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America has a serious employee retention problem, and the powersports industry is no exception. Studies suggest that more than half of today’ s workforce is at least considering JAN PLESSNER a career move.
Some employees leave to gain experience at a higher level elsewhere. More responsibility, a fresh challenge, better compensation, improved work / life balance, and moving
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closer to aging parents are all top reasons we see high-caliber, talented pros move on.
When individuals move to another industry, many do not return. This creates a long-term leadership and talent shortage in our industry.
Others boomerang back into the industry they love when the right opportunity presents itself. I regularly receive calls from these“ stronger than before” candidates, and it feels great.
MY BOOMERANG STORY On the eve of a major corporate restructuring at Kawasaki in 2001, after 11 years of service, I was informed that six positions in the watercraft division( including mine) were slated for elimination.
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Thanks to my Kawasaki boss and mentor, I landed on my feet in a senior management role at the Motorcycle Industry Council( MIC). I gained valuable leadership experience, strengthened my media relations skills, and broadened my industry exposure.
Two years later, I was rehired by Kawasaki as the PR Manager. I spent another decade with Kawasaki before pivoting to talent search. That experience continues to shape how I think about retention and long-term leadership development in the powersports industry.
WHY PEOPLE REALLY LEAVE I have spent 13 years in the powersports talent search arena. My experience is that
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most people leave for more than one reason, but the primary driver is often a stalled career. In a nutshell, organizations unintentionally trap their best employees in the role they currently perform best, rather than preparing them for the role they could grow into next. What does this look like?
• No visible or viable path for advancement
• No leadership development
• Managers protecting turf
• Promises without action
While passion may bring people into powersports, growth opportunities determine whether they stay.
Eventually, ambitious people begin to look elsewhere for the next chapter of their development, and that is when my phone rings.
Every time a dealership loses a highpotential employee, it loses more than a position. It loses momentum, culture, institutional knowledge, and often a future leader who could have helped elevate the entire organization.
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