Most employers know the value of an exit interview. When an employee resigns, agencies often ask why they are leaving and what could have been done differently. The problem, of course, is that by the time an exit interview takes place, the employee has already decided to move on.
What if agencies asked those questions before employees started looking for the exit?
That is the idea behind a “stay interview”: a conversation with a current employee designed to better understand what keeps them engaged, what challenges they are experiencing, and what might cause them to leave. “Stay interviews” can provide valuable information that agencies can use to improve employee satisfaction and reduce turnover.
This post describes these types of interviews, including their numerous benefits, and concludes with a discussion of some of the legal considerations employers need to navigate in conducting them.
Why Stay Interviews Matter
Finding qualified candidates has become increasingly difficult in many fields, particularly public safety, public works, information technology, and other specialized areas.
At the same time, agencies may overlook one of the most effective retention tools available: asking current employees about their workplace experience before they become dissatisfied enough to leave. Unlike performance evaluations, stay interviews are not intended to assess employee performance. Instead, they are an opportunity for agencies to learn what employees value about their jobs and what improvements might encourage them to remain with the organization.
Even if an agency cannot address every concern, simply asking employees for feedback can demonstrate that leadership is interested in understanding their experiences.
What Should Agencies Ask?
A stay interview does not need to be lengthy or formal. In many cases, a supervisor or manager can conduct a brief conversation focused on a few key questions.
Examples include:
- What do you enjoy most about your job?
- What makes your work challenging or frustrating?
- What motivates you to stay with the agency?
- Are there skills or experiences you would like to develop?
- What could the agency do to better support you?
The goal is not to collect perfect data. The goal is to identify trends and opportunities for improvement before retention issues become resignation letters.
Listen for Themes, Not Just Individual Concerns
Looking for recurring themes can help agencies identify issues that may be affecting morale across departments or classifications.
Stay interviews can also help agencies identify strengths. If employees consistently highlight supportive supervisors, meaningful work, or positive workplace culture, leadership can focus on preserving those qualities.
Set Realistic Expectations
One of the biggest mistakes agencies can make is treating a stay interview as a promise session.
Employees may raise concerns that the agency cannot immediately address due to budget constraints, operational needs, collective bargaining obligations, or other considerations. Supervisors should avoid making commitments they may not be able to fulfill. Instead, supervisors can acknowledge concerns, explain that feedback will be considered, and communicate honestly about what changes may or may not be possible.
Employees are often more interested in being heard than receiving an immediate solution.
Public Agencies Should Consider Labor Relations Issues
For public agencies with represented employees, stay interviews may raise labor relations considerations that are not present in a typical exit interview. Before launching a stay interview program, agencies should consider whether the program or the topics discussed could trigger obligations under the Meyers-Milias-Brown Act (“MMBA”) or other applicable public sector labor relations laws.
One concern is the risk of “direct dealing” with represented employees. If stay interviews are used to solicit employee input regarding wages, hours, benefits, working conditions, or other negotiable subjects, employee organizations may argue that the agency is bypassing the union and communicating directly with represented employees about matters that should be addressed through the collective bargaining process. Agencies should consider discussing the purpose and structure of any stay interview program with the applicable employee organization before implementation and consult counsel regarding any bargaining obligations.
Agencies should also be careful not to create the appearance that employees are being pressured to disclose their views regarding union activities, labor relations issues, or workplace concerns. Questions that employees perceive as coercive or as seeking information about protected concerted activity could create unnecessary labor relations issues. Supervisors conducting stay interviews should receive guidance on appropriate topics and understand how to respond if discussions turn to union-related matters.
Finally, although stay interviews are intended to focus on employee engagement and retention, conversations do not always go as planned. If an interview begins to focus on alleged misconduct, performance deficiencies, or other matters that could reasonably lead to discipline, agencies should be mindful of potential Weingarten rights. Specifically, in represented workplaces, employees may have the right to union representation during an investigatory interview that the employee reasonably believes could result in disciplinary action. Supervisors should understand when a stay interview may be shifting into a different type of conversation and seek guidance as appropriate. (In addition, for public safety officers and firefighters, stay interviews can carry the same type of risk under the Public Safety Officers Procedural Bill of Rights Act (POBRA) and the Firefighters Procedural Bill of Rights Act (FOBRA) respectively. These risks primarily arise when such interviews could be construed as interrogations or investigations that might lead to punitive action, and thus give to rise to procedural protections.)
Remember That Some Issues Require Follow-Up
Although stay interviews are intended as retention tools, they may uncover issues that require additional attention. For example, an employee may report concerns involving harassment, discrimination, workplace safety, or other issues that trigger agency obligations to investigate or take corrective action. Supervisors conducting stay interviews should understand when concerns need to be elevated through established reporting channels.
Agencies may also wish to provide guidance or training to supervisors before implementing a stay interview program to ensure conversations are conducted consistently and appropriately.
Start Small
A stay interview program does not need to be complicated. The most important step is simply creating opportunities for employees to share feedback before they decide to leave.
While exit interviews can help agencies understand why employees left, stay interviews may help agencies learn what they can do to encourage employees to stay. Stay interviews give agencies an opportunity to identify concerns, strengthen employee engagement, and improve retention before turnover occurs.






