3. The Why and How to Retaining Valuable Employees in the Banking Sector.
The flip side of the coin is equally however
important: what will become of good employees who remain. Retention is
considered not a soft, nice-to-have goal at master level, but rather a key
element of organizational performance. Evidence continues to point to the fact
that an organization may be more productive and better service delivery due to
efficient retention practices (Allen et al., 2010; Hausknecht, 2017).
The
benefits of keeping good employees are especially high in people-intensive
industries such as banking, where the product is mostly knowledge that an
individual brings to the company. This blog describes such benefits in a number
of major headings.
3.1 Reduced Costs and High Return on Investment on HR Investment.
As
organisations achieve longer retention of employees, such costs are amortized
over longer years, and the human capital is returned more with the increase. It
takes months and at times years before new employees can attain full
productivity. Retaining them after such a ramp up period enables the bank to
benefit from them to a greater extent. Allen et al. (2010) point out that
retention is the most useful when done on high-performing and high potential
employees, as the cost of losing their productivity is significantly greater
than the costs of losing average performers.
This reasoning is particularly strong in a banking situation where training consists not only of technical systems, but also of regulatory compliance, credit analysis and risk awareness. Each departure of an officer who has been trained is a kind of write-off of the training expenditure of the bank and a compulsion to incur anew.
3.2 Greater Customer Relationships and Increased Loyalty.
Financial
products are sold by banks but banks are competed based on relationships.
Customers have been remaining customers with a bank not necessarily due to
interest rates but due to their trust of particular employees, the relationship
manager who comprehends their business, the branch officer who gets things done
in a short time or the call-center agent who has given them the proper answers.
These
relations become stronger when valuable employees remain. Permanent employees
develop credibility, they are aware of the history of the customer and are able
to foresee the requirements. This often leads to:
• The increased cross and up-selling
prospects.
• More stable lending bases and
deposits.
• More customer leniency in terms of
the occurrences of occasional errors.
Empirical
research on service organisations indicates that retention of employees is
positively related to customer satisfaction and customer loyalty which are in
turn related to financial performance (Heskett et al., 1994). In the banking
context, the loss of a known relationship manager can result in the loss of an
entire portfolio of customers, but the maintenance of such a manager does
reinforce the bottom line as well as the reputation.
3.3 Increased Service Quality and Reduced Operational Error.
Experience
matters. The long-term employees are familiar with systems, products, the route
of escalation and other common exceptions than recruits. As a result, they tend
to:
• Attend to process transactions more
quickly.
• Make fewer mistakes
• Deliver improved data of customers.
• Deal with complex or uncharacteristic
cases with greater confidence.
Hausknecht
(2017) also observes that when the overall turnover at the unit is high, then
the performance indicators will tend to decrease, in part due to the loss of experienced
staff that generates more errors and derails the workflow. This is vital to
banks, in which a single mistake in a loan document or compliance measure can
result in severe legal and financial consequences.
Retention
hence assists in operational booms. When teams are stable, they know how to
co-ordinate with each other, know the strengths of others and less time is
needed to synchronise. They will be able to concentrate on the process and
service quality improvement as opposed to training newcomers all the time.
3.4
Risk Management and
Compliance.
The
contemporary banking is highly controlled. The fields like credit risk,
anti-money laundering, market risk and operational risk require the highest
degree of expertise and judgement. The benefits of retaining experienced
personnel in such functions are enormous:
• They perceive suspicious trends
faster.
• They are also familiar with the
letter and the spirit of regulatory requirements.
• They are able to mentor the new
employees in the implementation of rules.
The
studies of financial institutions highlight that risk events have a higher
probability of occurrence in the circumstances of the lack of experience and
poor internal controls (BCBS, 2011). Risk and compliance teams are the teams
that have high turnover and cause precisely those vulnerabilities. In
comparison, well-established and educated teams will lead to the robust risk
culture which minimizes the risk of fines, penalties or reputational losses.
Strategically
speaking, retaining key risk persons is not only an HR success, but also a
fundamental element of organisational resilience.
3.5 Knowledge and Organisational Memory Preservation.
Each
skilled employee has a load of explicit and unspoken knowledge. Explicit
knowledge is what is written in the policies and manuals, whilst tacit
knowledge, the way things are and what to do when something is not going as
planned, informal market knowledge, is often in the heads of the people.
This
tacit knowledge is lost when the valuable employees move away. According to
Hausknecht and Trevor (2011), collective turnover leads to losses in the human
and social capital and forces organisations to re-establish essential know-how.
Examples of tacit knowledge in banking are:
• Delicate signals of credit risk of
specific industries.
• How to negotiate with regulators or
big corporate clients well.
Lessons
learned in the past crises and system failures.
This
knowledge can be retained within the bank. It can be gradually codified and
disseminated via mentoring, documentation and training and enhance the learning
ability of the organisation.
3.6 Better Culture , More Engagement and Better Employer Brand.
Whenever
employees witness that the high performers and long serving employees are
getting well treated and decide to remain, this sends a strong cultural
message. It gives an impression that the organisation is where individuals can
get a meaningful career and not merely an earning.
