<p><strong>Leadership gap grows to a gulf<br />
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</strong>&bull; 25% of Brits say weak leadership is important factor influencing their decision to leave their job<br />
&bull; Strong management and leadership increasingly central to people looking to join new organisations with its importance rising steadily since 2012<br />
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Weak leadership is costing British businesses &pound;4.1bn every year in staff turnover alone according to research carried out by specialist global recruiter Randstad. &nbsp;</p>
As part of research for this year&rsquo;s Randstad Award, Randstad interviewed 10,728 British workers to find out which factors contributed to their decision to change jobs. &nbsp;The research found that weak leadership is actively pushing people out of their existing organisations with 25% of workers saying that weak leadership was one of the most important factors contributing to their decision to change employers.
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<h2>"Employees said weak leadership was the third biggest factor influencing their decision to change jobs"<br />
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<h3></h3>
<p>The CIPD estimates that the cost of replacing an employee is &pound;4,800 . &nbsp;Randstad&rsquo;s research shows that, currently, 19% of employees in Britain change employers every year &ndash; with 15% moving voluntarily and the other 4% being made redundant. If weak leadership is a contributing to factor in 25% of voluntary job moves, 3.75% of the country&rsquo;s employees are moving jobs every year because of weak leadership.<br />
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With total UK employment up 609,000 last year, to 30.9m , and 73.14% of the workforce in full-time employment (22,597,000 people ), weak leadership is costing the UK&rsquo;s employers over &pound;4.1bn every year in staff turnover alone .<br />
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<strong>Mark Bull, CEO</strong> of <strong>Randstad UK</strong>, said: &ldquo;There is a fundamental problem with leadership in the UK &ndash; and it&rsquo;s costing the country a huge amount of money. Bosses just aren&rsquo;t delivering. &nbsp;Management culture needs to be in line with employee culture, and at the moment employees don&rsquo;t see that and this can trigger departures. &nbsp;Too often company values aren't clear, demonstrated or promoted by management &ndash; and that&rsquo;s pushing a huge number of employees to switch jobs.<br />
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&ldquo;Changing company culture to foster stronger leadership makes tangible business sense. Employees said weak leadership was the third biggest factor influencing their decision to change jobs &ndash; with only uncompetitive compensation and a lack of career growth opportunities seen as more of a problem. And while paying employees more, or promoting them more quickly has an immediate financial impact on the bottom line of a company, encouraging strong leadership is a way to inspire employees to stay without a large cost implication attached.&rdquo;</p>
<h3>"it costs a great deal more to replace experienced employees than those just starting out in their career"</h3>
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Weak leadership is also a factor for more experienced workers. When asked what factors contributed to their decision to look for a new career opportunity outside of their former organisation, 40% of 45-65 year olds said weak leadership was one of the top 3 most important factors. &nbsp;These experienced employees are more likely to hold professional and managerial positions, which the CIPD estimate cost 46% more to replace &ndash; approximately &pound;7,000 &nbsp;&ndash; making weak leadership even more costly.<br />
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<strong>Mark Bull said</strong>: &ldquo;Younger workers are so determined to make it to the top right now that they believe they need to move on to move up. &nbsp;As a result, leaders invest a lot of time in them. &nbsp;This may well have caused some bosses to neglect the &lsquo;older&rsquo; generation in favour of investing time, training and attention in the young and hungry to keep them on board. &nbsp;This is an oversight &ndash; it costs a great deal more to replace experienced employees than those just starting out in their career.&rdquo;<br />
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The strength of leadership is not simply a problem for those already in work &ndash; it&rsquo;s becoming an increasingly important factor when choosing a new employer as workers become more concerned than ever about the quality of the leaders in their organisations.</p>
<menu><strong>'Strong management and leadership is one of the top 5 most important criteria when choosing an employer'</strong></menu>
<ul>
<li><menu>14% - 2012&nbsp;</menu></li>
<li><menu>14% - 2013</menu></li>
<li><menu>15% - 2014</menu></li>
<li><menu>17% - 2015</menu></li>
</ul>
<p>When Randstad asked British workers to list their priorities when it comes to looking for a job, strong management and leadership was cited as one of the five most important criteria in choosing a new employer by 17% of respondents. &nbsp;In previous studies, carried out annually since 2012, this has risen from 14% in 2012 and 2013 to 15% in 2014.</p>
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<strong>Mark Bull</strong> <strong>said</strong>: &ldquo;We think it&rsquo;s likely that this trend reflects a change in the way people perceive leaders within their organisations. &nbsp;First, the leader&rsquo;s job is getting harder which makes having a quality person in the role more important. The qualities demanded of high-performing leaders have changed over time: today's leaders need to be hands-on, inspirational, creative, and inclusive. &nbsp;Increasingly, leadership is about creating a context for innovation and inclusion in the face of ambiguity and the unexpected. &nbsp;Some weaker bosses have been willing to operate by a well-understood, &lsquo;tried and tested&rsquo; set of corporate practices and policies. Employees appreciate the difference. And second, with employee&rsquo;s remuneration and accomplishments increasingly wrapped up in the performance of their organisation, having the right leader in place is becoming critical to their own success.&rdquo;</p>
<p><strong>By sector</strong><br />
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Different industries place a different level of emphasis on the importance of leaders. Property professionals (26.5%), those working in professional services / consultancy (22.3%), and Telecoms professionals (21.8%) rate strong management and leadership as particularly important when choosing a new employer, while those working in the public sector (13.8%), creative industries (13.0%), and healthcare (12.9%) focus less on strong management and leadership (see Table 1 in Notes to Editors).<br />
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<strong>Mark Bull</strong> <strong>said</strong>: &ldquo;Those working in consultancy, professional services, property and telecoms value strong management and leadership much more highly than average. &nbsp;They are thinking about their long-term career progression and success in their next role. &nbsp;They&rsquo;re right, too. If you want to succeed at the highest level in any sector &ndash; from IT or banking to property and professional services &ndash; you can&rsquo;t afford to ruin your CV by working for failing organisations.&rdquo;</p>