In high-volume operations—where speed, output, and precision are everything—turnover is often treated like background noise: frustrating but expected. Distributors pour time and money into hiring, only to watch workers cycle out just as fast.
The problem? Most distributors are using outdated or surface-level strategies that don’t get to the root of the issue.
Here’s what many distributors get wrong about employee retention in high-volume environments—and what it takes to actually keep people around.
Pay is important—but it’s not everything. In many cases, employees leave for better treatment, more predictable schedules, or growth opportunities—not just an extra $0.75 an hour.
People stay where they’re respected and seen, not just paid.
“We have pizza Fridays, raffles, and a breakroom TV. What more do they want?”
Perks are nice—but they don’t fix toxic supervisors, confusing policies, or poor communication.
Build a culture of consistency, fairness, and respect. Train leads and supervisors to:
Culture > swag. Every time.
“We trained them on day one—after that, they should know what to do.”
In high-volume operations, the first 30–60 days are critical. A rushed or overwhelming start leads to early exits.
Retention starts with how you bring people in, not just how you reward them later.
“We run 24/7. They signed up for it—they should deal with the schedule.”
Rigid, unpredictable shifts are one of the biggest causes of burnout. Workers are more likely to leave when they can’t plan their lives.
Flexibility is a competitive advantage, not a weakness.
Time served ≠ leadership ability. A bad lead can drive out great workers faster than any external competitor.
A great leader retains 10 workers. A bad one repels 20.
Feedback that goes nowhere is worse than no feedback at all—it creates distrust and cynicism.
Show your team that what they say actually matters.
Everyone wants to know there’s a path forward—even if it’s just a slight step up. Stagnation leads to disengagement.
Growth builds loyalty. No path? No staying power.
High-volume operations don’t have to accept high turnover as the norm. The real problem isn’t the workforce—it’s the outdated assumptions about what keeps them around.
Retention isn’t solved with quick fixes. It takes leadership, systems, and a culture that values people as much as productivity.
Get those right, and you’ll not only retain your team—you’ll outperform the competition.