Exit interviews: Getting useful insights from departing employees

Most exit interviews produce little of value. Departing employees give polite, generic answers, the notes go in a file, and the same problems keep driving resignations a year later. Done well, however, exit interviews are one of the few moments when an organisation can hear honestly about what isn't working - and act on it.
exit interviews
HR
Published: 12 May 202618 minutes read

When a good employee resigns, most managers want to understand why. The exit interview is the obvious vehicle for that conversation, and it has been a fixture of UK HR practice for decades. Yet research consistently shows that the data they generate goes mostly unused - one Harvard Business Review study found that fewer than a third of executives could give a specific example of action taken as a result of an exit interview [1].

For SMEs, that gap matters more than it does for large employers. The cost of replacing an employee in the UK is estimated at £30,614 on average for those earning £25,000 or more, with broader benchmarks placing total replacement costs at six to nine months of salary once recruitment, training, and lost productivity are factored in [2]. When a 10-person business loses two people in a year without learning anything from their departures, the same triggers will apply to future resignations - undermining any employee retention strategies the business has in place.

This article explores why exit interviews often fall short of providing valuable insights. It also offers strategies for improving feedback quality and provides actionable steps for SMEs to implement this feedback, even without a dedicated HR department.

Summary

  • Exit interviews capture honest feedback only when departing employees believe their answers will be confidential and consequence-free. Without that trust, you get polite generalities.
  • Who conducts the interview matters more than the questions asked. Direct line managers rarely receive candid feedback - especially when management is part of the reason someone is leaving.
  • Open-ended questions framed around the decision to leave produce richer answers than tick-box surveys or yes/no questions.
  • Aggregated data is what drives change. A single resignation is an anecdote; six departures citing the same manager or process is a pattern that needs addressing.
  • The biggest failure point in most exit interview programmes is what happens after the conversation. Without a clear route from feedback to action, the process becomes more like a tick box exercise.
  • Regular check-ins - holding structured conversations with employees who haven't resigned capture the same insight earlier, when something can still be done about it.

Why most exit interviews fail to produce useful insight

The exit interview has a fundamental design flaw: it asks people to give honest feedback at a moment when honesty carries no upside and several potential downsides. Departing employees worry about references, about future encounters in their industry, and about being remembered as the person who complained on the way out.

The result is predictable. According to Gallup research, 42% of voluntary turnover is preventable - employees themselves report that their organisation could have done something to keep them - but most never raise their concerns before resigning, and 36% of voluntary leavers don't discuss their decision with anyone at work before making it [3]. By the time someone sits down for an exit interview, the opportunity to prevent their departure has often already passed.

Even when employees do speak openly, the data tends to go nowhere. A widely cited finding from Harvard Business Review's research on exit interview programmes is that only a small fraction of organisations systematically use the data they collect to drive meaningful change [1]. The CIPD's own resourcing benchmarks have found that just 12% of organisations collect data to evaluate and improve retention initiatives, even though 17% calculate the cost of labour turnover [4]. Organisations measure the problem more often than they measure what works to fix it.

The most common failure mistakes are recognisable in almost any business that runs exit interviews.

  • The interview is conducted by the departing employee's line manager, who may be part of the reason they're leaving.
  • Questions are vague ("How was your time here?") and produce vague answers ("Really good, thanks").
  • Notes are filed away without wider analysis, so recurring issues go unnoticed.
  • Findings stay within HR and never reach the people with authority to act on them.
  • No feedback loop exists between exit data and the decisions that shape recruitment, management, or working conditions.

Each of these is fixable. The next sections cover how.

Who should conduct the interview

The most important design choice in an exit interview programme is who runs the conversation. Departing employees calibrate their answers to the audience - and the wrong audience produces useless data.

Direct line managers should generally not conduct exit interviews with their own departing team members. If management style or a specific working relationship is part of the reason someone is leaving, the line manager is usually the last person they will tell. Even when the relationship is positive, the dynamic creates pressure to be polite rather than honest. HR best practice guidance is clear that exit interviews should not be carried out by an employee’s line manager to encourage open and honest feedback [5].

Here are the most realistic options for SMEs when it comes to who should conduct exit interviews.

