5.Turning Turnover Around - HR Strategies to Retain the Employees in the Banking Industry
Once
learning what employee turnover is, why it occurs and how it harms the
performance, the important question is what exactly can HR do about it? Retention is not a series of arbitrary practices commonly known
as HR activities, but a strategic evidence-based system of practices that are
aimed at retaining the right people at the right reason. The studies have found
that properly designed HR practices may greatly decrease turnover intentions
and enhance actual retention particularly when combined as opposed to being
separated (Allen et al., 2010; Hom et al., 2017).
In
banking where human capital and customer confidence are the most vital
resources, retention strategies have been found to be especially important. In
this blog, the main HR strategies are described, which is connected to theory
and empirical evidence.
5.1 Begin with Diagnosis: With Data Not Guesswork.
HR
should know who is exiting, whence and the reasons before initiating efforts.
According to Hom et al. (2017), it is crucial to make a distinction between the
types of turnover (voluntary and involuntary), and the types of employees.
In
the case of banks, a healthy diagnosis usually is a combination of:
• Branch, division, role, tenure and demographic group turnover statistics.
• Exit interviews and stay interviews.
• The results of engagement surveys and
internal mobility.
It is a diagnosis stage that will assist in determining the predominant problems as pay, workload, leadership, development, culture or external competition. Devoid of this, organizations will run the risk of creating generic engagements activities which are not aimed at the actual exit drivers.
5.2 Competitive and Fair Reward Systems Design.
Loyalty
can not be ensured by the pay alone, but the perceived unfair pay is a potent
push factor (Allen et al., 2010). Banks should hence, provide external and
internal equity. On the outside, the pay and perks of the employees should be
aligned with other banks, fintech companies and shared-service centers that
compete in the same domain of skills. On the inside, the pay systems must be
clear and understandable as to why the difference between grades and positions.
There
are indications that reward systems perceived to be equitable and
comprehensible by employees would reduce turnover intentions, despite the fact
that rival organizations might have somewhat better packages (Al-Suraihi et
al., 2021). This is especially applicable in the banking sector, where there
might be the perception of inequity based on variable bonuses when the criteria
remain unclear. A regulated culture and risk culture are also supported by
aligning bonuses with sustainable performance and risk-conscious behaviour.
The
non-financial rewards include recognition programs, career growth
opportunities and conspicuous appreciation of leaders, which supplement
financial rewards and reinforce the psychological contract.
5.3 Invest in Career and Talent Management.
Research
indicates that low career prospects and underdeveloped development frameworks
are the leading reasons behind turnover particularly in high-potential workers
(Allen et al., 2010; Al-Suraihi et al., 2021). According to the human capital
theory, employees will stay in such a place where they perceive long term
learning and growth.
In
the case of banks, the development strategies that should be effective will
include:
• It has clear career paths in retail,
corporate, risk and operations and digital functions.
• In house job posting and formal job
rotation.
• High potentials graduate development
programs and pools.
• Mentoring and coaching relationship
between senior and junior employees.
According
to Charan et al. (2011), systematic development and succession planning
establish robust leadership pipelines and also decreases the rate of external
hiring. When employees feel that they can move up or move across within the
bank, chances of them leaving to advance to other places are reduced.
The
line managers are key to retention. Organizational commitment and reduced
turnover intentions are closely related to perceived supervisor support
(Eisenberger et al., 2002). On the other hand, there is a relationship between
abusive or unsupportive supervision and the increase in the exit intentions
(Tepper, 2000).
Managerial
capability should therefore be addressed by banks as a strategic retention
tool. This means:
• Choosing managers based on more than
technical but also on people talent.
• Coaching, feedback, conflict
resolution and inclusion training.
• Partly basing performance evaluation of managers on retention and team
engagement.
A
supportive manager can absorb any kind of stress and heavy target in customer
intensive departments like in branches or call centers, a poor manager can
expedite burnout and resignations. According to the social exchange theory,
employees respond to their leaders as they perceive themselves to be valuable
and supported in order to return the favour with loyalty and extra-role
behaviours (Blau, 1964; Eisenberger et al., 2002).
Work
design basing on retention comprises:
• Setting realistic performance goals
and proper staffing.
• Enhancing job control and where
feasible, autonomy.
• Monotony should be avoided by
introducing job enrichment.
• Flexible or hybrid working
arrangements of appropriate positions.
Studies
demonstrate that a high turnover intention is linked to work-family conflict
and inaccuracy (Allen et al., 2000). Banks can limit one of the main causes of
the departure of talented employees, particularly women, by scaling down
scheduling, allowing some employees to work remotely in back-office or
analytical jobs, and offering assistance to employees with caregiving duties.
Retention
is also closely associated with the way employees are feeling within the
organization; being respected, hearing them and treating them equally.
According to the organizational justice studies, poor perceptions of fairness
in outcomes, processes and interpersonal treatment are major contributors of
turnover intentions (Colquitt et al., 2001).
Banks
can address this by:
• Developing a variety of employee
voice (surveys, focus groups, town halls) channels.
• Being visible on feedback,
particularly in the work load and ethics concerns.
