Cover Photo by Felix Dubois-Robert on Unsplash
One of your top performers just left. Again.
The resignation letter sits on your desk—the third one this month from a manager you thought was growing and thriving. You're not alone in this crisis. According to recent large surveys of mental health, the majority of employees struggle with burnout because of their job, with over a third feeling so overwhelmed it made it hard to do their work. The hidden damage runs deeper: large surveys of organizations around mental health and retention find a loss of nearly 20 percent in productivity, contributing to a staggering $8.8 trillion annually. But here's what successful mid-market companies are discovering: a not easy, but simple to understand solution. Leadership development and coaching isn't just a culture-thing or a benefit. It's needed for any strategy not just to innovate and compete but to break the burnout-to-turnover cycle.
The mental health crisis has evolved beyond individual suffering into something systemic. Burnout is a frequent struggle for about of a fifth of the workforce. We often support restaurant and hospitality leaders. In these industries high turnover is unfortunately viewed as an unavoidable cost of doing business. When we add the ups and downs of the past ten years, changes in technology, and a more competitive employment landscape the costs of ignoring employee turnover are high. It makes retail and restaurant managers especially vulnerable to burnout as they cope with record departures and understaffing. Here's a brief walk through of the numbers:
We know turnover doesn't just affect individual contributors. When managers struggle the effects spillover across your team, and bottom line. Direct reports and team members are much more likely to leave when they lose a leader. Customer satisfaction and sales drop, and immeasurable institutional knowledge walks out the door.
The good news? There’s actually a straightforward way to make progress: it’s something everyone can get behind, even if it isn’t always a walk in the park. Putting energy and resources into leadership development and coaching is one of the quickest ways to get ahead of turnover. We’re doubling down on our leaders—the folks at the heart of each team. When your managers have the tools and support they need, that positive impact ripples out, boosting not just team morale, but also retention and performance across the board. Sure, it takes some commitment, but the payoff goes well beyond just keeping people around; it sets your whole team up to thrive even when the pressure’s on.
Sometimes the best evidence comes from real kitchens and dining rooms. Take the story of how we partnered with Taste Buds Management. Turnover decrease from over 100% to 90% within only a few months. Over the following years, turnover continued declining, falling below 40%.
What made the difference wasn't just reduced departures. Chris Rodrigue, an hospitality consultant hired by Taste Buds, noted that "the quality of employees, especially leaders, increased. This elevated training and development of new hires. Employees focused more on growth and viewed the job as more than 'just another paycheck.'" This transformation happened through systematic assessment and development of leadership coaching capabilities.
When Chris moved to a new fast growing hospitality concept he brought this evidence-based approach with him. The results? Within six months of implementing Corvirtus assessments focused on developing and supporting new hires, the group saw a 25% reduction in turnover. Full-time staff numbers notably increased, and positive online guest reviews climbed—which leadership directly attributes to improved retention and more stable teams.
The financial logic was simple: reducing turnover by just seven people would pay for the entire program.
Not all leadership training works. Generic workshops and motivational speeches rarely create lasting change. What does work is evidence-based coaching development grounded in industrial and organizational psychology.
Let's switch gears to another service-driven sector: healthcare. CDC research on healthcare workers reveals the specific factors that reduce burnout. Health workers experience a decrease in odds of burnout if they -
On the flipside, it's not surprising that experiencing counterproductive behaviors like harassment and rudeness (often called incivility) increased the odds of anxiety, depression, and burnout three to five times.
In short, there's a clear path before us turnover and the other damaging consequences of stress and burnout at work. Each of these behaviors starts with leadership and can be strengthened by targeting development and coaching at leaders. It's not about soft skills but teaching key leadership competencies that directly influence team retention.
But for leadership coaching and development to work we need to understand the person: the strengths and vulnerabilities of the collective and each person. Then we can build tailored and targeted development and coaching programs that drive trust and engagement.
This is where an intentional approach to assessment can make the difference. Leadership assessments, whether during the hiring and promotion process, or for development, isolate strengths, ways of working, and areas of opportunity.
Leadership development and coaching succeeds when it tackles real-world workplace headaches and not just textbook theories. Here’s how organizations are trading flavors of the month for bold results, using evidence-based strategies that actually move the needle.
Traditional performance management and reviews usually fall short of driving results. The alternative involves regular coaching conversations—brief weekly touchpoints that assess both performance and wellbeing. With these more frequent connections we can coach the leadership behaviors that drive burnout both for the leader and within the team.
If we step back to the restaurant industry for a moment, burnout weekly discussions around engagement, morale, and well-being might be just as critical as P&L reviews. When we support restaurant leaders with performance feedback we often put into place the following simple disciplines to make behavior change stick:
Coaching that supports and celebrates our strengths and uses them to target our vulnerabilities addresses the whole person and also protects against burnout. It's easy to fall into an approach that focuses precisely on the greatest gaps in performance. However, a weakness-only approach creates a fixed mindset, limiting both personal growth and team progress. By concentrating solely on deficiencies, development efforts reinforce self-doubt. We're more likely to doubt ourselves and trust is likely to decline. This often results in disengagement and burnout, especially in high-stakes, fast-paced industries like customer service and healthcare.