Literature
demonstrates that engagement and turnover intentions are high in organisations
that possess favourable cultures and perceived organisational support
(Eisenberger et al., 2002). The engagement, in its turn, correlates with the
improved performance and the reduced absenteeism (Harter et al., 2002). A
positive cycle of retention and culture fosters culture and culture fosters
retention, then, then, and so on.
On
the outside, the high retention of key talent helps in positive employer brand.
In the age where candidates have easy access to employee reviews and unofficial
opinions, banks that have an image of building and retaining their staff have a
higher chance of attracting new talent. Allen et al. (2010) observe that
through the visibility and credibility of the practice, retention practices are
included in the value proposition of the organisation in competitive labour
markets.
3.7 More Succession Pipes and Leadership Consistency.
In
most organisations, the issue of leadership succession is a strategic risk. The
banks require an unending pool of future branch managers, regional managers and
top executives. When the high potential employees who move before they can be
put in these positions, the succession plans fail and the bank has to depend on
external recruitment and this will further expose the bank to cultural misfit
and delayed adaptation.
By
keeping talents and core experts, HR can introduce systematic succession
strategies: they see new leaders early and provide them with specific
development initiatives and increasing their tasks step by step (Charan et al.,
2011). Such continuity helps to conduct the strategic implementation in a more
stable and even-tempered way, as leadership transitions become less disruptive
and smooth.
3.8 Enhanced Innovative and Change Capacity.
Banking
innovation, either digital channels, or new products or process-redesigning,
requires people who are knowledgeable on both the old systems and the new
technology. The longer the employees remain in the organisation to gain the
rich organisational knowledge and then deploy it to change projects, the more
the bank is well placed to deliver effective realistic innovations.
On
the other hand, high turnover means that the teams waste a lot of time in
hiring and regaining basic competence. Time and energy to experiment or to
continue on improving are less. According to Hausknecht (2017), high collective
turnover may undermine the adaptability and learning capacity of a unit, which
would decrease its long-term efficiency.
The
agility of strategy is therefore contributed by retention. Considering the
perpetual digital disruption and regulatory change in a financial sector,
stable, competent teams are able to internalize change, learn how to improve
upon it, refine it and build upon it, which is also an essential benefit.
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.
Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) (2011) Principles for the sound
management of operational risk. Basel: Bank for International Settlements.
Charan,
R., Drotter, S. and Noel, J. (2011) The leadership pipeline: How to build
the leadership-powered company. 2nd edn. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
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.
Harter,
J.K., Schmidt, F.L. and Hayes, T.L. (2002) ‘Business-unit-level relationship
between employee satisfaction, employee engagement, and business outcomes: A
meta-analysis’, Journal of Applied Psychology, 87(2), pp. 268–279.
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.
Heskett,
J.L., Jones, T.O., Loveman, G.W., Sasser, W.E. and Schlesinger, L.A. (1994)
‘Putting the service-profit chain to work’, Harvard Business Review,
72(2), pp. 164–174.
Ongori,
H. (2007) ‘A review of the literature on employee turnover’, African Journal
of Business Management, 1(3), pp. 49–54.

Retention is not a wish list thing, it is a performance driver. Retaining talented employees reduces turnover expenses, protects customer relationship, enhances service delivery, maintains knowledge of risk-sensitive nature and sustains culture and leadership. In banking that is knowledge dependent those advantages translate directly into profitability and stability.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment Nirmal. Retention is a strategic performance enabler rather than a preference on behalf of HR. In banking, retaining and maintaining talented staff members directly protects the quality of services provided, trustworthiness by customers, control of risks, and institutional knowledge- all which translate to profitability and long term survival.
DeleteAn excellent, thorough explanation of why retaining valuable employees is critical in the banking sector. You clearly show that strong retention reduces costs, protects customer relationships, preserves vital knowledge, and supports operational excellence, risk management, and innovation. The connections drawn between retention, employer brand, culture, and leadership pipelines are particularly relevant for people-driven industries like banking. Well-supported with evidence, this analysis offers practical and strategic reasons for banks to make employee retention a top priority. Great insights!
ReplyDeleteThe feedback is very encouraging and thank you Sachithra. I am happy that the analysis was able to show the strategic value of retention particularly in knowledge-driven industries such as banking. The comment is enhanced by the way you have identified the connections among retention, culture, leadership and organizational performance. I like your ideas and encouragement.
DeleteRishani, you have nicely explained. Your argument for making employee retention a top priority in banking is spot on. You move retention out of the “nice-to-have” bucket and show how it’s actually essential for any organization that relies on knowledge, like finance. The benefits you list lower costs, better risk management, keeping expertise, driving innovation make it obvious that retention isn’t just about stopping people from leaving.
ReplyDeleteThis content provides an in-depth and engaging review of the reasons why employee retention is vital in the banking industry. It effectively connects retention to realistic business outcomes: reduced costs, improved customer relationships, service quality, and mitigation of risk. I very much appreciate how it then points out less obvious but critical advantages like knowledge preservation, succession planning, and innovative culture development. The discussion is well-organized, evidence-based, and clearly presents how retention is not strictly an HR issue but a strategic lever which has direct implications for organizational performance, culture, and competitiveness. Integration of theory, research, and practical implications makes it an informative yet actionable overview for both HR practitioners and management alike.
ReplyDelete