There is no crisis in South-East Asia. Companies are growing and recruiting. Finding new staff is not a major issue, but keeping them is. Business leaders complain that employees have no loyalty to the company. And that is true to some extent: the era where people spent a whole career with a single employer is without a doubt behind us.
The old adage that employees join an organization because of
the company’s reputation, and leave because of their direct boss, is also true
in this part of the world. An employee who is put under (work) pressure or
reprimanded for not performing, will think first about escaping the situation. The issue the employee has with his or her
boss will hardly be addressed in a direct way. There will be some gossip or
anecdote-sharing with close friends in the company, but very few other alerts. Quite
often the employee will just hand in the resignation notice and try to minimize
the number of days he needs to stay around and face the boss (the one month
notice period is rather theoretical !).
Yet in South-East Asia there is one more reason employees tend
to stay with a company, despite a difficult relation with the boss. And that is
their colleagues and team mates. This is very different from other cultures I
have experience with. Thais for example can tolerate pretty well a so-so
relationship with the boss (whom they will try to avoid as much as possible) as
long as they can stay around with their friends.
Although turnover and employee engagement is a challenge for
all companies doing business here, there is some comfort in knowing there is a
real return in investing in your team’s overall coherence. Being friends at
work is often seen in the West as superfluous and not relevant to the business.
After all, in the office, work comes first. As a leader, let your team develop
their office fun activities. Put your boss hat aside once in a while and participate.
Your team can make the difference between the boss as boss and the boss as
having fun with them. And it could just make the difference of someone deciding
to stay after all.
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