Let’s be real: great employees don’t just leave for more money. They leave for better leadership, more growth, and workplaces that actually work for them.

In 2025, with career mobility higher than ever and expectations continuing to evolve, employee retention can’t be reactive. If you want to keep your best people, you have to design for it.

Here’s how.


1. Conduct Stay Interviews, Not Just Exit Interviews

Don’t wait until someone gives notice to ask how they’re doing. A “stay interview” is a simple, informal check-in that helps you understand what’s working—and what’s not—from their perspective.

Ask questions like:

  • What’s something that’s been frustrating you lately?
  • What would make your work more enjoyable?
  • What are your long-term goals, and how can we support them?

The insights you get here are pure gold—and can help you fix issues before they become reasons to leave.


2. Make Career Growth Part of the Job (Not a Side Project)

Most employees don’t quit because they want a completely different job—they leave because they feel stuck. Be intentional about growth:

  • Create micro-promotions (small title bumps or new responsibilities).
  • Offer monthly skill-building sessions or stipends for learning.
  • Set quarterly check-ins focused purely on growth—not just performance.

When people can see a future with you, they’re far less likely to imagine one without you.


3. Train Your Managers Better (Yes, Really)

People don’t quit companies—they quit managers. The most common retention blind spot? Under-trained managers who don’t know how to give feedback, coach, or recognize wins.

What to do:

  • Invest in manager training for emotional intelligence, conflict resolution, and communication.
  • Promote based on leadership ability, not just performance.
  • Encourage 360° feedback so managers know how their team really feels.

Your culture is only as strong as your mid-level leadership.


4. Audit Your Workload Expectations

Burnout is one of the top reasons people walk. And it often creeps in quietly—especially in lean teams where high performers silently take on too much.

Spot-check:

  • Are deadlines realistic, or constantly pushed to the limit?
  • Do you have clear expectations around after-hours work and availability?
  • Do employees take their PTO—and feel safe doing so?

You can’t retain talent if your workplace is burning them out.


5. Recognize Wins Early and Often

This sounds basic, but lack of recognition is one of the most common reasons people start quietly job hunting. Make it a habit:

  • Public shoutouts in Slack or meetings
  • Personal thank-you notes or voice messages
  • Spot bonuses or surprise perks

Employees should never wonder if you notice their effort.


6. Let People Shape Their Roles

People want autonomy—and the chance to use their unique strengths. Some of your best retention moves may come from simply asking:

  • What do you love doing most here?
  • What’s something you wish you could do more of?
  • Where do you feel underutilized?

When employees can shape their roles to better fit them, they’re more likely to stay and perform better.


Final Thoughts: Retention Is a Strategy, Not a Perk

Preventing turnover isn’t about adding a meditation app to your benefits package. It’s about real connection, thoughtful leadership, and giving people a reason to stay that goes beyond their paycheck.

At Good People, we help purpose-driven brands build teams that last—not just teams that fill a seat. Want help building a culture that people don’t want to leave? Reach out.