Sustainable (i.e., an intentional program that endures) leadership development means not just identifying and addressing performance gaps, but also growing strengths to build confidence, drive engagement, and inspire continuous improvement. Creating this balanced focus empowers leaders to coach more effectively, ultimately shifting the culture from correction to ongoing growth and innovation.
When we work with organizations for employee promotion, or selection or development and coaching, managers make use of tools like surveys, performance feedback, and assessments to support each person's unique constellation of strengths and vulnerabilities. If we know why a manager excels at customer or guest recovery, perhaps some of those strengths can apply to support them in managing team conflict. A kitchen manager with strong organizational skills may simply need direction to use them as a resource to when they unexpectedly end up in the weeds.
By focusing on strengths, managers and employees shift from a dynamic of criticism to one of true collaboration. They create an environment where trust and a growth mindset flourishes.
When we talk about teaching and coaching, it's easy to overlook that burnout and stress don’t happen on schedule or in predictable cycles. They strike without warning—a punishing double shift, a family crisis, an emotionally charged customer exchange. In those moments, the impact on performance, motivation, and well-being is immediate and profound.
Our approach to employee retention guides leaders to create supportive environments where employees know they are valued by feeling respect, understanding, caring and fairness, even during difficult moments.
This includes training managers to spot early indicators of burnout. With greater awareness, changes like increased absenteeism, a drop in engagement, or noticeable changes in behavior are noticed and acted on. This proactive approach grows from staying connected with the thoughts and feelings of the team.
For example, managers are coached to have direct conversations with employees seem taking on higher workloads or extra shifts, or to ask questions about mistakes following a difficult customer exchange. They also learn to guide teams toward realistic solutions such as scheduling adjustments, opportunities for upskilling, job rotation, and tackling constraints in the work environment. Building daily disciplines that both support the bottom line and the team empowers managers to respond promptly, ensuring employees feel supported in the moment and know where to turn when challenges arise.
For customer-facing organizations operating on thin margins, investing in leadership coaching might seem like a luxury. Let's examine the financial reality with actual data.
When you develop one manager's leadership capabilities, the impact multiplies across their entire team. We know the average manager oversees about 8 to 15 employees, creating a positive spiral of earned trust, psychological safety, improved retention, productivity, and KPIs accomplished throughout the organization.
Photo by Christina @ wocintechchat.com on Unsplash
According to Ernst & Young's Empathy in Business Survey, 86% of U.S. employees said empathetic leadership boosts morale. Morale isn't just a feeling—it's a leading indicator of retention, productivity, and customer satisfaction. We talk a lot about the trust gap hurting both financial results and employee well-being and engagement. While leadership training, coaching, and employee development are often among the first to go during economically tough or uncertain times, there's a case to be made for making them the last.
Different industries see different returns from coaching development:
Restaurants: Beyond the case we shared earlier, our research on operational excellence and the attention to detail and quality it requires shows that teams guided by leaders selected, and then developed, with evidence-based training and coaching reduce food waste by more than 10%, with their teams rated as being eight times more likely consistently deliver.
Healthcare: Becker's Hospital Review, measured the direct cost of nurse turnover at approximately $52,000 per nurse. At the same time, our work around healthcare retention (using both stay interviews and exit interviews) consistently found the immediate supervisor to be the greatest driver (or cause) of retention and commitment, or intentions to leave and turnover. With healthcare turnover clocking in around 20 percent, there's a case for making leadership development and coaching a priority.
Business Services: The impact of coaching and development is pronounced even for knowledge workers that might look at the screen before them more than a human being. For knowledge workers, preparing leaders to actively coach and develop is just as important. This employment group is eager to learn and fearful of missing out on opportunities for knowledge and skill building. A leader not fully engaged in connecting and coaching can be just as harmful. Professionals in business functions like technology, accounting, finance, and human resources, and knowledge workers overall, are vulnerable to information overload. Their work often carries a strong feeling of uncertainty. All of these challenges are coachable especially with self-aware and engage leaders. Leadership becomes even more critical.
The map away from burnout and turnover to retention and greater employee well-being is clear-but still tough to traverse.
What sets us at Corvirtus apart extends beyond our expertise in industrial-organizational psychology and the evidence-based approach that comes from it. We recognize that lasting, meaningful change is achieved through a systematic process: employing assessment, implementing targeted development, and providing consistent support throughout the journey.
Unlike large consulting firms that simply deliver findings and exit, our team remains an active presence. In contrast to technology-only providers who supply solutions that struggle to connect to your systems we value working alongside you.
Central to our philosophy is the understanding that leadership development and coaching are not about cultivating a perfect end state. Rather, it is about equipping real leaders, imperfect people, with practical tools and strategies to enable others to thrive amid the realities of demanding work. Supporting people in this way not only drives business results, but also creates a culture rooted in empathy, trust, and human connection.
Every day we avoid understanding burnout and mental well-being within our leaders and employees, the odds it affects the bottom-line gets even worse. But the process can begin with a single conversation, a single assessment, a single manager who learns to truly support their team.
The ROI is proven it's whether you'll implement it before your next key leader or high potential walks out the door. Because when your managers become coaches what was your crisis becomes your competitive advantage.