In today’s post-acute and senior living environments, staffing pressure can push leaders toward fast decisions that feel necessary in the moment but often create long-term consequences. Vacancies, overtime, agency reliance, and staff fatigue make “quick hiring” tempting. Yet, ineffective and rushed hiring is one of the most common drivers of turnover, disengagement, and instability.
Quick hiring typically occurs when organizations feel acute pain, such as vacancies, rising agency costs, or exhausted staff. In these moments, leaders may celebrate the number of hires made rather than the quality of those hires. Filling positions without a structured plan often results in onboarding individuals who do not align with organizational values, role expectations, or the realities of healthcare work.
The result of such a hiring approach is predictable: higher early turnover, ongoing overtime, persistent agency use, and disappointment among existing staff who hoped relief was on the way. Instead of improving morale, quick hiring often sends a false signal of hope that quickly fades when new hires leave.
In today’s PATHTalks episode, Clint Maun, President and Senior Partner of Maun-Lemke Consulting, shares why this practice should not be used and how to properly approach staffing.
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