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Why Employees Leave OrganizationsAzim Premji is the Chairman of Wipro, one of the largest software companies in India. He is one of the richest people in the world. Wipro is also one of the global top 100 technologies company. Below is the article from Azim Premji explaining why employees leave the organizations.

Every company faces the problem of people leaving the company for better pay or profile.

Early this year, Arun, a senior software designer, got an offer from a prestigious international firm to work in its India operations developing specialized software. He was thrilled by the offer.

He had heard a lot about the CEO. The salary was great. The company had all the right systems in place, employee-friendly human resources (HR) policies, a spanking new office and the very best technology, even a canteen that served superb food.

Twice Arun was sent abroad for training. "My learning curve is the sharpest it’s ever been," he said soon after he joined.

Last week, less than eight months after he joined, Arun walked out of the job.

Why did this talented employee leave?

Arun quit for the same reason that drives many good people away.

The answer lies in one of the largest studies undertaken by the Gallup Organization. The study surveyed over a million employees and 80,000 managers and was published in a book called "First Break All The Rules". It came up with this surprising finding:

If you are losing good people, look to their immediate boss. Immediate boss is the reason people stay and thrive in an organization and he is the reason why people leave. When people leave they take knowledge, experience and contacts with them, straight to the competition.

"People leave managers not companies," write the authors Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman.

Mostly manager drives people away?

HR experts say that of all the abuses, employees find humiliation the most intolerable. The first time, an employee may not leave but a thought has been planted. The second time, that thought gets strengthened. The third time, he looks for another job.

When people cannot retort openly in anger, they do so by passive aggression. By digging their heels in and slowing down. By doing only what they are told to do and no more. By omitting to give the boss crucial information. Dev says: "If you work for a jerk, you basically want to get him into trouble. You do not have your heart and soul in the job."

Different managers can stress out employees in different ways – by being too controlling, too suspicious, too pushy, too critical, but they forget that workers are not fixed assets, they are free agents. When this goes on too long, an employee will quit – often over a trivial issue.

As you can read from the above article by Azim Premji, employees do not leave their jobs, their leave managers. Employees are still performing their jobs but at different organizations. If your manager is a jerk, will you still do the best of your job? Of course, no! Why you want to work so hard just to keep the jerk sitting on the top? If you done a good job, who will take the credit? Of course, your boss! Therefore, if the boss is a jerk, the employees will create problem for him or her.

 

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One Response to “Why Employees Leave Organizations”

  1. Some people see things that are and ask, Why? Some people dream of things that never were and ask, Why not? Some people have to go to work and don’t have time for all that..

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