The historic wave of workers leaving their jobs began shortly after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Great Resignation looks likely to continue. In November 2021, 4.5 million people quit their jobs, leaving an estimated 10.6 million job openings. With fewer than 7 million people officially unemployed, and an additional 41% of people considering leaving their jobs within the next year, companies face fierce competition for talent. Businesses in every industry are feeling the pressure, but sales teams are taking a dramatic hit. The overall attrition rate is 13%, but sales position turnover has reached a high of 35%.
That’s the bad news, but there is good news as well. With new strategies focused on diversifying sales teams and improving the employee experience, there is a way back from the Great Resignation.
But first, the basics: Why are employees leaving? The pandemic put many businesses, and their employees, on pause for temporary shutdowns, and other employees discovered the convenience of remote or hybrid work. This unprecedented chance for introspection led many to reevaluate their lives. In the end, they gained perspective on their value to employers, reshaped their expectations, and fundamentally changed the way work works.
The myriad reasons people cite for joining in the Great Resignation include the desire to:
With all this in mind, what can employers do to retain their employees and attract new talent? If you haven’t already, renew your company’s commitment to DEI initiatives to expand your talent pool, diversify your teams, and create a more inclusive employee experience. Understanding what DEI can do for your business is your first step to recovering from the Great Resignation — and it has the additional benefit of being the right thing to do.
DEI has three guiding principles:
The principles of DEI are mutually reinforcing. To implement a successful DEI program, all three areas must be addressed.
A commitment to DEI makes for a stronger, more agile company. Attrition is expensive. New hires, onboarding, and training are far more costly than employee retention efforts, and DEI affects every level of your company.
Diversity leads to increased job satisfaction, high morale, and a healthy company culture — all predictors of increased productivity and profitability. Your sales team members are 158% more likely to understand your target customers when at least one team member represents the target’s gender, race, age, sexual orientation, or culture.
Companies with more diverse teams are more likely to report over 40% growth in market share and 70% in new market expansion than companies with lower rates of diversity, possibly because diversity of gender, country of origin, career path, and industry background are highly correlated with innovation. And diverse executive leadership teams are more likely to be profitable and create additional value. Other benefits of DEI include:
Successful DEI initiatives begin with good intentions and produce tangible results. The effects of a well-implemented DEI plan are substantial, and your teams will see quantifiable results in sales productivity, performance, recruiting, and retention in the data you gather as your initiatives develop.
Track the success of your sales team DEI initiatives with a comprehensive sales compensation management solution (SCMS) and advanced reporting module (ARM). Request a demonstration at SalesVista.com.