The role of the DBA is an anomaly in the IT environment. DBAs are often extremely critical yet hidden from view; highly paid yet individual contributors; and very knowledgeable yet rarely consulted. So why does an extremely critical, highly paid, and very knowledgeable resource have a high risk profile for quitting? What factors can an IT manager consider when trying to increase retention rates of DBAs?
The following are the top 10 reasons DBAs quit, and leave their companies at risk:
- Burnout – constant overtime, holiday disruptions, and frequent weekend work
- On-Call – being on-call too often (or all the time) with frequent incidents
- More Pay – the best DBAs are highly valuable, and are always in high demand
- Recognition – real or perceived inadequate praise, recognition, or acknowledgement
- Constant Firefighting – always reacting to issues with inability to put in proactive measures
- Insufficient Involvement – often ignored during design, architecture, or project planning
- Job Satisfaction – working on routine tasks with no exposure to advanced features & technologies
- No Training – little to no training, conferences, books, or collaboration to improve themselves
- Management – manager not understanding DBA workloads, stress, needs, and value
- Changing Roles – DBAs leverage their in-depth data knowledge to get a “better” role in IT
- Understand the leading causes of DBA turnover – the 10 listed above.
- Diagnose your DBA team to determine if any are manifested in your environment.
- Acknowledge issues – let the team know you are listening and understand their issues.
For more information please contact myself, Datavail or request of copy of the whitepaper: Innovative Solutions for Database and DBA Management.
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