Towards a U.S. Army officer corps strategy for success : retaining talent /


Autoria(s): Wardynski, Casey.; Colarusso, Michael J.; Lyle, David S. (David Stephen), 1971-; Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute.
Data(s)

05/10/2024

Resumo

Over the last 3 decades, dramatic labor market changes and well-intentioned but uninformed policies have created significant officer talent flight. Poor retention engenders substantial risk for the Army as it directly affects accessions, development, and employment of talent. The Army cannot make thoughtful policy decisions if its officer talent pipeline continues to leak at current rates. Since the Army cannot insulate itself from labor market forces as it tries to retain talent, the retention component of its officer strategy must rest upon sound market principles. It must be continuously resourced, executed, measured, and adjusted across time and budget cycles. Absent these steps, systemic policy, and decisionmaking failures will continue to confound Army efforts to create a talent-focused officer corps strategy.

"This monograph is the third in a series of six that analyze the development of an officer corps strategy"--P. ii.

"January 2010."

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction -- Talent retention generates benefits and mitigates risks -- "Company man" employment practices cannot compete in today's labor market -- The Army must build talent retention policies upon sound theory -- From theory to practice : building successful retention policies -- Evaluating existing retention programs -- Conclusion.

Over the last 3 decades, dramatic labor market changes and well-intentioned but uninformed policies have created significant officer talent flight. Poor retention engenders substantial risk for the Army as it directly affects accessions, development, and employment of talent. The Army cannot make thoughtful policy decisions if its officer talent pipeline continues to leak at current rates. Since the Army cannot insulate itself from labor market forces as it tries to retain talent, the retention component of its officer strategy must rest upon sound market principles. It must be continuously resourced, executed, measured, and adjusted across time and budget cycles. Absent these steps, systemic policy, and decisionmaking failures will continue to confound Army efforts to create a talent-focused officer corps strategy.

Mode of access: Internet.

Formato

bib

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015075693997

URN:ISBN:1584874252

URN:ISBN:9781584874256

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Carlisle, PA : Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College,

Relação

Also available online in PDF format from Strategic Studies Institute (SSI) web site. Adobe Acrobat Reader required.

Direitos

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Palavras-Chave #United States. Army #United States. Army #United States. Army #Military planning #Employee retention
Tipo

text