Attract and retain top staff with flexible working
Business people in Indonesia reveal flexible working is often the make-or-break of job offers. 79% reveal that they would choose one job over another similar one, if it offered flexible working. A staggering 73% confirm that flexible working also improves staff retention, finds the latest survey by Regus, the global workplace provider.
Recruitment is an expensive process that many global businesses are keen to reduce. The CIPD (Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development) estimates the cost of an employee leaving at £4,625, rising to £5,000 for managers and professionals.
With employee retention reported as a priority for over a third of business, what measures should businesses be prioritising to slash hiring costs, attract and retain top staff? Flexible working, respondents reveal, provides a solution to all three.
The survey, canvassing the opinions of more than 20,000 senior executives and business owners across 95 countries, confirms that in Indonesia flexible working can be used to avoid employee churn (and the consequent expense of recruitment agencies) as 77% of respondents point to flexible working as a perk that attracts top talent.
The research also found that:
- 76% of respondents say offering flexible working makes employees more loyal;
- 60% of workers would actually turn down a job that ruled out flexible working;
- 68% say they would have stayed longer in their last position had flexible working been an option.
Commenting on the study, John Henderson, Regus Asia Pacific Regional Director says: “Hiring and retaining top talent is an age-old priority for successful businesses, but not all companies can afford to offer golden bonuses or mouth-watering salaries while remaining competitive. Stemming churn is also vital to avoid incurring recruitment agency costs and the inconvenience of starting the hiring process.”
“Flexible working, which is lower cost than fixed office working, offers the attractive perks of lower stress and better work:life balance to existing and prospective employees, and provides a low cost solution to attracting and retaining those top workers. It’s also striking how mainstream the perk of flexible working has become, with many respondents actually choosing their jobs on the basis of flexibility.”
Regus is the global workplace provider
Its network of more than 1,700 business centres in 100 countries provides convenient, high-quality, fully serviced spaces for people to work, whether for a few minutes or a few years. Companies like Google, Toshiba and GlaxoSmithKline choose Regus so that they can work flexibly and make their businesses more successful.
The key to flexible working is convenience and so Regus is opening wherever its 1.5million members want support – city centres, suburban districts, shopping centres and retail outlets, railway stations, motorway service stations and even community centres.
Founded in Brussels, Belgium, in 1989, Regus is based in Luxembourg and listed on the London Stock Exchange.
For more information, please visit: regus.com