How to Beat the ‘Great Resignation’

Focusing on recognition instead of resignation may help quell current manufacturing workforce challenges. Employers should focus on flexibility, skills development, meaningful work, work-life balance, and creating new workplace dynamics.

The 'great resignation' leads to something bigger–a new, shared responsibility between employees and employers for creating a “new normal” workplace in manufacturing.
The "great resignation" leads to something bigger–a new, shared responsibility between employees and employers for creating a “new normal” workplace in manufacturing.

I recently read an interesting “great resignation” post by Matt Fieldman, executive director of America Works, about workers who are voluntarily quitting their jobs in record numbers. Fieldman notes that the great resignation moniker focuses too much on employees only and conjures up unflattering, stereotypical images of the workers. But he suspects that there’s something far bigger and more transformative in play—a new, shared responsibility between employees and employers for creating a “new normal” workplace in manufacturing. He suggests an alternative moniker—the “great recognition”—which he maintains is better at capturing how both employees and employers are learning and evolving in a quest to address disruptive workplace challenges and reverse the upward trend in resignations, all in the hope of filling some of the nearly 900,000 open jobs in manufacturing today.The 'great resignation' leads to something bigger–a new, shared responsibility between employees and employers for creating a “new normal” workplace in manufacturing.The "great resignation" leads to something bigger–a new, shared responsibility between employees and employers for creating a “new normal” workplace in manufacturing.

For workers in manufacturing, the great recognition equates to the desire for flexibility in work scheduling, job flexibility that develops multiple skills and capabilities, clearer career path opportunities and mobility, improved working conditions, meaningful work, and a redefinition of work-life balance, with greater emphasis on how they live their lives, especially with the need for more leisure time.

For employers in manufacturing, the focus of the great recognition is on employee engagement (how to empower, enable, and connect employees to their companies), greater attention to employee needs throughout the entire employee lifecycle, improving job quality and working conditions in a variety of ways, innovation, and creativity around new ways of thinking about workplace dynamics—and, of course, the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace.

A prevailing message in the great recognition is the heightened focus on and steadfast commitment to the cultural transformation—a true cultural shift—required for employers if they expect to be competitive in recruiting and retaining these “new normal” workers.

Employee engagement plays a key role in understanding the great recognition. According to Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace: 2021 Report, there is a global engagement rate of 20 to 34% in the U.S. and Canada. The implication here is that most employees are either not engaged or are actively disengaged. As measured by lost productivity, high turnover, and high employee replacement costs, disengagement can be costly.

One of the key findings in this Gallup data is that the great recognition is less a pay issue and more a workplace issue. So, what can be done to improve employee engagement in the workplace? More importantly, what are food and beverage manufacturers doing about it now?

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