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Employee retention is the ability of an organization to retain its employees and ensure sustainability. Employee retention can be represented by a simple statistic (for example, a retention rate of 80% usually indicates that an organization kept 80% of its employees in a given period).
VOX TALENT is Canada's non-union voiceover talent agency representing over 200 of Canada's voiceover actors and supplying voiceover talent to advertising agencies, independent producers, corporate marketing departments, producers and casting directors.
Talent management is positively associated with employee retention. [2] Talent retention is the ability of an organisation to retain its high performing staff and is a key component of most talent management strategies and frameworks. [4] Retention is key to winning the war for talent.
Staffing is the process of finding the right worker with appropriate qualifications or experience and recruiting them to fill a job position or role. [1] [2] Through this process, organizations acquire, deploy, and retain a workforce of sufficient quantity and quality to create positive impacts on the organization's effectiveness. [3]
Of bosses who say they’re aware of worker burnout, 85% said they thought mental health strains on workers had impacted their ability as managers to retain talent.
Talent Management: helps organizations identify key positions vital for long-term success, develop a pool of high-potential employees to fill these roles, and establish a framework for managing performance, developing leaders, retaining talent, and fostering organizational commitment.
Marketing and advertising expenditures decrease as existing employees source potential candidates from existing personal networks of friends, family, and associates. By contrast, recruiting through third-party recruitment agencies incurs a 20–25% agency finder's fee – which can top $25K for an employee with $100K annual salary.
Talent management (TM) is the anticipation of required human capital for an organization and the planning to meet those needs. [1] The field has been growing in significance and gaining interest among practitioners as well as in the scholarly debate over the past 10 years as of 2020, [2] particularly after McKinsey's 1997 research [3] and the 2001 book on The War for Talent.