"Only when the last tree has died and
the last river has been poisoned and
the last fish has been caught,
will we realise that
we cannot eat money"
Staff shouldn't be treated as some kind of natural resource to be burned through and discarded after 12 months just to make a few bucks for investors when you flip. I'd classify that as the hollowest form of "success."
At an ethical/moral level, they should care, but at a business level, they should also care. Every time a staff member walks out the door, how much does it cost a company in terms of replacing them?
Not to mention the kind of bad will employee horror stories can generate in the talent pool you're trying to hire from.
Staff shouldn't be treated as some kind of natural resource to be burned through and discarded after 12 months just to make a few bucks for investors when you flip. I'd classify that as the hollowest form of "success."