minimum of four months notice if you've got a real problem with an employee, and that's just
light-years better," he says.
While Hoffman doesn't meet with every employee individually, he conducts frequent all hands
meetings to give employees a role in setting company goals and to stay in touch with what their
needs are. Still, especially as your company grows, details of the employee experience will
escape your attention, which is what the exit interview is for. It's the last line of defense against
a bolting employee and it can sometimes yield surprising insights and reveal fixable problems.
For example, when Hoffman's head of accounting quit, everything was going amicably. She gave
plenty of advance notice, she helped train her replacement, it was only at the exit interview that
Hoffman realized why she was leaving. It had nothing to do with the company, she had simply
grown tired of accounting and needed a new challenge. That was all it took and two months later,
the employee returned to the company in a different department and she is now its head buyer.
Attracting the Right Candidates
Over the years, Engage has implemented a number of policies that serve the dual purpose of
attracting potential employees and keeping current ones passionate and committed. Here are a
handful of examples:
Engage gives hiring priority to people who live near the office because they believe that long
commutes are detrimental to work-life balance.
Instead of a traditional vacation policy, the company lets employees take time off from a leave
bank, in which they can accumulate as many as 60 days off to use as they see fit. This policy has
helped with employee retention, particularly by making it easier for female employees starting
families to take time off and ultimately return to work.
During the hiring process, Engage administers the DISC Personality test, which charts the four
characteristics, drive, influence, steadiness, and compliance, to build personality profiles for new
hires. All employees' test results are public knowledge, which Hoffman feels helps people
understand one another and get along.
By setting quarterly goals with rewards attached, such as iPods for the whole team or a trip to a
nice restaurant, Engage can encourage employees beyond the competitive, and potentially
divisive realm of salary bonuses. The group nature of these rewards is important, says Hoffman,
because "somebody who is not motivated by getting an iPod knows that other people in his or
her group are and doesn't want to let them down."