How to Combat Job-Hopping? Hire Part-Time Employees and Interns!

Is Job Hopping Here to Stay?

It used to be that most employees would stay in a position on average of four to six years. That is no longer the case. The fact is that most employees are no longer considering long-term employment with your company.  

The leaders of the job-hopping movement are, to no surprise, millennials. They are now aptly called the “job-hopping generation” because they display a significantly higher willingness to switch careers than previous generations. The long-tenured career employee is essentially over.   

Employee mobility with employment options, and the opportunity to get more money with the next move, have resulted in decreasing employee tenure. Social media is saturated with narratives about getting a 20% increase by going to a new company. The fact is that strategy works for people. In previous years, job jumping was frowned on – now, that tactic is part of the challenges that employers must seriously account for.  

Given that employees are less likely to stay with your company for a long period, you need to develop shorter and more impactful training procedures to make up for time lost in the hiring process. Shorter employment also makes companies question their pension and retirement benefits. Instead of benefit and tenure keeping in immediately waiting 6 to 12 months longer and increasing vesting provisions from 3 to five years. 

Hire Part-Time Employees to Fill the Labor Gap

One driver of the current resignation wave is that employees are looking to shift their work schedule and work with more flexible work type arrangements. Often, even a full-time WFH arrangement is not enough. Employees are also looking for a shorter, flexible work schedule.  Part-time employment may be an option for them and many employers.  

Beyond the cost economics – which may help the employer – part-time employees often have the experience and the technical agility that employers often require from new employees.  Given the new dynamics in work arrangements, part-time employees, when properly structured, can add the stability that the current environment lacks. 

Managers will be key. Managers can resist the perception that part-time employees are supplemental and not worthy of long-term investment in terms of training to development. HR must bring considerable company culture efforts to show how part-time employees can be more than a short-term for the organization. Employees now place a high value on the ability to control their work/life balance, so they are likely to appreciate the opportunity to earn income while being able to accommodate to their lifestyle.  

High Demand for Interns Expected in 2022

Intern season is coming up! A well-managed internship program is a great way to identify potential long-term talent against the wave of resignations. If you have been on the fence about hiring interns, this may be the year for you to jump into developing an internship program.  A properly vetted internship program offers a variety of solutions that can quickly fill the labor gaps most employers are experiencing. 

Hiring interns is a great way to get specific skill-based labor that can support critical key functions and relieve areas with entry-level support. A good program should also be able to help you identify potential long-term talent. If you target and recruit specific skill sets, you may be able to bring some support to key projects that might be stuck due to a lack of resources.  

Most of the jobs that are being lost, besides retail and health, are office administrative classifications where minimum wages have not kept up with inflation. That means interns and part-time employees could provide much-needed relief during the late spring and summer months. 

Cancelling Signing Bonuses, Upping the Ante for Base Pay: What Employers are Doing to Attract Talent 

The summer of 2021 saw unparalleled incentives to entice workers back into the market during a widespread talent shortage, such as wage increases and signing bonuses. According to this survey, 50% of employer respondents surveyed said that they offered signing bonuses, while only 20% of which will continue to do so toward the end of 2021.    

In lieu of signing bonuses, 62% of organizations plan to increase base salaries to attract new hourly and salaried employees, increasing their labor costs.  

Companies will need to work to address both internal and external labor market factors such as 

  • Focus on HR metrics 
  • Benchmarking market data 
  • Gauging employee sentiment 

The last point is particularly poignant in an atmosphere where employees share a heightened awareness in pay equity issues. Lack of transparency creates a higher risk for your company. 

BlueComp offers an accessible online compensation tool to measure survey data against the current market, showing real time changes and your placement within it.