  • An HR colleague or operations lead with no direct reporting relationship to the leaver. This works well when the organisation is large enough to have someone independent.
  • A second-line manager - the line manager's manager. Research suggests this approach often surfaces more honest feedback than HR-led interviews, partly because employees see the conversation as having more weight, and partly because the second-line manager is better positioned to act on what they hear [1].
  • An external HR consultant or third party for businesses too small to have internal options. The cost is modest - typically a few hundred pounds per interview for a structured conversation and written summary - and the neutrality often produces materially better data.
  • A written or online questionnaire as a supplement, not a substitute. These can capture quantitative data on common themes (workload, pay, management quality) but rarely surface the specific incidents that explain a departure.

For very small businesses where the owner is the only person available to conduct the interview, the honest answer is that the data will be limited. In that case, the more valuable conversation is often the stay interview which removes the resignation dynamic entirely.

Questions that surface useful information

The questions asked shape the depth of what you learn. Most exit interview templates default to broad, polite prompts that produce broad, polite answers. Better questions are specific, open-ended, and focussed on the decision to leave rather than around general feedback.

Compare these approaches:

Generic: "How would you rate your experience working here?"

Specific: "What were the one or two factors that contributed most to your decision to leave?"

Generic: How did you find your manager?

Specific: "Was there a point in the past six months when you considered leaving but decided to stay? What changed your mind then, and what changed it back?"

The second versions don't just gather more information - they signal that you're prepared to hear specific answers, which changes what the leaver feels comfortable saying.

A useful core set of questions for employers covers six areas.

  • The decision itself. When did they first consider leaving, what triggered it, and what would have changed their mind?
  • The role. What worked, what didn't, and what would they change if they were redesigning the job for the next person?
  • Management and support. Were expectations clear, was feedback useful, and did they feel they could raise concerns?
  • Development and progression. Did they see a future in the organisation, and if so, why didn't that materialise?
  • Comparison with the new role (if applicable). Without breaching their new employer's confidentiality, what is materially different about where they're going?
  • Improvement suggestions. If they had the opportunity to change one thing, what would it be?

The comparison question is often the most informative and the least asked. It surfaces what the market is offering that you weren't - flexible hours, clearer career structure, better work tools, higher pay - and turns competitive intelligence into clear, usable insight.

If allegations are made against named individuals, these may need to be investigated through a formal grievance or disciplinary process rather than logged as exit interview data. Where there isn’t any known grievance issues, it’s generally better to phrase questions around systemic issues: "Were there processes or working patterns that made the job harder than it needed to be?" rather than "Was there anyone you found difficult to work with?".

Creating trust in exit interviews

Departing employees are constantly assessing the situation. They are deciding, often in real time, whether honest feedback will reach the people they are criticising, whether it could affect their reference, and whether anything meaningful will happen as a result. The quality of the exit interview conversation depends heavily on gaining the trust of employees.

Exit interviews work best when employers actively build trust in these three areas.

  • Feedback is handled sensitively and with care for anonymity. Employees should be assured that their comments will not be shared in a way that identifies them personally (where this is reasonable to do so). Instead, feedback is reviewed alongside other evidence to understand whether there are wider patterns or issues that need addressing.
  • The feedback leads somewhere. If a leaver reasonably believes nothing will come of the conversation, there is little incentive to provide thoughtful or detailed feedback. Exit interviews only work when employees believe the organisation is willing to learn from them.
  • References are not affected by what is said in the interview. This needs to be stated clearly and reflected in practice. Employees are unlikely to speak candidly if they believe honest criticism could affect future references.

There is also an important distinction between exit interview feedback and formal grievance processes. General observations about culture, communication, workload, or management can usually be reviewed alongside other exit feedback to identify broader themes and do not typically trigger formal grievance procedures. Some allegations - whether raised in resignation letters or at exit interviews, such as bullying, discrimination, harassment, or unlawful conduct - are handled differently. If concerns of that nature arise, the employer’s response moves beyond the exit interview process and into formal grievance or disciplinary procedures, as appropriate.

When a resignation contains a grievance

Some resignations bring legal risk with them. If a leaver describes the reason for leaving in a way that points to bullying, harassment, discrimination, a serious breach of contract, or any other conduct that would normally trigger a grievance, the employer's obligations sit outside the exit interview process entirely. Handling those concerns through a friendly debrief, or filing them away as feedback, can create more risk than the original issue.

