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TALK to a John Lewis employee — sorry, partner — and you’d be forgiven for
thinking that they work in a Utopian democracy where the happiness of the
worker is second only to that of the customer.
Get past the buzzing enthusiasm and things look a little more ordinary, albeit
still impressive. John Lewis partners (all permanent employees of the John
Lewis Partnership are known as partners) enjoy some of the biggest perks in
the retail sector, including a share of the annual profits (the company has
no shareholders), cut-price concert tickets, access to holiday homes owned
by the business and a final salary pension scheme. In March, once a
proportion of the company’s profits had been set aside for reinvestment, all
permanent employees received a bonus of 15 per cent of what they had earned
the previous financial year.
“The fact that everyone shares in the ownership of John Lewis means we are a
unique company,” says Michael Nathan, the manager for manpower planning. “We
take on only 15 to 20 graduates, a small number compared with other
retailers, but people know us as a graduate employer and 1,800 people come
on to our application system. We’re flattered by the interest. But we also
have a strong tradition of bringing people through the company. It’s very
much about meeting the needs of the branches.”
Graduates who do get on to the programme are placed in one of the 26 stores,
where they spend a month learning how the branch works before becoming a
section manager in one of the departments. After six months or so they spend
a few weeks at head office to understand how the whole business operates.
They are then sent back to a store to take on a larger section management
role. “We want them to be able to manage a department of 20 to 30 people,
with a budget of up to £4.5 million, within 12 to 18 months,” Nathan says.
Lucy Norman, a former graduate trainee, runs the menswear and sport department
at the Cribbs Causeway store in Bristol and manages 48 people. She has been
at the store for just over a year and has worked for John Lewis for three.
“I’d had Saturday jobs in retail from the age of 16 and applied for a
six-week summer placement at John Lewis straight from university,” she says.
“I knew that John Lewis was a good place to work because my mum used to work
for them. It has a classic and traditional structure. It’s nice to know your
succession planning. There are incredible opportunities, but most of it is
down to you. You develop as quickly as you want to.”
She sets great store by the organisation’s communication processes: “Rather
than the managing director saying, ‘This is how it is’, here we need
everyone’s input.” This is done through the business’s council structure.
Each department has a representative on the branch council and each branch
is represented on the John Lewis central council.
John Lewis’s retention rates are slightly better than the rest of the retail
sector (58 per cent compared with 52 per cent), and Norman can’t see herself
leaving: “For me, if you’re going to be in retail it’s the best company to
work for, so it’d be strange to go elsewhere.”
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