Attracting and retaining skilled and professional staff in remote locations of Australia
Fiona Haslam McKenzieGraduate School of Business, Curtin University, 78 Murray Street, Perth, WA 6000, Australia. Email: f.mckenzie@curtin.edu.au
The Rangeland Journal 33(4) 353-363 https://doi.org/10.1071/RJ11024
Submitted: 2 May 2011 Accepted: 19 October 2011 Published: 29 November 2011
Abstract
Remote Australia constitutes ~75% of the continent and is a dry, often harsh environment in which to live; consequently less than 3% of Australia’s population reside there but it is also where a substantial proportion of Australia’s export wealth is derived. It is therefore important that attention is paid to ensuring that remote locations in Australia are liveable and that innovative strategies are pursued to attract and retain a productive workforce in these places. Attracting and retaining skilled and professional staff is a problem not limited to remote, or even rural and regional locations in Australia. There is strong evidence to suggest that it is increasingly a global problem and organisations throughout the world are seeking innovative strategies to attract and develop new talent and developing other strategies to retain that talent. This paper examines population and labour mobility trends in remote Australia and the issues that have been influential on rates of staff attraction and retention, most particularly adequate housing, services and infrastructure. The second half of the paper examines a variety of recommendations and strategies developed by the public and private sectors to more effectively attract and retain skilled and professional staff to remote locations. This paper does not claim to be a rigorous analysis of all remote areas of Australia nor a comprehensive study of attraction and retention strategies. Rather, it aims to highlight the complexity, depth and interconnectedness of the issues for communities, public and private sectors and how they apply in remote locations in Australia.
Additional keywords: attraction, labour force, retention sustainable communities.
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