Resilience as a strategic imperative: Redefining retention for workplace stability
Christina Tsolaki
This research explores the critical role of human values in shaping workplace resilience, employee retention, and organizational stability. A qualitative focus group study involving 14 participants from diverse professional backgrounds examines responses to a case study contrasting two leadership styles within the same organization: a value-driven, relational approach under the founder and a results-oriented, authoritarian style under his successor. Thematic analysis revealed six interrelated themes: organizational stability and change, personal and collective resilience, empathy and ethical leadership, moral dilemmas and value conflicts, the purpose and meaning of work, and the limits of technology and monetary incentives. Findings suggest that resilience is not merely an individual trait but a culturally and relationally conditioned phenomenon, heavily influenced by leadership style, organizational values, and psychological safety. While financial incentives were initially perceived as primary motivators, participants ultimately emphasized the irreplaceable importance of trust, dignity, and ethical consistency in sustaining performance and retention. The study concludes that resilience must be reframed as a strategic imperative rooted in human values and that leadership transitions must be handled with emotional intelligence to preserve organizational integrity and long-term viability.
Christina Tsolaki. Resilience as a strategic imperative: Redefining retention for workplace stability. Int J Res Finance Manage 2025;8(1):831-842. DOI: 10.33545/26175754.2025.v8.i1i.512