The main legal exposure here is constructive dismissal. If an employee with at least two years' service (or six months service from 1 January 2027) resigns because of conduct that fundamentally damages the working relationship, and the employer fails to reasonably address it, they may be able to bring a claim of constructive unfair dismissal at an employment tribunal [6]. Common triggers include unaddressed bullying or harassment, a refusal to investigate ongoing grievance issues or significant unilateral changes to working conditions. A pattern of repeated smaller incidents can also amount to a breach when taken together.

Not all related claims share the same service qualifying threshold. Discrimination claims under the Equality Act 2010 and whistleblowing detriment claims do not require a qualifying period of service, for example. An employee can bring those claims from day one of employment.

The ACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance procedures matters here too. Where an employer unreasonably fails to follow the Code, tribunals can adjust any award by up to 25% [7].

Practical steps when a resignation contains, or hints at, a grievance:

  • Consider treating the issue as a grievance, in line with the ACAS Code.
  • Acknowledge the resignation in writing, inviting the employee separately to a formal grievance meeting to address the issues raised in the resignation letter. If the employee doesn’t wish to raise a grievance, ask for confirmation and where possible, still investigate the concerns raised.
  • Investigate properly, even if the employee doesn’t want to raise a formal grievance. The investigation outcome matters whether or not they stay.
  • Keep clear records of dates, actions taken, and decisions made. If the matter does end up in front of a tribunal, contemporaneous notes carry weight.
  • Get specialist HR or legal advice early where there is a risk an employee is resigning due to workplace issues.

From feedback to action

The point of an exit interview is not just to gather information, but to make improvements based on what you learn. This is where most exit interviews fail.

The pattern is consistent across organisations that run exit interviews well.

  • A single owner for the data. Someone is responsible for reviewing exit feedback regularly, identifying themes, and reporting them to leadership.
  • A regular review cadence. Quarterly or biannual reviews of aggregated exit data, alongside other people metrics, prevent feedback from sitting unread in folders.
  • A direct route from theme to decision. When the data surfaces a recurring issue - say, that new joiners consistently leave within 12 months citing inadequate onboarding - someone has the authority and remit to redesign the onboarding process. If the route from "we now know this" to "we have changed this" doesn't exist, the data is wasted.
  • Visible follow-through. When changes are made in response to exit feedback, current employees should know. "Based on feedback from leavers, we've restructured how new joiners are onboarded" tells the rest of the team that feedback matters - which, in turn, makes future feedback better.

For SMEs, this doesn't have to be elaborate. A single page reviewed each quarter that lists themes from recent departures, alongside current engagement signals and any planned actions, is more than most businesses do and enough to drive meaningful change.

What you measure also tells leavers - and current staff - what you take seriously. If exit interview themes never appear in management discussions about how the business is run, the message that filters back is that the conversations are a formality. If they show up regularly in decisions about hiring, training, working patterns, or pay, the opposite signal travels.

Patterns to watch for

A single resignation rarely results in having to make substantial business changes, but repeated themes across multiple departures highlight a potential underlying issues that needs addressed. Below are the themes most worth tracking.

  • Length of service. If departures concentrate at particular time points in service - 6 months, 18 months, three years - the cause is often structural rather than individual. Six-month departures point to onboarding or role design; 18-month departures often signal a missing development path; three-year departures may indicate a pay or progression ceiling.
  • Departmental concentration. When a single team accounts for a disproportionate share of leavers, the cause is usually local - a manager, a workload pattern, a change in scope - rather than organisation-wide.
  • Reasons given vs. reasons inferred. Stated reasons are useful; the gap between what people say and what other data suggests is often more useful. If three leavers cite "career opportunity elsewhere" but all three were managed by the same person, the manager is part of the picture even if no one named them.
  • Where leavers go. Patterns in the destination of leavers reveal what the market is offering and you aren't. If everyone who leaves goes to two specific competitors, those competitors have a recruitment advantage worth understanding.
  • Demographic patterns. If leavers concentrate in particular demographic groups, the underlying cause may be cultural or structural and warrants closer investigation - both as a fairness issue and as a business one.

This kind of analysis only becomes possible when exit interviews are recorded consistently and reviewed collectively. For most SMEs, that means a simple shared document or HR system with a few standard fields - length of service, department, reason given, themes - rather than free-form notes that can't be compared across individual departures.

