The hospitality industry has been talking about its staff turnover problem for years.
The causes are well documented. The consequences are felt daily. And yet hospitality employee turnover remains higher than almost any other sector in the UK.
So the real question is not why turnover is high. It is why, despite knowing exactly why, so little has actually changed.
Walk into most hotel management meetings and someone will mention staffing within the first ten minutes. Budgets are built around it. Rotas are designed around it. Entire recruitment processes exist to manage it.
But managing a problem is not the same as fixing it.
The operators making real progress on hospitality staff retention are not the ones who have accepted churn as the cost of doing business. They are the ones who stopped treating it as inevitable and started treating it as an operations problem.
That distinction matters more than anything else in this conversation.
Hospitality employs a higher proportion of young workers than almost any other UK sector. That brings energy and adaptability. It also means a significant portion of the frontline workforce is in a life stage defined by movement. When hospitality roles feel like a stepping stone rather than a destination, people treat them that way.
Many hospitality businesses still operate with a seasonal staffing mindset even when the roles they are filling are year-round:
When that becomes the default, it creates a self-fulfilling cycle. The organisation does not invest in people. People do not stay. And high turnover gets blamed on the industry rather than the approach.
In hospitality, competing for talent happens on the same street. Hotels, restaurants, and venues draw from the exact same local pool. If the property next door offers better shift patterns or a less chaotic working environment, word travels fast.
Hospitality staff retention is a property-level problem. The operators winning are treating it that way.
Here is where the conversation usually goes wrong.
Operators acknowledge the structural pressures and use them as a reason not to act. But the same structural pressures produce dramatically different retention outcomes across comparable properties.
The difference almost always comes down to three things.
High hospitality staff turnover is heavily concentrated in the first 90 days. That is not a recruitment problem. It is an onboarding problem. New starters who are not properly set up, given clear expectations, or made to feel like the organisation thought about their arrival disengage fast. The role was not wrong for them. The experience of joining was.
The literal, daily experience of doing the job drives more departures than most operators want to admit:
When the answer to most of those is the wrong one, even employees who want to stay start looking elsewhere. Hospitality workers leave not because of pay alone, but because the working environment was not what they expected.
Today's hospitality workforce wants to know there is somewhere to go. Not just a job, but a direction. In properties where progression feels unclear or out of reach, people treat their role as temporary. And then it is.
On Thursday, 12th March at 2:00 pm GMT / 10:00 am EST, Snapfix is hosting a free 60-minute live webinar with the people closest to this problem every day: senior hoteliers who have worked through it, recruitment specialists reshaping how hospitality hiring works, and organisations focused on building the long-term talent pipeline the industry needs.
No theory. Just honest, frontline insight on what is actually working in hospitality recruitment and retention right now, and what you can take back to your property the same week.
What you will cover:
👉 Register free and save your place