Early-tenure turnover isn’t just a staffing issue, it’s a signal that something is missing in the employee experience. The Summer 2025 webinar co-hosted by AONL & Laudio Insights surfaced fresh data and grounded wisdom on what truly keeps nurses in the profession—and what’s unintentionally pushing them out.
The big takeaway? It’s not about doing more—it’s about showing up. The presence, support, and timing of a nurse manager’s involvement is one of the strongest levers for retention.
Here’s what stood out.
The Hidden Cost of Span of Control
Everyone’s aware that large spans of control are a challenge—but the data revealed just how sharp the impact can be on early-tenure nurse turnover:
- Managers with 45 direct reports had ~27% turnover.
- Those with 90+ reports saw that number jump to ~40%.
Even though total tenure turnover stays more stable, it’s the early-tenure nurses, those in the first year, who are most vulnerable to disengagement when managerial support is diluted.
👉 Implication: Reducing span of control isn’t just about workflow. It’s about creating space for trust, visibility, and support to form when nurses need it most.
Not All Check-Ins Are Created Equal
You know the typical cadence: 30, 60, 90 days. But the data challenged assumptions:
- 30–45 day check-ins led by the manager showed a 10 percentage point boost in retention.
- 90-day check-ins had negligible impact.
- Assistant manager-led check-ins? They actually correlated with lower retention.
Why? Nurses want a real relationship with their direct leader. That connection sets the tone for coaching, confidence, and commitment.
👉 Recommendation: Audit your check-in strategy—not just for timing, but for who’s in the room.
Building Belonging Before Day One
The most effective leaders are starting long before orientation:
- Personalized emails at graduation
- Introductions to teammates
- Photo + fun fact shares before arrival
These seemingly small acts created early signals of inclusion. Once nurses were on-site, pairing them with both a clinical preceptor and a dedicated mentor provided safe spaces for both technical and emotional support.
“We celebrate wins. We coach through misses. And we don’t wait 90 days to find out if someone’s struggling.” – Nurse Leader
Making Psychological Safety Real
“Psychological safety” often gets lip service. But in the webinar, leaders described naming it explicitly in feedback conversations.
- “I want to have a psychologically safe conversation with you.”
- “Thank you for modeling psychological safety just now.”
Pair that with zero-tolerance for incivility, and examples of new grads stopping the line in high-stakes settings—and you begin to shift culture.
👉 Culture tip: Storytelling matters. Share real examples of psychological safety in action.
From Residency to Roadmap
Residency isn’t the finish line. It’s the launchpad.
Webinar panelists emphasized:
- Creating structured development plans (IDPs) post-residency
- Starting career mapping during interviews
- Offering “stretch” roles early (like preceptor or charge relief)
- Recognizing lattice-style growth—not just ladders
“We used to think progress meant climbing a ladder. Today, nurses want to explore the lattice. If we don’t give them those opportunities, someone else will.”
What to Do Now
- Assess manager bandwidth: Do leaders have time for high-impact moments?
- Revisit your check-in strategy: Are managers leading early, authentic conversations?
- Protect development time: Is growth visible, accessible, and tailored?
The retention problem doesn’t begin at exit interviews. It begins on day one—with what new nurses see, feel, and experience. And it’s solved by presence, not policy.