If Cash Is King, Then Reducing Employee Turnover Is Queen

For a tribal casino and resort organization, the solution involved implementing training for mid-level managers and senior-level leaders.

A tribal casino and resort organization with more than 300 employees specializes in providing remarkable casino gaming and entertainment experiences for players and resort guests. The income generated from the casino and resort activities is used to fund a wide variety of social services for members of the tribe.

The Challenges
The casino was extremely effective in attracting resort guests and gaming players, but struggled in its ability to retain them.

With a turnover rate of roughly 40 percent, it was becoming increasingly costly to not address this issue, due to the real costs of recruiting, interviewing, and onboarding new employees, all of which had direct impacts on employee productivity, customer service, and profitability.

The Solution
We immediately focused on diagnosing the reason why significant amounts of staff members were voluntarily leaving within a 12-month period.

Using a combination of exit interviews and our signature anonymous employee engagement survey, we quickly discovered that ineffective mid-level managers were creating undesirable work environments and driving the turnover rate. More than 95 percent of the casino managers had at least five years of management experience, but had never received any formal leadership training.

They were deficient in knowing how to motivate employees without money; instead, they used their authority, threats, and intimidation. When giving employees feedback, they communicated using condescending tones of voice and body language, making the staff feel undervalued and underappreciated.

We strongly discouraged the senior-level leaders to not invest in company-wide customer service training (their initial plan) until their mid-level managers were trained and equipped to be effective leaders.

Our rationale was that once employees felt good about coming to work, valued, appreciated, and motivated to perform, only then would they act, behave, and communicate in ways that would positively affect guests and players. Until then, they would continue to have “paycheck mentalities,” and would voluntarily quit once they found more favorable employment.

The casino decided to implement training for not only mid-level managers but senior-level leaders, as well, to send a message of the importance of the training. After six months, an engagement survey showed a 50 percent improvement in employee attitudes toward managers. However, many employees were still skeptical and were not sure if the behavior of managers would be sustainable.

After only 12 months, turnover was reduced to 32 percent, which resulted in more than $250,000 in savings related to costs of turnover, and more than maximizing the return on the training and consulting investment.

We informed the casino’s senior-level leaders that employee engagement and effective leadership was not a single event, but a process that must be cultivated and maintained over time.

James Bird Guess was homeless after high school and built a quarter-million-dollar business from the trunk of his car. He is now a top consultant, keynote speaker, and subject matter expert on employee engagement, culture change, talent retention, and maximizing organizational performance. The best-selling author of books “How I Made a Quarter Million Dollar$ From the Trunk of My Car” and “Lead Like Water: Many Can Manage, Few Can Lead,” Bird Guess serves as president of the International Success Academy, an organizational development firm providing on-site leadership training, executive coaching, and employee engagement strategies for Fortune 500 and Fortune 1000. He can be reached at james@internationalsuccessacademy.com