• Imposing a zero tolerance to
harassment and discrimination.
Supporting
diversity and inclusion efforts beyond mere lip service.
The
employees will have a greater sense of belonging when they know that their
concerns are taken seriously and that promotion, reward and discipline process
is indeed fair. This embeddings decreases their interest to quit, even in case
it could be in case external opportunities are available (Heavey et al., 2013).
The
first year of employment is the period of high turnover. Part of this premature
turnover is due to unrealistic expectations formed at the time of recruitment.
Hom et al. (2017) note that it is realistic job previewing, which entails the
positive and negative features of the job being described, that helps diminish
the shock-based resignations.
In
the case of banks, this would include providing the actual picture of the sales
pressure, regulatory restrictions and customer demands in an open and fair
manner and also much like showing the opportunities of development and support.
An organized onboarding program with a special emphasis on socialization, as
opposed to compliance training, can allow new hires to form relationships and
feel confident within a relatively short period, which will raise the chances
of remaining enough time to become fully productive.
According
to strategic HRM research, as opposed to single and isolated initiatives,
bundles of mutually reinforcing practices can be more effective at influencing
performance and retention (Allen et al., 2010). As an example, the absence of
competitive pay without fair supervision and career opportunities can not stop
the turnover; good training without recognition and workload management can
leave the employees in dissatisfaction.
High-retention
SHRM system may include in the banking industry:
• Competitive, fair rewards
• Career visibility and internal
mobility.
• Effective people-management skills of
the line managers.
• Flexible work design and support.
• Ethical culture and employee voice.
• The monitoring of turnover trends
using data.
As
these factors come together, the bank conveys a consistent message that faces
people with: we want you to develop here and we are ready to invest in that
development. This consistency is stronger than any program or one-off HR
promotion.
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.
Charan,
R., Drotter, S. and Noel, J. (2011) The leadership pipeline: How to build
the leadership-powered company. 2nd edn. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
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.
Heavey,
A.L., Holwerda, J.A. and Hausknecht, J.P. (2013) ‘Causes and consequences of
collective turnover: A meta-analytic review’, Journal of Applied Psychology,
98(3), pp. 412–453.
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.
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.

A highly practical and evidence-based guide to HR strategies for retaining employees in banking. You methodically cover targeted diagnosis, fair rewards, strong talent management, effective supervisors, flexible work design, and ethical culture all supported by relevant research. The emphasis on combining these practices into a coherent system is especially valuable. This is an excellent resource for banking HR teams aiming to lower turnover and build a stable, engaged workforce. Great analysis!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your valuable comment Sachithra. This article integrates several strategies in HR such as the careful identification of turnover driving factors, equitable and competitive compensation, strong talent management, effective leadership, flexible work design and a supportive ethical environment into a single framework. This offers practical information to banking HR personnel by relating every aspect to research and practical applicability, but also enables the necessity of not only minimizing turnover, but also create a more stable, engaged, and high-performing workforce. It is particularly useful in pointing out how these practices support each other to produce long-term success with regard to employee retention and long-term organizational success.
DeleteRishani, this is a practical, well-thought-out framework for dealing with turnover in banking. You don’t settle for quick fixes. Instead, you call for a holistic, data-driven approach that covers all the main HRM bases. Focusing on real diagnosis, building strong line managers, and putting together a solid SHRM bundle makes it clear that retention isn’t just a one-off program it’s a system (Guest, 2011). You cover both push and pull factors, from competitive rewards to career development and good culture, so it’s a genuinely complete plan.
ReplyDeleteDear Rishani, This section presents a well-rounded and evidence-based overview of effective retention strategies, especially in talent-intensive sectors like banking. By highlighting diagnosis, fair rewards, career development, strong leadership, flexible work design, and inclusive culture, it shows that retention is not a quick fix but a strategic system of practices working together.
ReplyDeleteThis section develops a comprehensive, coherent framework through which to approach the problem of employee turnover in the banking sector. It clearly links HR strategies to evidence-based research and theory, making the recommendations both practical and credible. I particularly appreciate how it combines both systemic approaches-like SHRM bundles, competitive rewards, and career development-with human-centered measures, such as nurturing line managers, flexible work arrangements, and employee voice. The emphasis on diagnosis, realistic job previews, and onboarding shows a deep understanding of retention drivers, while the integration of fairness, inclusion, and culture reinforces the importance of a holistic HRM approach. Overall, the content effectively shows that employee retention is a strategic business priority rather than just an HR task.
ReplyDeleteThis is an insightful and well structured analysis of how banks can reduce turnover through evidence based HR strategies. You’ve effectively connected theory, empirical research and practical examples to show that retention is not a single intervention but a coordinated system of policies that reinforce one another. The focus on diagnosis, fair rewards, career development, supportive leadership and flexible work design reflects a deep understanding of the realities within the banking sector. Your emphasis on culture, inclusion and realistic job previews further strengthens the piece, highlighting areas that are often overlooked but critical for long term retention. Overall, this blog offers a clear and comprehensive roadmap for HR teams seeking to build a stable and committed workforce in a competitive industry.
ReplyDelete