Natural attrition: Difference between revisions
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The dismal [[human resources]] practice of managing a [[reduction in force]] not by tactically managing out poor employees, nor by strategically excising unneeded ones in a [[Redundancy|redundancy round]], but by waiting for [[lateral quitter|good staff leave by their own initiative]] and then not replacing them. | The dismal [[human resources]] practice of managing a [[reduction in force]] not by tactically managing out poor employees, nor by strategically excising unneeded ones in a [[Redundancy|redundancy round]], but by waiting for [[lateral quitter|good staff leave by their own initiative]] and then not replacing them. |
Revision as of 18:02, 7 January 2023
The Human Resources military-industrial complex
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Natural attrition
ˈnæʧrəl əˈtrɪʃ(ə)n (n.)
The dismal human resources practice of managing a reduction in force not by tactically managing out poor employees, nor by strategically excising unneeded ones in a redundancy round, but by waiting for good staff leave by their own initiative and then not replacing them.
For sensitive types in HR who don’t like workplace conflict, natural attrition seems a smashing idea: kind, humane and low-risk. For shareholders, a terrible one, ensuring as it does the inevitable drift to mediocrity among the stewards of your capital.
A sensible human resources department — and here we are bound to say we are unpersuaded such a thing exists — would pursue the opposite strategy, devoting time, effort and, if need be, money, talking good employees out of leaving and, and funding any such expenditure by culling the poor ones.