
Retaining working caregivers starts with understanding why they leave - and flexibility alone is not the answer. Despite widespread investment in hybrid schedules and well-being programs, women and caregivers continue to exit the workforce at alarming rates. The problem is not the policies. It is the conditions underneath them that no policy document has addressed.Most organizations are solving for the visible symptoms while the root causes go untouched. Caregivers are not struggling because they lack resilience or commitment. They are struggling because the systems they work inside were not built for the lives they are actually living - and managers are often the last to know. If you lead people, or influence the leaders who do, this is the conversation worth stopping for. Inside, I solve for:How do organizations retain working caregivers without burning them out?What does it actually cost a company when a caregiver walks out the door?Why are flexibility policies not enough to keep working moms in the workforce?How can managers support caregivers at work before they reach a breaking point?What is the real strategy for retaining women in corporate America right now?ποΈ In this episode, I'm diving into:Why working caregivers - especially women - are leaving the workforce at increasing rates, and why it is not because they are opting outThe real operational cost organizations absorb when a caregiver leavesWhy flexibility has become the baseline and what actually drives retentionThe root causes of caregiver burnout that managers can directly influenceHow Maslow's hierarchy of needs reveals a blind spot in corporate learning and developmentThe three pillars of caregiver support - structure, culture, and career Why only 42% of burned-out employees ever tell their manager they are strugglingThe concept of leaving "loudly" and how it creates psychological safetyWhat propinquity means, why it reframes the in-office debateWhy framing caregiver burnout as a women's issue limits real changeπ‘ Key reframes from this conversation:Not: Flexibility is a competitive differentiator for retaining caregivers β But: Flexibility is now the baseline expectation. What sets organizations apart is the quality of their managers and the intentionality of their cultureNot: Burnout is a personal problem that employees need to manage β But: Burnout is an operational risk with a measurable price tag, and managers have more leverage over it than most realizeNot: Supporting working caregivers means waiting for them to raise their hand β But: Proactive check-ins and psychological safety determine whether caregivers stay long before they ever reach a crisis pointThis episode is a direct address to the people leaders and organizational decision-makers who have more power than they may realize. The caregiving crisis is not happening somewhere else - it is happening inside your teams, quietly, right now! Women are not leaving because they lack ambition; they are leaving because the systems around them were not built for the lives they are actually living. The good news is that managers - not policy documents - are the most powerful retention tool an organization has. If you know someone in a leadership role who needs to hear this, getting this episode in front of them may be one of the most useful things you do this week. And if you are a working mom ready to build the systems that help you stay sustainable at work and at home, the free training linked below is a strong place to start.π Resources mentioned:π§ 3-Minute Boundary Self-Check Quiz π§ FREE TRAINING (hosted bi-annually): How to Go from Surviving to Thriving as a Working Mom ποΈ Episode 67: [Conditions That Cause Burnout to Quietly Sneak Up on High Performers] π± Connect with Courtney on Instagram π Learn more about The Life Management System https://workingmomsmovement.com π The Tipping Point (Revisited) by Malcolm Gladwellπ₯ Watch <a href="https://youtu.be/6P-8XxyNHiE?si=TfGK_cUjGQTdDTeM" targe
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