IntroductionThe identification, development, and retention of high-potential employees is one of the most important areas of research in industrial-organizational (I-O) psychology. Whereas the vast majority of the workforce will perform in ways that do promote organizational goals, the top performers in any organization are those that provide the firm with its competitive advantage. On the contrary, organizations that do not actively seek to identify, develop, and retain high-potential employees stand to lose a lot as top talent may seek opportunities to maximize potential elsewhere—often a competitor. Moreover, the high potential employees are those with the greatest potential to lead the firm in the future, paving the way for effective succession training and management.
Research on the identification, development, and retention of high-potential employees is burgeoning, but there are significant gaps in the literature. Filling those gaps would help organizations create and implement evidence-based practices to ensure the success of the organization, future-proofing it via succession planning. Moreover, organizational practices have yet to keep up with I-O research on developing and retaining high-potential employees. Surveys show that current human resources processes “suffer from subjectivity, bias and disagreements,” (Palshikar, Sahu & Srivastava, 2016, p. 208). On the other hand, research has been increasingly pointing to the need for transparent, formalized processes and procedures that identify high-potential employees and openly cultivate those employees via mentoring, special assignments, and other methods (Zhu & Manjarrez, 2017). It is important to know how high-potential employees respond to specific types of incentives, mentoring methods, and formal approaches to employee training and development. Organizations that apply evidence-based practices to developing and retaining high-potential employees are more likely to receive returns on their investments.
Review of Literature
Somewhere between 40 and 60 percent of global organizations have formal high potential employee development programs, such as fast-tracking, in place (Dries & DeGieter, 2013). The reason these programs are being increasingly put into place in spite of their additional costs is that high-potential employees are known to be “twice as valuable to an organization” compared to the average employee, and are “75 percent more likely to succeed in a senior position,” (Downs, 2015, p. 349). The return on investment in high-potential employees is obvious, particularly when leadership stability and future proofing a company are taken into account as strategic advantages. Some of the most important factors influencing high-potential employees to remain in an organization relate to structural and organizational culture variables including leadership, cohesive organizational purpose, formal development opportunities, the perception of meaningful work, and collegiality in the workplace environment (Letchmiah & Thomas, 2017). Organizational supports play a crucial role in the decisions made by high-potential employees, whether they are formally identified as such or not.
Formal identification procedures are more common in organizations than...
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