Good peoplevaluable employeesquit their jobs every day. Usually, they leave for better positions elsewhere. Take Ken, an

Question:

Good people—valuable employees—quit their jobs every day. Usually, they leave for better positions elsewhere. Take Ken, an experienced underwriter in a northeastern insurance company, who scribbled the following remarks on his exit interview questionnaire:

This job isn’t right for me. I like to have more input on decisions that affect me—more of a chance to show what I can do. I don’t get enough feedback to tell if I’m doing a good job or not, and the company keeps people in the dark about where it’s headed. Basically, I feel like an interchangeable part most of the time. 

In answer to the question about whether the company could have done anything to keep him, Ken replied simply, “Probably not.” Why do so many promising employees leave their jobs? And why do so many others stay on but perform at minimal levels for lack of better alternatives? One of the main reasons—Ken’s reason—can be all but invisible, because it’s so common in so many organizations: a system-wide failure to keep good people........


Question

1. Do you think that Ken's self-esteem had any- thing to do with his leaving the firm? 

2. What do you think were Ken's satisfaction with and commitment to the job and firm he is leaving? How does this relate to the research on the determinants and outcomes of satisfaction and commitment? 

3. What lesson can this company learn from the case of Ken? What can and should it now do?

Fantastic news! We've Found the answer you've been seeking!

Step by Step Answer:

Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Organizational Behavior An Evidence Based Approach

ISBN: 9781648021251

14th Edition

Authors: Fred Luthans, Brett C. Luthans, Kyle W. Luthans

Question Posted: