The Challenge
UKG's Clunky System Blocks Employee Engagement
When COVID-19 hit, Gurley Leep successfully shifted recruiting back into managers’ hands, but leadership struggled to keep employees engaged once onboarded.
Inefficient Onboarding Impacts 90-Day Retention Rates
The automotive industry is known for its high turnover and fierce competition for talent. Gurley Leep can have 50-60 positions open across locations at any given time, and three dedicated HR team members onboard new hires daily. However, if the recruiting and onboarding experience isn’t seamless, new talent may not stick around.
Bobbi explains, “We do move people through the system very quickly because we don't want to lose them. So you are trying to keep their interest, even after they've given notice at their previous position, and making sure they don't back out or opt for a counteroffer.”
Before Paylocity, a dedicated employee handled all the recruiting through UKG, but it reduced visibility for HR, managers, and new hires. Gurley Leep needed a solution that ensured all parties stayed informed during the recruiting and onboarding process.
Communication and Culture Breakdowns Impact the Employee Experience
Gurley Leep’s locations stretch across the Midwest, so quick, effective, and engaging communication is imperative. Unfortunately, pre-Paylocity, company-wide communication fell to mass emails and private Facebook groups that left out employees who didn’t have social media.
Without a centralized hub for communication and documentation, employees inundated HR with emails asking, “Can you send me this document?” Because their team was always on-the-go, they needed a flexible solution that didn't require computer access, and UKG fell short. UKG's mobile app had limited functionality, so employees faced limitations accessing important documents like W-2s.
Moreover, it wasn’t easy for employees to share their thoughts about their experience, denying Gurley Leep the crucial feedback it needed to improve recruitment and retention efforts. Bobbi shares, “Our marketing people helped put together surveys, but there was no consistency.” Gurley Leep needed a system that could gather employee feedback in one place, automate surveys during employee milestones, and standardize surveys for ease of use.