A man of many facets and feelings.. One of them matched with Marianna’s personality and professionalism, along with the need of perfection.. Since then, they both like to argue and debate in order to reach the perfect solution to anything. He is the best company for anything and everything, however he prefers to just drink a beer and talk about life. His passion is music, cooking for friends and loves the beach. On his free time, he writes poetry. (He is the Admin.)

Employers of Choice Attract and Retain the Best Talent!

Do you work for an employer of choice? Better yet, are you one?(…and that’s my challenge in every employer i work for)! An employer of choice is an employer who offers a work culture and workplace environment that attract and retain superior employees. The features of the environment available at an employer of choice favor the well-being of employees and customers.

But, the factors are also situational. Not every employer of choice fits every employee.

For example, by reputation, Google is an employer of choice, but a friend of mine really dislikes the Google culture. She feels as if she is required to participate in socializing and activities with coworkers that neither interest her nor fit her personality. But, others thrive in the Google environment.

Employers of choice have a lot in common, but the bottom line is that your employer of choice may not be the same as another employee’s employer of choice. But, for you to be happy and most fulfilled at work, your employer must be your employer of choice – whatever that means to you.

12 Characteristics of an Employer of Choice

An employer of choice strives to pay employees compensation that may include a salary and benefits that are equal to or above market rates. Most employers of choice offer employees a comprehensive employee benefits package, as they can afford to add benefits for employees, including health insurance, paid time off, paid holidays, and paid vacation.

Employers can consider themselves an employer of choice without these compensation offerings, but they must substitute a powerful mission or vision in their place. An example might be a non-profit agency with a mission to cure cancer in children.

These are examples of the additional factors that make an employer an employer of choice.

  1.  Job Security: Employees are reasonably certain that their employer is financially sound. Freedom from concern about losing their jobs, employees are able to concentrate on their goals and core functions without worry.
  2. Empowerment and Authority: Employees are empowered to make decisions about and take responsibility for how they do their jobs. Employees are given a strategic framework (company mission, vision, values, goals, feedback) by their department, but they control their choices and how they perform their core functions and make progress on their goals.
  3. Respect: Employees may not always be right and their ideas may not set company direction and choices, but ​with an employer of choice, employees feel that they are fundamentally respected by their bosses and coworkers.
  4. Opportunity for Growth: At an employer of choice, employees feel as if they are encouraged to continue to develop their skills and careers. These employers offer performance development planning, career paths, and internal and external training opportunities. Job assignments help employees expand their skills.
  5. Access to Information: Employers of choice share information with employees that range from the company financial progress and results to the success framework referenced above. Employees feel as if they are members of the in-crowd because they know what is happening.
  6. Commitment: Employers of choice are committed to their employees and to their customers. This is reflected in everything from Human Resources policies to business strategies. This commitment plays out in retention and engagement strategies and perks that can range from free lunches and beverages to monthly employee and family events. Lunch with the president, inclusion in candidate interviews, and a place on an employee selection committee cement employee commitment and involvement. Running a boot camp for customers or a conference or training event at the company location highlight employer commitment and most of the other strategies on this recommended list.
  7. Involvement: At an employer of choice, employees feel as if they have the opportunity to be involved. They can make suggestions, think up new products or service innovations, serve on employee committees to plan events and work processes, and attend appropriate meetings and have input on work processes that affect their jobs.
  8. Positive Relationships With Coworkers: Gallup research finds that engaged employees are likely to have a best friend at work. On a larger scale, at an employer of choice, because the cultural fit is considered in recruitment, coworkers like and enjoy working with each other. A bad boss is dealt with by the organization before he or she can negatively impact employees and the work culture. Remember that for employee retention, employees leave bosses more than they leave anything else present in their workplace.
  9. Work-Life Balance: Increasingly demanded by employees, work-life balance initiatives such as flexible scheduling choices, allow employees to work undistracted by the family and life events and needs occurring outside of the workplace. These initiatives minimize employee stress and help them accomplish life’s challenges while working.
  10. Performance Culture: An employer of choice finds ways to tie the performance and the interests of employees with those of the employer. Two of the ways that employers accomplish this are through their variable compensation system that ties rewards to performance and a job plan process that provides regular guidance and feedback.
  11. Fairness: Perceptions of unfair treatment or a workplace that favors certain individuals over others for unknown, undefined reasons, is an anathema to an employer of choice. Employers need to fairly develop and apply policies, treat employees with the same regard and consideration, and make the workplace guidelines clear and enforceable across the board.
  12. Recognition: Employers of choice provide feedback to employees about their performance, growth prospects, accomplishments, and areas needing improvement regularly. One of the most powerful forms of feedback is employee recognition. For an employer of choice, recognition is regular, targeted to real successes, and used to reinforce positive, desired behavior.

These are not all of the characteristics of an employer of choice, but if you’ve implemented a significant number of these factors in your company, you are well on your way to becoming an employer that attracts and retains superior employees.

Your reputation will proceed you and employees will seek you out as a desirable place to work.  My advice after 18 years in HR: “Be the employer that superior employees choose.”

Yours Truly,

The BizandLove Lady!

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