Employee Retention and Turnover: Why Employees Stay or Leave

Author:   Peter W. Hom (Arizona State University) ,  David G. Allen ,  Rodger W. Griffeth
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138503816


Pages:   328
Publication Date:   06 September 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Employee Retention and Turnover: Why Employees Stay or Leave


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Author:   Peter W. Hom (Arizona State University) ,  David G. Allen ,  Rodger W. Griffeth
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.458kg
ISBN:  

9781138503816


ISBN 10:   1138503819
Pages:   328
Publication Date:   06 September 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents List of Illustrations Biographies Series Foreword Preface Chapter 1: What Is Turnover, Why Is It Important, and How Is It Measured? Turnover Significance Voluntary vs. Involuntary Turnover; Avoidable vs. Unavoidable Turnover Functional vs. Dysfunctional Turnover Withdrawal Behavioral Family Turnover Destinations Collective Turnover Chapter 2: Turnover Consequences Turnover Effects on Leavers Turnover Effects on Stayers Turnover Effects on Organizations Collective Turnover Determining Optimal Turnover Rates Chapter 3: Causes and Correlates of Turnover Summarize Empirical Findings on Predictors of Individual Turnover from Past and Current Broad-Based Meta-Analyses Chapter 4: Complex Theories of Employee Turnover Describe and Review Classic Models Describe and Review Contemporary Theories, notably, the Unfolding Model Chapter 5: The Psychology of Staying: Job Embeddedness Review Original 2001 Model of Job Embeddedness and Its Refinement Extension of Basic Model to Explain Other Forms of Work Embeddedness Multifocal Model of Job Embeddedness Proximal Withdrawal State Theory Dark Side of Job Embeddedness Chapter 6: New Perspectives on Classic Turnover Antecedents Organizational Commitment – Commitment Profiles Job-Satisfaction – Trajectories Over Time Job Performance – Complex Dynamics Movement Ease and the Employment Opportunity Index Chapter 7: Research Streams on Understudied Turnover Antecedents Intervening Role of Job Search in Turnover Process Cybernetic Theory about Job search and Turnover Leadership Influences on Subordinate Turnover Leadership Style and Personality Managerial Attempts to Predict and Prevent Turnover Leader Departure Effects Social Networks – Structural Features Snow Ball Effect Network Centrality Network Closure Personality Influences Personality Traits Cognitive-Affective Processing System Theory Chapter 8: Methodological Approaches in Turnover Research Standard Research Practice: Critique of Static Cohort Research Design New Statistical Methods for Predicting Turnover Modern-Day Statistical Methods for Testing Turnover Theories Chapter 9: Controlling Employee Turnover Realistic Job Previews (RJP) Recruitment Source – Employee Referrals Hiring Based on Biodata Hiring Based on Personality Hiring for Fit Socializing Newcomers Work Design Compensation & Reward Practices Promising New Approaches Pre-Quitting Behaviors Stay Interviews Predictive Analytics Chapter 10: Diversity and Global Research on Turnover Women Corporate Flight Sexual Harassment Racial Minority Turnover Intersectional Discrimination Double Jeopardy Subordinate Male Target Hypothesis International Diversity and Turnover Expatriate Withdrawal Turnover among Assembly Workers in Export-Oriented Processing Zones in Emerging Economies Chapter 11: Future Research Directions Investigating Change Trajectories of Turnover Predictors Person-Centered Analyses Construct Validation More Research on Shocks, Link Defections and Turnover Destinations Generalization vs. Contextualization of Theories Understanding Collective Turnover Empirical Validation of Methods for Controlling or Predicting Turnover

Reviews

This book is outstanding in so many ways. First it lays out developmentally how the complexity of this topic has evolved over time. This picture includes how theory has changed, how our results and understanding have expanded over time and how extensions now deal with a much broader phenomenon including the international implications of the findings. Second, it is simply the best scholarly treatment of the turnover topic. The authors are exceptionally well versed in the literature and constructs being tested as well as the complex methods being used to study this phenomenon over time, contexts and samples and the practical implications of these findings. It will serve as the go to book for years to come. - Terence Mitchell, University of Washington This timely book by a team of preeminent scholars in the area of employee turnover will be of benefit to both researchers and managers. Decades of research have demonstrated the high cost of turnover to organizations. Grounded in the accumulated wisdom of thousands of empirical studies, coupled with the latest in practice, this book will guide efforts to develop state-of-the-art retention policies. It also will guide future research on the topic in an era of increasingly smart machines and dynamic labor markets. - Brooks Holtom, Senior Associate Dean, McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University


This book is outstanding in so many ways. First it lays out developmentally how the complexity of this topic has evolved over time. This picture includes how theory has changed, how our results and understanding have expanded over time and how extensions now deal with a much broader phenomenon including the international implications of the findings. Second, it is simply the best scholarly treatment of the turnover topic. The authors are exceptionally well versed in the literature and constructs being tested as well as the complex methods being used to study this phenomenon over time, contexts and samples and the practical implications of these findings. It will serve as the go to book for years to come. - Terence Mitchell, University of Washington


"""This book is outstanding in so many ways. First it lays out developmentally how the complexity of this topic has evolved over time. This picture includes how theory has changed, how our results and understanding have expanded over time and how extensions now deal with a much broader phenomenon including the international implications of the findings. Second, it is simply the best scholarly treatment of the turnover topic. The authors are exceptionally well versed in the literature and constructs being tested as well as the complex methods being used to study this phenomenon over time, contexts and samples and the practical implications of these findings. It will serve as the ""go to"" book for years to come."" - Terence Mitchell, University of Washington ""This timely book by a team of preeminent scholars in the area of employee turnover will be of benefit to both researchers and managers. Decades of research have demonstrated the high cost of turnover to organizations. Grounded in the accumulated wisdom of thousands of empirical studies, coupled with the latest in practice, this book will guide efforts to develop state-of-the-art retention policies. It also will guide future research on the topic in an era of increasingly smart machines and dynamic labor markets."" - Brooks Holtom, Senior Associate Dean, McDonough School of Business, Georgetown University"


Author Information

Peter W. Hom is a Management Professor at the WP Carey School of Business, Arizona State University, USA. He has investigated why people quit, how managers react when their subordinates are being poached, and why employees trapped in jobs misbehave. David G. Allen is Professor in the Neeley School of Business at Texas Christian University, USA. His teaching, research, and consulting on people and work focus on the flow of human capital into and out of organizations. Rodger W. Griffeth is a Professor Emeritus in the Psychology Department at Ohio University. He has authored many seminal top-tier journal articles on employee turnover, while authoring three books on this topic.

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