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Measuring Employee Retention in WIPO A study of survival probability. Palais des Nations, Geneva 31 October – 2 November 2011. Cristobal Bazan. Definitions. “Employee retention” refers to policies and practices employers use to keep valuable employees on the job.
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Measuring EmployeeRetention in WIPO A study of survival probability Palais des Nations, Geneva 31 October – 2 November 2011 Cristobal Bazan
Definitions • “Employee retention” refers to policies and practices employers use to keepvaluable employees on the job. • “Retention rate” is a measure of the probability an employee will remain on the job over a given period of time. • Use retention rate to forecast future retention costs - better than turnover. • Retention data can tell who leaves, after how long, why, with what skills.
Methodology Sample • 276 employees • Fixed-term appointments • Appointed from1 January 1994 to31 December 2001 Measured by • Date of entry in service • Date of leaving by voluntary separation • End of period Method • Survival Probability
Possible factors affecting survival Factors affecting WIPO’s retention rate? • Gender Male Female • Category General Service Professional Director • Age at appointment Under30 30 to 40 Over 40
Results • Of276 employees in the sample, 47 left voluntarily and229 were still active at March 31, 2010. • WIPO’sretention rate for the 8-year periodis 83%. • Of 47 leavers, 41 (87.2%) left inthe first 4 years in service.
Results Survival probability not significant by Gender
Results Survival probability not significant by Category
Results Survival probability significant (p 0.01) by Age at appointment
Conclusions • WIPO’s Retention Rate is among the highest in the UN system • The Retention Rate is a measure of probability to remain professionally active. For every 100 employees appointed, 83 have a high probability to remain professionally active until normal retirement age • For employees over 40 at time of appointment, this probability is 92%. • Employees over 40 at time of appointment look for the security and stability of long-term employment. • It is not necessarily positive correlated whit a high degree of satisfaction • Is an indicator of the quality of employment on long term
Further issues • The Retention Rate is not systematically measured in the UN system • The higher the retention rate the higher the associated costs (health insurance, pension, education grant, training) • Retention rate could be an indicator of the quality of employment
Your comments are welcomeThank you Cristobal Bazan E-mail : cristobal.bazan@wipo.int Tel: 41 22 338 71 32