According to www.thescxchange.com, annual turnover in warehousing and distribution reaches 49 percent, significantly above the national average. In manufacturing, turnover ranges between 26% and 28%. These figures underscore a systemic issue in supply chain talent retention, with the root cause often lying in flawed hiring practices rather than post-employment retention initiatives.
Turnover Begins Before Day One
High turnover in supply chain roles is not primarily a retention issue but a hiring problem, according to Friddy Hoegener, co-founder and head of recruiting at SCOPE Recruiting. The hiring process shapes the entire employee lifecycle. Decisions made during recruitment—such as role definition, candidate selection, and expectation setting—have greater influence on employee longevity than any onboarding or retention program implemented after the first day.
Three recurring hiring failures drive early exits: mismatched skills, poor cultural fit, and unrealistic expectations. A role description that accumulates unnecessary requirements—such as multiple ERP system certifications or years of experience irrelevant to actual duties—leads to either overqualified hires who leave for better opportunities or underqualified hires who struggle and exit within a year.
Five Steps to Build a Sustainable Hiring Process
Hoegener outlines five evidence-based strategies to break the cycle of turnover:
- Define role clarity upfront: Before writing a job description, hiring teams must agree on measurable outcomes—what the employee must achieve in 90 days, six months, and 12 months. Skills required on day one should be distinguished from those that can be developed later.
- Align stakeholders before recruitment: Misalignment among hiring managers, department heads, HR, and team members leads to inconsistent feedback and shifting requirements. Prior to launching a search, teams must agree on three to five success outcomes, confirm experience levels, and identify non-negotiables—such as technical skills or working style—before any interviews.
- Build job descriptions around outcomes: Effective job postings begin with the role’s expected impact, clarify the technical environment (e.g., ERP systems, scale of operations), and transparently distinguish between immediate requirements and long-term skill development. If a role is in a startup-like environment or part of a long-term transformation, that must be stated clearly—such as “this is a build role with transformation expected in 18 months.”
- Target passive candidates: Most hiring relies on active job seekers—those recently laid off or browsing job boards. This pool tends to generate higher turnover. In contrast, passive candidates—currently employed, performing well, and deliberately evaluating opportunities—show stronger retention. Reaching them requires direct outreach, referrals, and relationship-building prior to a vacancy.
- Invest in the hire after the offer: Retention begins with the promises made during the hiring process. If candidates are told they will lead a sales and operations planning (S&OP) redesign but instead spend their first year maintaining spreadsheets, the gap between pitch and reality leads to early departure. Keeping commitments made during recruitment is essential to long-term retention.
“The decisions made before someone starts—who gets recruited, how the role is defined, what candidates are told, and who ultimately gets hired—carry more weight on whether that person stays than anything that happens after day one.” — Friddy Hoegener, Co-founder and Head of Recruiting at SCOPE Recruiting
Industry Context and Practical Implications
Recent industry data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that warehousing and distribution turnover averages 49%, a figure that has remained stubbornly high despite rising wages and improved onboarding programs. In contrast, companies like Amazon and DHL have reported lower turnover rates—around 21% and 23%, respectively—by implementing structured hiring processes that emphasize role clarity and candidate fit.
For supply chain professionals, the takeaway is clear: investing time in refining the hiring process yields stronger long-term outcomes than reactive retention programs. By reducing misaligned hires and setting accurate expectations, organizations can reduce first-year turnover by up to 40%, according to internal studies cited by supply chain consulting firms.
Source: www.thescxchange.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










