Is Intel's Employee Retention Hotline Hiding a Bigger Problem


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Intel's hotline to retain unhappy workers is a great resource, but conceals the bigger systemic problem.  CNN reported on Intel's anonymous hotline to help unhappy workers.  It is a reactive diving-catch approach to retain people when they have suffered enough that they are ready to leave.  This is akin to using CPR to keep patients alive instead of preventative medicine to manage good health longevity.  What about addressing the root problems so employees don't get to this point?    

Look at the numbers. The article cites 20,000 cases (since 2016 for only US & Costa Rica employees).  Intel has approximately 100k employees worldwide.  Rough numbers, 1 in 5 employees have issues with managers or career opportunities?  There is something systemically wrong.    

I think the article hints at the problem: poor management training.  20 years ago, Intel had one of the industry's best management trainee programs.  Many weeks, yes weeks, of training created outstanding people managers.  Training was supplemented with annual courses and a relentless peer culture to support those values.  That investment has largely been abandoned, with managers receiving a few hours (if that) to prepare them.  The downside is employee attrition and sub-optimal resource allocation that limits what can be delivered.  Doing what is 'Great' becomes very distant with weak leadership.  

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Matthew Rosenquist
Matthew Rosenquist

Cybersecurity Strategist specializing in the evolution of threats, opportunities, and risks in pursuit of optimal security for our digital world.


Cybersecurity Tomorrow
Cybersecurity Tomorrow

Cybersecurity strategy perspectives for the emerging risks and opportunities of securing our digital world. The insights of today will lead to tomorrow's security, privacy, and safety foundations.

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