Your employee does not need to resign to become available to your competitors
Your employee does not need to resign to become available to your competitors. In today’s digital job market, a LinkedIn update, refreshed CV, salary search, or “Open to Work” setting can quietly place them in front of recruiters.
For employers, this means retention starts long before a resignation letter lands. As one of the leading Recruitment Agencies in South Africa, Greys Recruitment, part of the MASA group, understands how quickly talent can become visible and why businesses must act before competitors do.
The recruitment market has changed quietly
There was a time when employees only became available to competitors once they formally applied for jobs. That is no longer how the labour market works.
Today’s recruitment environment is digital, searchable, automated, and always active. Recruiters do not simply wait for applications anymore. They proactively search for talent every day. This means employees can become discoverable long before they actively decide to leave.
LinkedIn itself confirms that users can choose whether their “Open to Work” status is visible publicly, privately to recruiters, or hidden from broader audiences. For employers, that matters enormously. Because once an employee quietly signals availability, recruiters can begin approaching them with opportunities they had never considered before.
An employee may still be performing well, attending meetings, meeting deadlines, and speaking positively about the business. All while already being visible to the external talent market.
For HR teams and business leaders, this means employee retention can no longer be measured only by resignation letters or exit interviews. It must be understood much earlier in the employee journey, at the point where curiosity, market visibility, and recruiter access begin to overlap.
This brings us to a more modern question.
What is Employee Retention in HR Today?
Traditionally, employee retention in HR referred to an organisation’s ability to keep employees long-term by maintaining satisfaction, engagement, and stability. That definition still applies, but modern employee retention has become far more proactive. Today, retention is not simply about preventing resignations. It is about recognising the early moments when employees begin testing the market.
That testing often starts digitally and silently. An employee may:
- Benchmark their salary online
- Browse job opportunities casually
- Update professional job board profiles
- Respond to recruiter outreach
- Compare benefits packages
- Explore hybrid work opportunities
They may not have made a decision to leave. But psychologically, something important has shifted. They have become open to the possibility. And that is when competitors enter the picture.
This is why employee retention in HR must now include market awareness. Employers need to understand not only why employees resign, but also what may cause them to become curious about external opportunities in the first place.
In many cases, that curiosity begins with one simple question: “Am I still being paid fairly?”
Once employees start asking that question, they often begin comparing their current package with what the market is offering. This is where salary benchmarking becomes one of the earliest and strongest signals of potential movement.
Employees are benchmarking themselves constantly
Employees are no longer waiting for annual reviews or recruiter conversations to understand their market value.
Today, they can access a wide range of information almost instantly, including:
- Salary reports
- Recruiter insights
- Industry trend reports
- Compensation comparisons
- Market-related salary data
AI has also made this even easier. Employees can now use AI-powered tools, job platforms, and online salary calculators to compare their pay, skills, experience, and job title against current market expectations within minutes.
This changes employee behaviour.
A staff member may begin with a simple search such as “what is salary benchmarking” or “how to benchmark salary.” Very quickly, that search can become a comparison between their current package and what competitors appear to be offering.
This naturally raises an important question for employers: what is salary benchmarking, and why has it become so important for employee retention?
What is salary benchmarking?
Salary benchmarking is the process of comparing what employees are paid against current market rates for similar roles in the same industry, region, and level of experience. It looks at more than just the basic salary. A proper salary benchmarking process can also compare benefits, incentives, bonuses, flexibility, scarce skills, and total cost-to-company packages.
For South African employers, this has become especially important in 2026. Salary movement is changing. Old Mutual’s latest Remchannel salary data, reported in May 2026, showed that average salary increases in South Africa were around 5.43% in 2026, with employers becoming more selective and performance-focused in how they structure pay and benefits.
For employers, salary benchmarking helps ensure remuneration remains competitive enough to:
- Attract the right talent
- Retain skilled employees
- Reduce avoidable resignations
- Plan salary increases more fairly
- Improve workforce planning
- Support employee retention strategies
For employees, salary benchmarking often becomes a reality check. If they discover they are being paid below market value, they may start questioning whether staying is still in their best interest.
This is why salary benchmarking has become so important for employee retention. A salary gap does not always cause an immediate resignation, but it can create openness. Even satisfied employees may become more receptive to recruiter outreach when they realise competitors may offer higher salaries, better benefits or greater flexibility.
In short, salary benchmarking helps employers identify retention risks before employees find those risks for themselves.
Retention Starts Before Resignation
In today’s labour market, employees no longer need to actively apply for jobs to become visible to competitors. A LinkedIn update, a refreshed CV, an AI-powered salary search, or quietly activating “Open to Work” can place an employee directly into the talent market long before a resignation is ever discussed.
For employers, this changes the way employee retention must be approached. Retention is no longer only about responding when employees decide to leave. It is about understanding the earlier signals that employees may already be questioning their value, exploring opportunities, or becoming receptive to recruiter outreach.
That is why salary benchmarking, workforce visibility, and proactive retention strategies have become essential business priorities in 2026. Employers who regularly review market-related salaries, strengthen employee engagement, and stay aware of changing workforce expectations are far more likely to retain critical talent before competitors step in.
As one of the leading Recruitment Agencies in South Africa, Greys Recruitment and MASA understands that talent does not only move when employees resign. Through strategic recruitment insight, workforce planning, staffing solutions, and market awareness, MASA helps employers identify retention risks sooner and build stronger talent strategies before valuable employees enter a competitor’s pipeline.


