octavious
576

Hello
Follow the link below
https://www.citehr.com/97361-calcula...-turnover.html
Thank You
Octavious
https://www.citehr.com/99968-major-h...tml#post386938

From India, Mumbai
c2_sharad
1

Dear All,

Following is the formula of attrition with example & proven logic.


((no. Of attritions x 100) / (Actual Employees + New Joined)) /100.

Examples:

1) Actual Employees No. Of people left No. Of Joined Total Employees
(Opening BAL) (Attritions) (Current Headcount)
150 20 25 155

So according to the formula: ((20 x 100) / (150 + 25)) / 100
Which comes to 0.1142 i.e. 11%

Now as you had 150 previously and now 25 joined so it makes 150 + 25 =175
Now if you calculate 11.42% of 175 i.e. 175 x 0.1142 = 20

Which clearly shows that 175 - 20 = 155, which is your current headcount and at the same time you can say my attrition is 11.42% that shows you lost 20 employees of 150 and 25 more joined which makes count to 175.

2) Actual Employees No. Of people left No. Of Joined Total Employees
(Opening BAL) (Attritions) (Current Headcount)
100 50 0 50

This is the special case where we are considering attritions only keeping into mind that nobody has joined in particular month.

So according to the formula: ((50 x 100) / (100)) / 100
Which comes to 0.5 i.e. 50%
Now as you had 100 previously and now 0 joined so it makes 100 + 0 =100
Now if you calculate 50% of 100 i.e. 100 x 0.5 = 50
Which clearly shows that 100 - 50 = 50, which is your current headcount and at the same time you can say my attrition is 50% that shows you lost 50 employees of 100 and 0 joined which makes count to 50.

3) Actual Employees No. Of people left No. Of Joined Total Employees
(Opening BAL) (Attritions) (Current Headcount)
500 200 100 400

So according to the formula: ((200 x 100) / (500 +100)) / 100
Which comes to 0.3333 i.e. 33.33%
Now as you had 500 previously and now 100 joined so it makes 500 + 100 =600
Now if you calculate 33.33% of 600 i.e. 600 x 0.3333 = 200
Which clearly shows that 600 - 200 = 400, which is your current headcount and at the same time you can say my attrition is 33.33% that shows you lost 200 employees of 500 and 100 more joined which makes count to 400.

4) Actual Employees No. Of people left No. Of Joined Total Employees
(Opening BAL) (Attritions) (Current Headcount)
8000 5000 500 3500

So according to the formula: ((5000 x 100) / (8000 +500)) / 100
Which comes to 0.5882 i.e. 58.82%
Now as you had 8000 previously and now 500 joined so it makes 8000 + 500 =8500
Now if you calculate 58.82% of 8500 i.e. 8500 x 0.5882 = 5000 Which clearly shows that 8500 - 5000 = 3500, which is your current headcount and at the same time you can say my attrition is 58.82% that shows you lost 5000 employees of 8000 and 500 more joined which makes count to 3500.

Regards,
Sharad

From India, Mumbai
octavious
576

Hello
Follow the below link mentioned, hope the same will help you
https://www.citehr.com/97361-calcula...-turnover.html
Thank You
Octavious
https://www.citehr.com/99968-major-hr-links.html#post386938

From India, Mumbai
Meenakshi Dutta
5

Hi,
We are using this formula to calculate :
Attrition = no of employees left in month*100/total no of employees in month.
Is it the correct one and in case if u are using someother then pls do mail me on this id :

From India, Sangrur
samsen123
2

yes meenakshi is right. even i am aware of this formula only in case you know some other method. plz mail me
From India, Faridabad
sara.orchid
I have calulated attritonrate by using the fundamental below ie
total no. of left amployees x 100
emplyees on the 1st dayof the month
But this doesnt seem to be working out. Can any body please help me.
Regards
Anuja

From India, Mumbai
sara.orchid
I have vacany for the post of HR Co-ordinator - profile would be trime - office, mis, welfare activiteis, collaboration with bank etc. if somebody is interested contact me on
Regards
Anuja

From India, Mumbai
MINESH PANDYA
6

Hi,

This is for information to all.
<LI class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt; COLOR: black; mso-margin-top-alt: auto; mso-margin-bottom-alt: auto; mso-list: l0 level1 lfo1; tab-stops: list .5in">Attrition: Number of employees who left in the year / average employees in the year x 100. Thus, if the company had 1,000 employees in April 2004, 2,000 in March 2005, and 300 quit in the year, then the average employee strength is 1,500 and attrition is 100 x (300/1500) = 20 percent.
A graded system can probably depict the true picture.

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Fresher attrition: the number of freshers who left within one year. It tells you how many are using the company as a springboard.

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Infant mortality: percentage of people who left within one year. This indicates the ease with which people adapt to the company.

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Critical resource attrition: key men exit.

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Low performance attrition: those who left due to poor performance.

MINESH PANDYA

From India, Vadodara
Rajesh 2002
This can be calculated....
No of employees left during the month / no of employee at the start of month + new joinees during the month/12
At the end of the year no of emplyees left / Avg. Manpower
Further clarification you can mail me on
Rajesh Kumar Bhat


rasinha 19
2

No of people left/No of people recruited+actual no of people in the org Xno of months if you want to calculate for 12 months for a year formula x12 Ra Sinha
From India, Hyderabad
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