Life Sciences: Five Principles for Effective Talent Management
Life sciences and analytical instruments organizations are developing programs to attract and retain top tech talent to push innovation. How are best-in-class organizations crafting and executing a cohesive commercial talent management strategy?
Alexander Group recently surveyed 250+ commercial leaders in life sciences and analytical instruments to gain their insights on the best practices for developing a talent management strategy that truly brings a competitive advantage.
The report, Five Principles for Effective Talent Management in Life Sciences, is now available. Highlights include:
- Companies that invest in employee engagement programs achieve higher customer experience ratings.
- Life Sciences companies lead in having diversity targets for hiring and retention, but lag in reporting progress across those targets.
- Life sciences candidates move through the talent funnel quickly, with companies taking approximately three weeks to open generalist rep positions.
- Companies that measure employee skills and competencies on a quarterly basis realize a ~20% reduction in employee attrition due to insufficient training.
- Compensation is the #1 reason candidates accept hiring offers and is also the top reason employees resign; the dollar amount, however, is not the only component that matters.
Interested in finding out more on how to develop advanced practices for talent management?
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