as a collection of problems caused by workplace conditions, leadership quality, organizational culture, and external market forces.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteRishani, this is a very strong and engaging introduction that elevates the discussion of employee turnover beyond a simple HR metric to a complex, accumulated consequence of job, organizational, and external factors.
ReplyDeleteYou don’t just talk about why people quit, you tie it straight to real research, pointing at things like job satisfaction, loyalty, and whether folks think they’ve got other options (Hom et al., 2017). Zooming in on banking and finance is smart. That world’s intense. It’s high-pressured, and people deal with customers all day, every day. Moving from general ideas to what actually happens in a bank makes this feel practical, not just theoretical.
Thank you Sameera. I appreciate your feedback. I tried to write that employee turnover is not just a issue of numbers, but a combination of several of factors, especially in high stressed sectors like banking.
DeleteThis is a comprehensive and well-structured analysis of the drivers for employee turnover in the banking sector, blending together theory, empirical research, and practical examples to explain why employees leave, from job stress and pay perceptions to leadership quality, culture, and external opportunities. I like the way it underlines both individual and organizational factors that can cause turnover to take place because it is seldom a single factor that is at play but rather an interplay of different elements. Adding to the depth, the inclusion of frameworks such as equity theory, P-O fit, and job demands/resources will make this analysis not only academically sound but also practically relevant to HR practitioners who might wish to develop differential retention strategies.
ReplyDelete