@ton.yeung - And if the implementation can no longer be accomplished by the expert, then has their knowledge become obsolete?
Yes, hence the vague terminology of critical knowledge.
It is not well defined, and therefore is rather vague.
It is basically defined on a case by case basis which means that it is highly biased.
Critical knowledge is properly defined as "disciplined thinking that is clear, rational, open-minded, and informed by evidence"
Any interpretation of the phrase "critical knowledge" comes from personal inference based on situation. That inference is where the bias is.
No, I understand the context of the phrase with regards to important employees and their retained knowledge of mission critical aspects of a business.
However, it is not defined anywhere and as long as I eloquently describe how to define it, it seems that is taken as the current definition.
For you, for me, for someone else, for this other person, for spencer, for ryan. There is a large amount of bias in each version of our definitions. That is why it is vague.
I think tech in general does a good job of retaining talent.
Large companies have the issue of leveling off though. And as they level, the upward mobility of their employees stagnates.
That is part of the corporate ladder.
@ton.yeung - That is how finance works, and they are a rather large industry.
Often even returning to the same ship
@ton.yeung - In fact, the tenure overall seems to be based more on the age of the employee than anything else.
It states that engineers have the average tenure of 6.4 years
I don't see any indication of developers in that report. Where are you getting the 2 year number from?
Also, what do you suppose the average age of a developer is?
The BLS states the tenure for "workers ages 25 to 34 years (3.0 years)"
So that would fall under the average for that age group which seems to be a larger factor than by industry.
It doesn't mention age group. It mentions service occupations
It is inline with their age group. As the employee becomes older and more experienced they reach whatever employment goal they had set.
If it were statistically outside of the normal rate that younger employees move around I would argue they are not good at retaining employees but that is not the case.
There is a physical barrier to promoting employees too quickly in most companies.
There is literally no space in the company above the position where that person is.