3 Ways to Create a “Stay Culture”
We hear a lot these days about employee engagement – how to make sure your employees are fully engaged with their work, with their team, and with their managers. And it’s a noble and valuable thing that we remain focused on employee engagement. Examining how we, as organizations and leaders, are ensuring that our employees are engaged with their work is a vital step towards retention, productivity and innovation.
Still, regardless of how much attention we in HR pay to the issue, it continues to warrant concern. A recent survey from the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM) found that only 52% of employees felt “plugged in” at work.
But, is that the end of the story? What’s going on with other 48%?
Years ago my husband worked for the CEO of a small company who had a mantra of sorts around employee engagement. “You can quit or you can stay,” he would say, “but you can’t quit and stay.” That phrase has stuck with me all these years. So: what about those employees who appear to be staying and working and engaging, but, underneath it all, have at least a few toes already crossing the exit door’s threshold? How do we identify those signals and, more importantly, work to create what I like to call a “Stay Culture?”
Here are the three clues I often advise others to look for:

- Connection – How connected is the work that your people are doing with what’s important to them? These days, more and more Gen Y’ers actively voice their opinions about the need for meaning in their work, for a sense of connection between what they do and what they value. You could be pumping out widgets, but if the end result is that those widgets are being used for purposes that speak to core values, then your employees’ connection to their work will be deepened.
- Contribution – How do you and your employees “show up” at work? (notice I said “at” work and not “to” work) This is less about the time on the clock – although a willingness to go above and beyond is often a sign of engagement – and more about stepping up to contribute in ways that go outside the job description. There is a balance, of course, but when you see your folks raising their hand to volunteer to learn about something new or taking on a leadership role for a project, this is a staying sign.
- Conversation – How many times do your employees strike up a conversation with you, trying to get to know you more, trying, in fact, to engage? How open and inclusive is your culture of feedback and engagement? Sometimes employees actually try to engage but are turned back. The reasons may be valid—deadlines, urgencies, customer issues—but we should pay particular attention to these attempts to reach out. Ignoring such attempts can easily result in employees who “quit and stay.”
There may be other factors that could be at play that help to create a “stay culture”. What have you experienced in your organization that helps to create an engaged “stay” mindset?





















