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On hiring, retention, and designing a better workplace

Nigel Runnels-Moss

18 Nov 2021

•

3 min read

On hiring, retention, and designing a better workplace
  • Hiring

Photo by Cytonn Photography on Unsplash

I'm often told stories with a very similar pattern. They usually start with something like:

  • "One of our senior ICs has just handed in their notice"
  • "We need to come up with an action plan for hiring and retention because the CTO has told me churn is too high"
  • "I've just been told by my team lead that they're leaving for XYZ corp"
  • "I've been listening to one of my team's devs telling me that there seems to be no clarity around what they need to do to get promoted here"

The symptoms are always the same:

  • Average maturity of team members is low, less than 5 years of professional experience
  • It seems impossible to hire senior staff
  • Staff churn is high, particularly amongst seniors
  • Promotion critiera are opaque, if not downright Byzantine
  • Morale is low, but not for Basecamp-style big reasons, but a general low-level disaffection

I've said many times: if it's easier to get a higher-paid job at another company than to get a promotion at your existing company, then the trajectory of your ship is already sinking. The corollary of this is: you should leave.

Most people interpret this as being all about the money, and an encouragement for people to be mercenary. The reality is quite the contrary, I promote loyalty to a company that values your work, pays you well, and treats you like a human. As a consultant, and as a coach, I've interviewed hundreds of people at dozens of organisations over the years, and what I see is a tendency for the management at companies to pay staff the least they can for as long as they can get away with it, with few exceptions. What is 'fair', 'right', or 'ethical' rarely seems to be a factor for consideration. There are cultural reasons for this that are rooted in the Industrial Revolution, the rise of Taylorism, and the robber barons' influence on the birth of General Management in the late 19th Century from the womb of colonialist bureacracy. But this is political history and anthropology, which isn't the subject of this work.

So let's cut to the chase. We design products. We know about UX. We know about MVPs, about Design Thinking, about A/B testing. We work quite dilgently on the whole to bring some level of empiricism to the way we design, build and ship products to customers. So:

  • Why don't we apply the same level of rigour and thinking for our workplaces?
  • Why isn't there a field called EX (Employee eXperience), or similar?
  • Why is there no CPO (Chief People Officer) on the board?

I suspect the answer is the same as why it took us nearly a century past Taylor's publication of The Principles of Scientific Management to come up with Agile. Change is slow, because as Thomas Kuhn put it "a new scientific truth does not triumph by convincing its opponents and making them see the light, but rather because its opponents eventually die, and a new generation grows up that is familiar with it".

The CEO and co-founder of Makers, Evgeny Shadchnev, calls it a 'culture-first company'. It is one of the first companies that I've seen that starts with their customer and employee experience, and derives everything from there. I personally have been the hiring manager or part of the hiring team that has hired over twenty Makers' graduates - they are consistently impressive given the short time of training, only 12 weeks - often better than candidates with 1-2 years of commercial experience. This is a level of success that is outstanding in their field. Their competitors aren't even in the same ball-park.

You want two more, billion dollar examples? How about Zappos, as told by their founder Tony Hsieh in the book 'Delivering Happiness, A Path to Profits, Passion, and Purpose'; Or the story of VISA as told by CEO Dee Hock's 'One from Many: VISA and the Rise of Chaordic Organization' - it's not just trendy EduTech startups.

Ask yourself the question: "If we truly were to put our people first, how much better off financially would our company be as a result?" - because we know engagement drives results.

Then ask yourself the question: "If we truly were to put out people first, how much better a world would we be creating?"

Did you like this article?

Nigel Runnels-Moss

Software Crafter, Pioneer, Maker, Thinker, Collaborator, Coach, Polyglot.

See other articles by Nigel

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