The cost of turnover is higher than most companies realize. Employee turnover carries both visible and hidden costs that compound quickly.
Key data points:
- The average cost to replace an employee is 33% of their annual salary
Source: Work Institute – Retention Report
https://workinstitute.com/retention-report/ - U.S. companies lose over $1 trillion annually due to voluntary turnover
Source: Gallup – State of the Global Workplace
https://www.gallup.com/workplace/349484/state-of-the-global-workplace.aspx - Nearly 1 in 3 new hires leaves within the first 90 days
Source: SHRM – Human Capital Benchmarking
https://www.shrm.org/resourcesandtools/hr-topics/talent-acquisition/pages/employee-turnover-costs.aspx
Retention is no longer an HR issue. It is a business risk.
Why Employees Are Leaving (Even After “Great” Hires)
Compensation matters, but it is rarely the only factor driving attrition.
Top reasons employees leave:
- Lack of clear growth paths
- Poor management or misaligned leadership
- Burnout and workload imbalance
- Mismatch between role expectations and reality
- Limited flexibility or autonomy
According to Gallup, 70% of employee engagement is directly influenced by managers, making leadership quality one of the strongest predictors of retention.
Source: https://www.gallup.com/workplace/236441/employee-engagement-drives-growth.aspx
Retention Starts Before the Offer Is Accepted
Many retention problems originate during the hiring process itself.
High-retention organizations:
- Set realistic expectations during interviews
- Prioritize role clarity over speed
- Assess values and working style, not just skills
- Involve future managers early in the hiring process
Companies that focus on role fit see up to 50% lower turnover in the first year.
Source: Harvard Business Review – Hiring for Fit
https://hbr.org/2015/01/hiring-for-cultural-fit
What Strong Retention Strategies Have in Common
Organizations with consistently low turnover share similar traits.
Common retention drivers:
- Clear performance metrics and feedback loops
- Visible career progression opportunities
- Investment in manager training
- Flexible work models aligned to team needs
- Recognition tied to outcomes, not hours worked
According to LinkedIn’s Workforce Learning Report, 94% of employees say they would stay longer at a company that invests in their development.
Source: https://www.linkedin.com/learning/workplace-learning-report
What This Means for Employers
Retention-focused companies:
- Spend less time backfilling roles
- Preserve institutional knowledge
- Build stronger leadership pipelines
- Create more resilient teams
In contrast, high-turnover organizations often find themselves stuck in a costly cycle of constant hiring without long-term progress.
What This Means for Candidates
Candidates are also prioritizing retention-driven workplaces.
Today’s top talent looks for:
- Clear growth trajectories
- Strong, accountable leadership
- Sustainable workloads
- Transparency during the hiring process
Retention is increasingly a signal of company health.
The Bottom Line
Hiring gets attention, but retention creates advantage. Companies that invest in the full employee lifecycle outperform those focused solely on filling seats.
Call to Action
Whether you are:
- A company looking to build long-term, high-performing teams, or
- A candidate seeking a role where growth and stability matter
Quest can help you make smarter, more sustainable decisions.
For clients:
Learn how our retention-focused recruitment approach leads to stronger, longer-lasting hires.
Contact info@questorg.com
For candidates:
Explore opportunities with organizations that prioritize long-term growth and leadership alignment.
Reach out to info@questorg.com