RETENTION 101
In a couple of our previous articles we talked about Retention (Closing the Back
Door) and Counseling. In this article we are going to expand on those two thoughts
What is Retention?
Chapter
5 of the IGR Regs 10-4 states,
"The retention of qualified enlisted personnel is vital to the success of the
IGR in fulfilling its mission."
The regs tell you what you are responsible for but they do not tell you how
to go about it. That's what we are going to do in this article. We are going to give you some of the basic
steps to help you improve your retention program.
Who is responsible?
Chapter 5 once again states,
"The
development and maintenance of a trained Guard Reserve Unit is the responsibility of each Commissioned and Non-Commissioned
Officer."
Basically stated that means that everyone in a Leadership position from the CG on down to the Squad
Leader has a hand in the retention of our soldiers.
All Commanders are responsible for establishing an annual
Retention Program in their Commands. CSMs it is your responsibility to assist your Commander by initiating and maintaining
a Retention Program in your Unit. 1SGs you share that responsibility with your CSM. Platoon SGTs/Section SGTs
your responsibility is to ensure your soldiers are trained and gainfully employed when they are at drill. Front Line
Supervisors (Squad Leaders) you have the toughest job of them all. Before drill you should be contacting your
soldiers to make sure they are prepared for drill. During drill make sure your soldiers are where they are supposed
to be and doing what they are supposed to be doing. After drill contact those soldiers who couldn't attend
and update them on what went on at drill.
The Active Army and the NG task their NCOs with the execution of the
retention mission. IGR NCOs should follow the example set by those components. Commanders should be aware of any
potential losses of soldiers but NCOs we are the ones who are responsible for retaining our soldiers. Depending on where
the soldier sits in the T.O. Roster there are at least one or more NCOs between that soldier and the Commander.
Retention
is one of two parts to a formula that will give you a gain in your Units strength. That formula is an aggressive
recruiting plan with a quality retention program should give you a gain in your Units overall numbers. When we
get a low retention number where does it hit us? It usually hits us in what I call the "STRENGTH POCKET BOOK."
How many times have we been on a mission and look around for soldiers to support that mission and they are just not there.
Where do we begin?
Retention begins on day 1. Once we find out from the G-1 that we have
a new soldier in our Unit this should start a sequence of events. The first phase is the welcome phase. S-1s should
develop and send out a welcome letter. This letter should include pertinent information that is important to the new
soldier getting a good feeling about making the decision to join our organization. It should contain key member's
names and contact numbers, his/her T.O. position, maybe a strip map to the Armory.
CSMs should assign what I like
to call is a "Battle Buddy" to help the new soldier transition into the Unit. It could be a squad member,
perhaps someone who lives close to the new soldier. Maybe they can link up with the new soldier and give them a ride
to the drill. Sometimes a soldier would rather go to their peers for answers than their Leadership. This is where
a well coached "Battle Buddy" comes in. This position should last at least six months.
Once the
new soldier arrives at his/her first drill the next step is to conduct a meet and greet session. Introduce the new soldier;
let them take a few minutes to talk about themselves. Introduce them to the key Leaders in the Unit. Introduce
them to their squad or section members.
The next step is a key element in the soldier's career progress.
The 1SGs should conduct a counseling process. Not the kind that we talked about in our earlier article but career path
counseling. Interview the soldier by asking leading questions. Questions such as, "why did you join the
IGR?' "What are your career goals?" "Where do you see yourself 1 year from now?"
"3 years from now?" Take all this information and put together a career path laying out all the requirements
to help the soldier attain the goals they stated in the interview.
TRACKING ETS DATES
Knowing when a soldier's term of service is about to end is important
when maintaining our strength in numbers. It is important not to let our soldier's re-enlistment overlap their ETS
date. Regulations states that all paperwork concerning a soldiers re-enlistment to include the oath of re-enlistment
(JFHQIN-IGR Form 3-R) must be returned to HQ at least 10 days prior to the individual's normal expiration of term of service.
To help us track and keep our soldiers in good standing we are developing a color-coded system to remind us of those ETS
dates. We will be using a variation of the traffic light colors in that system. Soldiers that are 121-180 days
out from their ETS dates will be in the GREEN ZONE. Those soldiers that are 61-120 days away from ETSing will be in
the AMBER ZONE. Soldiers that are 31-60 days out from their ETS dates will be in the RED ZONE. Finally those soldiers
that are 0-30 days away from ETS will be categorized as in the DANGER CLOSE ZONE. Keep in mind that these dates only
cover the soldiers last six months of his/her term of service. What is important also is the 2 ½ years before
they hit the GREEN ZONE. But that is matter for a later topic to be covered here in the Leader's Tab.
You'll find that retaining our good soldiers by doing some simple basic things is a lot easier than trying to recruit
their replacement.
There is an old saying that goes like this, "its better have a bird in one hand than two
in the bush." I like to think that refers to our Retention Program. Let's keep those good soldiers in
the IGR than go after the other two recruits.