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Key Strategies for Retaining Your Staff

Summary

  • Employers in Australia have a legal duty to consider flexible working requests in certain circumstances and must not discriminate when offering career progression opportunities.
  • Acting fairly in the workplace is a legal obligation, not merely good practice.
  • High staff turnover carries real business costs, making retention strategies a practical legal and commercial priority.
  • This article is a plain-English guide to staff retention for Australian business owners, covering key legal obligations around flexible working, fairness, and employee well-being.
  • It has been produced by LegalVision, a commercial law firm that specialises in advising clients on employment law matters.

Tips for Businesses

Map out clear, fair career progression for all staff to avoid discrimination claims. Consider flexible working requests seriously, as you may be legally required to do so. Reward and challenge employees regularly. Fairness in day-to-day management reduces disputes and supports a stable, productive workforce.

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Retaining staff means keeping your best people in your business and reducing turnover. Employers who invest in their teams build stronger, more loyal workforces and avoid the significant costs of repeated recruitment. This article will explain what you, as an employer, need to know about employee retention, giving you our five top tips for retaining staff.

Why Retain Staff?

When you retain your staff, you keep your team working for you. Accordingly, this means you have a low staff turnover rate.

You will likely want to retain your staff and avoid high staff turnover. Doing so helps you avoid the recruitment process, which can be resource-intensive for a business. Retaining staff also allows you to build up a team proficient in their roles and loyal to you as an employer. Therefore, you avoid losing those who know your business and have built up the skills needed over the years.

How to Retain Your Staff

There are many ways you, as an employer, can try to retain your staff. Below we present our top five tips for helping to maintain your staff.

1. Map Out Clear Career Paths

It is essential to make your staff realise that they can stay with you and still climb the career ladder. To do this, you should show them what could be ahead of them, such as: 

  • salary increases;
  • promotions; and 
  • training opportunities.

You should speak to your staff to see how they wish to progress and what they aspire to become. Ensuring your staff can see clear room for progression will help them avoid feeling stuck in their careers. 

Remember that when you allow staff to see clear career progression, you should do so for all staff. Therefore, it is essential to act fairly without discriminating, as the latter is unlawful.

Key Statistics

  1. Turnover rate: UK average employee turnover rate is 34%, which highlights the need for retention to minimise costly recruitment and knowledge loss.
  2. Hybrid work: Hybrid working reduces quit rates by 33 per cent, supporting flexible arrangements to improve staff retention.
  3. New opportunities: 24% UK workers plan to change jobs in 2026, often due to lack of appreciation and career progression.

Sources

  1. CIPD, June 2024
  2. Nature, 2024
  3. Ciphr, February 2026

2. Create Challenging Work

When your staff have been in the same role for lengthy periods, they could get bored and want to move on if you provide them with the same work. Therefore, as their employer, you need to ensure that you stimulate them by providing tasks that change. You can do this by:

  • giving them a new project to work on;
  • increasing their responsibilities; or
  • giving them a different role altogether in your business.

Remember to ensure that you provide your staff with any training necessary for the challenging work you allocate them.

3. Offer Flexible Ways of Working

Offering flexible ways of working is an excellent way to help retain your staff. If your staff can manage their work pattern and methods better, they will likely be happier and want to remain in their roles. Try to tailor working methods to each employee. For example, you may like to offer a different workplace or varying shifts. 

Whilst offering flexible working may worry you in terms of associated costs, the costs of replacing staff are likely to outweigh them. In some circumstances, employers must legally consider flexible working requests. Thus, you could find yourself dealing with flexible working regardless.

Also, as an employer, you have a legal duty to ensure your staffs’ health, safety and well-being. Sometimes, flexible working may help the work-life balance and, therefore, your employees’ well-being. 

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2025 Key UK Employment Law Changes

This factsheet outlines key developments in 2025 affecting workforce management. In particular, the proposed Employment Rights Bill (2024) will drive significant changes, anticipated to start late 2025.

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4. Be Fair

To help retain your staff, you should act fairly in your employment with them. When staff see or experience others receiving better treatment, it is off-putting and may cause them to want to leave your business. 

Acting fairly is part of your duty as an employer. Thus, it should be a way of working in which you already engage in.

5. Value and Appreciate Your Staff

It is essential to show appreciation to your staff. This will make them feel valued and help retain them. You should value and appreciate your staff regularly. Knowing that you are happy with their work, they may want to do more for you. Valuing and appreciating your team will gain respect from other staff and increase the likelihood of them wanting to remain with these people and therefore retain them in your business.

You should also listen to your team and ask for feedback. Encouraging your employees to talk about their work and the workplace can release stress.

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Key Takeaways

Retaining your staff is something you should be aiming for as an employer. If your team works well and is productive for your business, keeping them working for you makes sense. However, you must find ways to increase retention rather than assuming your staff will remain with you. For example, valuing and appreciating your team by letting them know you are happy with their work can be beneficial. Furthermore, consider offering flexible working arrangements that suit their lifestyle better, making them more comfortable at work.

LegalVision provides ongoing legal support for businesses through our fixed-fee legal membership. Our experienced employment lawyers help businesses manage contracts, employment law, disputes, intellectual property, and more, with unlimited access to specialist lawyers for a fixed monthly fee. To learn more about LegalVision’s legal membership, call 0808 196 8584 or visit our membership page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What legal obligations do employers have around flexible working?

In some circumstances, you must legally consider flexible working requests from employees.

Can favouritism in the workplace cause staff to leave?

Yes. When staff experience unfair treatment, they are more likely to leave your business.

How does career progression help retention?

Showing staff clear paths for salary increases, promotions, and training reduces the likelihood of them feeling stuck and seeking roles elsewhere.

What risks come with high staff turnover?

You lose experienced team members, face costly recruitment processes, and must rebuild skills and business knowledge from scratch.

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Sarah Aldersley

Sarah is a Practice Leader in the Corporate team. She began practising as a lawyer at a London law firm, spending three years working as a corporate lawyer in Australia before making the move back to the UK. Sarah specialises in advising startups, SMEs, corporate clients and investors on a variety of corporate matters from company incorporations and business structuring to complex cross-border business sales.

Qualifications: Bachelor of Laws (Hons), King’s College London, England.

Read all articles by Sarah

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