Dealing with "Brain Drain"
6 proactive strategies for long-term success

Many people underestimate the potentially catastrophic impact of “Brain Drain”. The Pentagon is now dealing with the problem on
a very serious scale. They need to refurbish America’s arsenal of Trident nuclear warheads, but Washington has a problem.

In the 25 years since the warheads were first armed it seems the original personnel, which did not take the time to document the
process, has retired or died. Now the National Nuclear Security Administration is spending millions of dollars trying to recreate the
procedure.
According to U Express, others are experiencing similar
problems. In Germany over three hundred top secret files have
been lost. The files are so secret the German company does not
even know what is in them!

Brain Drain occurs when experienced employees retire.
Surveys show Baby Boomers have temporarily deferred their
retirements until the economy recovers. Once they see
recovery has ended, a record exodus of experience will leave
the workplace -- creating a significant brain drain.
There are six essential steps for organizations to take to stave
off brain drain by ramping up the experience of Generations X
and Y while retaining Baby Boomers longer. They are:

    1. Adopt Age-Neutral Policies. Allow Baby Boomers
    to feel welcome by developing age-neutral policies. This
    is more extensive than simply eliminating mandatory
    retirement. Try to develop career paths allowing
    employees to reduce their responsibilities (and stress) as
    they reach their golden years. One way is to allow
    employees to work part time or during peak periods. (see
    diagram)

    2. Training. Train young managers how to connect
    Baby Boomers to technology and new management
    styles. Peer training is also helpful so all employees
    understand the assets of the various generations in the
    workplace.

    3. Measure Job Fit. Make sure all employees are in the
    right job for their interest and personality.

    4. Mentoring.  Develop mentoring programs to connect
    Boomers with Gen X and Y employees. This is a great
    way to transfer your “brain” instead of draining it.

    5. Succession Planning. Have a solid succession plan
    in place to protect yourself against employee loses. This
    is more than just plotting out who moves where. Use
    automated online assessments to determine if the people
    within your plan have the people skills, interests, and
    training they need to take the position you feel they
    should have. Remember they are not ready for the
    position today or you probably would have already made
    the change. Get them prepared while you have time and
    you will reduce the impact of brain drain later.

    6. Flexible Schedules. Allow employees to take part in
    one or all of the exciting, proven programs designed to
    reduce stress on employees and managers. Possibilities
    include job sharing, work from home, self-scheduling
    by a team, and many more novel ideas.

Act quickly as a tidal wave of retiring Boomers if now
appearing on the radar.
About Max Impact

Max Impact is a strategy and leadership development company
based in Rochester Hills, Michigan.  Products and services
connect teams to a shared vision of success in a troubled or
rebounding economy.

For information about Max Impact, visit
www.getmaximpact.com, call 248-802-6138, or write
info@getmaximpact.com.  
©2009 Max Impact Corporation
Rochester Hills, Michigan, USA
www.getmaximact.com.