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{"id":2320,"date":"2020-02-10T05:00:37","date_gmt":"2020-02-10T06:00:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/proactivetraining.com.au\/news\/2020\/02\/10\/the-best-way-to-lose-a-superstar-employee\/"},"modified":"2020-02-10T07:48:07","modified_gmt":"2020-02-10T07:48:07","slug":"the-best-way-to-lose-a-superstar-employee","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/proactivetraining.com.au\/news\/2020\/02\/10\/the-best-way-to-lose-a-superstar-employee\/","title":{"rendered":"The Best Way to Lose a Superstar Employee"},"content":{"rendered":"
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When your superstars leave, instead of burning the bridge, stay in close touch with them and stay on good terms.<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Article Author: <\/div>\n
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Bruce Tulgan, Founder and CEO, RainmakerThinking<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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\n\tWhat do you do when you have a superstar employee who is definitely going to leave? You are past the point of any chance of retaining this person. What do you do?<\/p>\n

\n\tReasonable minds differ on this question. I cannot tell you how many smart leaders and managers I know who place such a high value on loyalty that they have a very hard time forgiving someone who leaves.<\/p>\n

\n\tIn my view, that is a very limited way of looking at employment relationships, and I advise against taking that emotional and self-defeating approach.<\/p>\n

\n\tThe more your organization has invested in this employee, the more you have at stake in retaining that person—even if that person leaves, you have a huge investment to protect, no matter where it goes. Why not make sure the employee has as big a stake as possible in maintaining a good relationship with you, too?<\/p>\n

\n\tKeep as Much as You Can<\/strong><\/p>\n

\n\tYou may not be able to keep this person as a full-time, onsite, uninterrupted, exclusive employee. If you can’t keep the whole employee, why not keep as much as you can? Instead of losing them, offer your most valued employees the chance to take an unpaid sabbatical or to work part-time, flextime, or as consultants.<\/p>\n

\n\tWhen your superstars leave, instead of burning the bridge, stay in close touch with them and stay on good terms. Try re-recruiting them after they’ve had a chance to rest or after they’ve had a chance to see that the grass isn’t that much greener on the other side. This is all about continuing to get a return on your investment in this superstar even after he or she has decided not to continue as an employee.<\/p>\n

\n\tMake It a Long Goodbye<\/strong><\/p>\n

\n\tWhen it’s a superstar you’re losing, you want the goodbye to be as long as you can make it. Of course, some employees feel it’s best to make as quick and clean a break as possible. But for the superstar with whom you want to remain on good terms going forward, make it a long goodbye to facilitate a good succession plan, comprehensive knowledge transfer, and a smooth transition.<\/p>\n

\n\tI always remember what a senior partner in a large accounting consulting firm told me: “We take succession planning very seriously—every time we lose a key person and realize there is no one on the bench read to step in.” Every superstar should be training and developing his or her replacement, on an ongoing basis. That should be something you talk about with your superstars in your one-on-ones with them, and your superstars talk about in their one-on-ones with their people.<\/p>\n

\n\tIf your superstars don’t have direct reports, it’s all on you. What is your best succession plan for every one of your superstars? Who is on the bench being developed to step in when that superstar steps out?<\/p>\n

\n\tDevelop Your Talent Bench Strength<\/strong><\/p>\n

\n\tWhether or not you have a person on the bench ready to step in by the time you know your superstar is leaving, you want as much time as possible so the superstar can help train and develop his or her replacement. If you have the luxury to hire the replacement before the superstar is gone, you should meet with him or her together on a regular, ongoing basis, in addition to meeting with him or her separately.<\/p>\n

\n\tIn other words, triple your one-on-ones for the duration of the transition period:<\/p>\n