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HomeTechIT workers more inclined to quit than non-IT employees: Gartner Survey

IT workers more inclined to quit than non-IT employees: Gartner Survey


IT workers are more inclined to quit their jobs than employees in other functions, according to a survey by Gartner, Inc.


Gartner surveyed 18,000 employees globally in Q4 2021, including 1,755 employees in the IT function. Responses were collected monthly across 40 different countries in 15 languages.

As per the survey, IT workers had a 10.2 per cent lower intent to stay with their current employer than non-IT employees — the lowest out of all corporate functions.

“While talent retention is a common C-level concern, CIOs are at the epicenter, with a huge chunk of their workforce at risk,” said Graham Waller, vice president and distinguished analyst at Gartner.

“We’ve heard of IT organisations implementing back-to-the-office policies only to face mass resignations and have to reverse course. CIOs may need to advocate for more flexibility in work design than the rest of the enterprise, as IT employees are more likely to leave, in greater demand and more adept at remote working than most other employees,” Waller added.

Globally, mere 29.1 per cent of IT workers have high intent to stay with their current employer, but the number is much lower in Asia (19.6 per cent), Australia and New Zealand (23.6 per cent) and Latin America (26.9 per cent). Even in Europe, the best performing region, only four in ten IT workers (38.8 per cent) have high intent to stay.

The IT talent retention challenge varies by age group and region. For instance, IT workers aged under 30 reported two and a half times less likelihood to stay than those over 50. 

As per the report, only 19.9 per cent of IT workers who are aged 18 to 29 years have a high likelihood to stay, compared to 48.1 per cent of those aged 50-70 years.

“Data shows that more flexible and human-centric work policies can reduce attrition and increase performance,” the report said.

As per a Gartner survey of 3,000 employees conducted across a wide range of industries, functions and geographies in 2021, 65 per cent of IT employees said that whether they can work flexibly will impact their decision to stay at the organisation.

Gartner analysts further said that “CIOs should use a data-driven approach to identify workers who are most at risk and most valuable, and tailor hybrid work policies to keep them engaged and high-performing.”

“A human-centric work model can improve talent and business outcomes. To achieve it, Gartner advises CIOs to rethink outdated assumptions about work that are unnecessarily limiting,” it added.

These important factors include working hours, office centricity and meetings.

“Progressive enterprises are empowering people and teams to decide when they do their best work and pioneering new schedules such as the four-day week,” it said.

Further, many organisations are now planning for a hybrid future that recognises employees can be fully productive remotely for ‘heads-down’ work, while the office is best suited for certain work activities such as human connection and collaboration.

“The culture of meetings started in the 1950s when people had to come together physically to make decisions. Now, asynchronous and synchronous collaboration tools enable distributed decisioning making, collaboration and creativity,” it added.

“CIOs who adopt a human-centric work design will out-hire, out-retain and out-perform those that revert back to industrial-era work paradigms,” said Waller.

Published on


March 12, 2022



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