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13. 2 Have a nice day Reading Read this article and then fill each gap below with one word Employee loyalty in service firms Have a nice day New york Hotel, shop and restaurant chains, which employ thousands of people in low-paid, dead-end jobs, are discovering that high labor turnover rates resulting from the indiscriminate hiring of cheap"workers can be extremely costly Cole National, a Cleveland-based firm which own Child World, Things Remembered and other speciality shops, declared a" war for people "in an effort to recruit and keep better staff. Employees were asked: What do you enjoy about working here? In the past year, have you thought about leaving? If so, why? How can we improve our er place to work? Employ ed the better training, supervisors and, above all, wanted their bosses to"make me feel like I make a difference". Labor turnover declined by more than half; for full time Marriott Corporation, a hotel and restaurants group, has also decided to spend more money on retaining employees in the hope of spending less on finding and training new ones. In one year, it had to hire no fewer than 27, 000 workers to fill 8, 800 hourly-paid job slots To slow its labor turnover, Marriot had to get a simple message accepted throughout its operating divisions: loyal, well motivated employees make customers happy and that, in turn, creates fatter profits and happier shareholders Improved training of middle managers helped. So did a change in bonus arrangements At the same time, Marriot became more fussy about the people it recruited. It creened out job applicants motivated mainly by money: applicants which the ompany pejoratively described as "pay first people". Such people form a surprisingly small, though apparently disruptive, part of the service-industry workforce. Marriot found in its employee-attitude surveys that only about 20% of its workers are Roy Rogers restaurants and about 30% of its workers at Marriot hotels regarded pay as their primary reason for working there Many middle managers in service industries are more comfortable coping with demands for more money than with demands for increased recognition and better communications. They will have to change their ways. Surveys say that when 13, 000 employees in retail shops across America were asked to list in order the 18 reasons for working where they did, they ranked"good pay"third In first place was"appreciation of work done, with"respect for me as a person"second2 13.2 Have a nice day Reading Read this article and then fill each gap below with one word. Employee loyalty in service firms Have a nice day New York Hotel, shop and restaurant chains, which employ thousands of people in low-paid, dead-end jobs, are discovering that high labor turnover rates resulting from the indiscriminate hiring of “cheap” workers can be extremely costly. Cole National, a Cleveland-based firm which own Child World, Things Remembered and other speciality shops, declared a “war for people” in an effort to recruit and keep better staff. Employees were asked: What do you enjoy about working here? In the past year, have you thought about leaving? If so, why? How can we improve our company and create an even better place to work? Employees replied they wanted better training, supervisors and, above all, wanted their bosses to “make me feel like I make a difference”. Labor turnover declined by more than half; for full time sales assistants, it declined by about a third. Marriott Corporation, a hotel and restaurants group, has also decided to spend more money on retaining employees in the hope of spending less on finding and training new ones. In one year, it had to hire no fewer than 27,000 workers to fill 8,800 hourly-paid job slots. To slow its labor turnover, Marriot had to get a simple message accepted throughout its operating divisions: loyal, well motivated employees make customers happy and that, in turn, creates fatter profits and happier shareholders. Improved training of middle managers helped. So did a change in bonus arrangements. At the same time, Marriot became more fussy about the people it recruited. It screened out job applicants motivated mainly by money: applicants which the company pejoratively described as “pay first people”. Such people form a surprisingly small, though apparently disruptive, part of the service-industry workforce. Marriot found in its employee-attitude surveys that only about 20% of its workers are Roy Rogers restaurants and about 30% of its workers at Marriot hotels regarded pay as their primary reason for working there. Many middle managers in service industries are more comfortable coping with demands for more money than with demands for increased recognition and better communications. They will have to change their ways. Surveys say that when 13,000 employees in retail shops across America were asked to list in order the 18 reasons for working where they did, they ranked “good pay” third. In first place was “appreciation of work done”, with “respect for me as a person” second
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