Regular check-ins to capture issues early

The fundamental limitation of exit interviews is that they happen too late. By the time someone has resigned, the cost of their departure is already locked in - even if the feedback is excellent. Regular check-ins address this directly by having the same kind of structured conversation with current employees who haven't resigned and aren't planning to.

Check-ins can be informal in nature and last 20-30 minutes, usually conducted by the line manager or skip-level manager, that explores what's working, what isn't, and (if applicable) what might cause the employee to look elsewhere. The key questions are deliberately similar to those in an exit interview, but asked while the employee can still be retained:

  • What's working well in your role at the moment?
  • What's frustrating or getting in the way?
  • Is there anything frustrating about your role at the moment?
  • What's the one thing you'd change if you could?
  • Is there development or progression you'd like that you're not getting?

The advantage of regular check-ins is that they surface the same kinds of issues that drive resignations, such as workload, management, progression, and recognition, while there's still time to do something about them. The disadvantage is that they require managers to listen without becoming defensive, and to do something about what they hear. Used well, they significantly reduce the volume of exit interviews you need to run in the first place.

For SMEs, a reasonable cadence is annual interviews for all employees, with more frequent conversations - quarterly or biannually - where resources allow for this, or for higher-performing or higher-flight-risk staff. The conversations can replace some performance review content rather than adding to the management calendar.

The two practices complement each other. 1-1s catch issues before they become resignations; exit interviews catch the issues that the 1-1s missed and provide harder data on what is actually pushing people out.

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

A few common mistakes tend to recur in SME exit interview programmes.

  • Treating the interview as a tick box exercise. When the exit interview sits alongside form-signing, equipment-return, and final payroll calculations, it gets the energy and attention of those other tasks. Separating it - in time, location, and tone - signals that the conversation is meant to be meaningful.
  • Asking only the leaver. Exit data alone is partial. The same questions asked of current high performers during regular reviews, and of new joiners in 90-day check-ins, produce a much fuller picture of what's working and what isn't.
  • Acting on individual feedback rather than patterns. Single data points rarely justify major changes to the business. Investigate individual concerns where appropriate but wait until you see the same theme across several leavers before reshaping policy, structure, or process around it.
  • Failing to close the loop with current staff. Leavers' feedback only changes culture when current employees see that something happened as a result. Without that visible loop, the rest of the team has no reason to be honest in their own future conversations.
  • Confusing politeness with honesty. A departing employee saying "It was great, just a personal decision" is often communicating that they don't trust the process. Treating it as genuine feedback rather than as a signal about the process itself misses the point.
  • Running interviews without a plan to use the data. If no one has time to review exit feedback, identify themes, and propose changes, the interviews shouldn't be run at all. Conducting them and ignoring the output is worse than not conducting them, because it consumes the leaver's goodwill without producing anything.

What good looks like for employers

The exit interview process that actually produces useful insight has a few consistent features. Conversations are conducted by someone other than the leaver's direct manager. Questions are open-ended and focused on the decision to leave and what would have changed it. A single owner reviews the data on a regular cadence, identifies themes, and feeds them into decisions about hiring, management, and working conditions. Findings are shared back to the team in a way that makes the connection between feedback and change visible.

None of this requires sophisticated technology or a dedicated HR function. It requires deciding that the data is worth collecting properly and acting on it - and treating exit interviews as one source of insight in a wider conversation about why people stay and why they leave, rather than as a standalone tick-box exercise.

This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The information is accurate at the time of writing but may be subject to change. For advice specific to your situation, please consult a qualified professional.

[1] Spain, E. and Groysberg, B., Making Exit Interviews Count, Harvard Business Review, April 2016.

[2] Oxford Economics / Stribe, Employee Retention Statistics and Figures (UK), 2026.

[3] Gallup, 42% of Employee Turnover Is Preventable but Often Ignored, 2024-2026.

[4] CIPD, Benchmarking Employee Turnover: What Are the Latest Trends and Insights?, 2024.

[5] TotalJobs, Making the Most of Exit Interviews: A Guide for Employers, 2025.

[6] ACAS, Constructive Dismissal, 2026.

[7] ACAS, Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures, 2024.

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