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How bosses drive their best employees away

The real reason talented people leave great jobs? Usually, it s the boss.

Managers can make or break a workplace experience both with their behaviour

and what they say aloud. Of course, the things they don t do are equally

problematic, such as not providing training and not tapping the most-qualified

person for a promotion. Several LinkedIn Influencers weighed in on these topics

this week. Here is what two of them had to say:

Brian de Haaff, chief executive officer at Aha!

The way a boss communicates with his or her team is crucial. While effective

communication is definitely a two-way street the bar should actually be set

higher for managers and other leaders, who should recognise their

responsibility to model appropriate conduct in the workplace, wrote de Haaff

in his post Three Things Smart Bosses Never Tell Employees.

Managers and leaders should set a positive example by thinking before speaking

and choosing their words wisely, he wrote, offering three things a smart boss

should never say.

Guess what I heard? Sometimes it can be lonely at the top, and managers may

trade gossip with their co-workers because they want to be buddies. However,

there is no room for gossip in the workplace even if it builds camaraderie, de

Haaff wrote. Rumour-mongering tears down the trust that you are trying to

establish with your team and shows an overall lack of maturity.

What s up with Adam? There may be rare times when a manager may seek

information about an employee out of genuine concern for the person s welfare

but when you fish for information to satisfy your own personal curiosity, you

put the person's co-workers in the awkward position of breaking a confidence.

This kind of behaviour demonstrates weak leadership, wrote de Haaff.

I don t want to hear it! When you say this phrase, you close your mind to the

possibility that you might actually be wrong and the other person may be right,

he wrote. This gut-level reaction to bad news shuts down all communication

and sends a clear message that you are unapproachable and inflexible.

Michelle M Smith, vice president of marketing at OC Tanner

What could be more essential to organisational success and the corporate

bottom line than talent? asks Smith in her post How to Lose Your Best

Employees in 10 Easy Steps. Yet many people continue to be marginalised and

neglected.

No corporate function today lags behind as dramatically as how we manage the

employees for which we are responsible, Smith wrote, pointing to research by a

business school professor.

If companies want to lose their best people, they ll keep doing these 10 things

that drive the brightest and most high-potential people away, she wrote. Among

them:

Put jerks into management. Reward the old-fashioned, autocratic style that

stifles unorthodox, creative thinking and feels threatened by fresh ideas,

energy and dynamism, Smith wrote.

Measure hours, not results. Keep an expensive cadre of stern enforcers busy

with policing everybody, she wrote. Don t trust your talent to use their time

wisely. Crack down on social media. Forbid personal activities during the

workday, even as you continue to expect work to be conducted over the weekend

as well.

Don t bother with training. Instead, have your workers do the same tasks over

and over in the very same way, she wrote.

Bungle the teams. Avoid mixing generations and skill sets, instead grouping

like with like and producing stale and predictable solutions that are safe and

excite no one, Smith wrote.