By Lisa Ryan, CSP
When good people leave, it’s rarely sudden. It’s a slow fade that begins weeks or even months before they hand in their notice.
You won’t hear them complain, and that’s the problem.
Most of the time, your best yard employees don’t storm into your office demanding changes. They don’t threaten to quit. They just stop caring, stop trying, and eventually stop showing up.
By the time you notice, they’ve already mentally checked out. And by the time you try to fix it, someone else has already made them an offer.
I hear the same story from yard owners everywhere: “We had no idea they were unhappy. They seemed fine.”
Fine is the warning sign you missed.
The Quiet Exit Starts Long Before the Two-Week Notice
When good people leave, it’s rarely sudden. It’s a slow fade that begins
weeks or even months before they hand in their notice.
Here’s what that looks like:
They stop offering ideas. Your lead dismantler used to suggest better ways to organize inventory or speed up teardowns. Now? Silence. He clocks in, does the work, and clocks out.
They stop asking questions. Your parts puller used to check in about customer requests or ask how you wanted something handled. Now she just does the bare minimum and moves on.
They stop complaining. This one throws people off. You think, “Great, no more whining.” Wrong. Complaints mean they still care enough to want things to improve. Silence means they’ve given up.
They show up differently. Maybe they’re suddenly taking every call outside. Maybe they’re less engaged in the morning meeting.
Maybe they’re first out the door at quitting time when they used to stick around. These aren’t dramatic red flags.
They’re subtle shifts. And that’s exactly why most owners miss them.
What Causes the Fade
Good employees don’t disengage for no reason. Something shifts:
They feel invisible. You haven’t acknowledged their effort in months.
You don’t notice when they stay late or help a newer guy. They start to wonder
if any of it matters.
They’re bored or stuck. Same job, same way, for three years. No new responsibilities. No growth. No challenge.
They’ve been burned. You promised them something and didn’t follow through. A raise. More hours. Fixed equipment. Now they don’t believe a word you say.
They don’t trust leadership. You play favorites. You change policies without explaining why. You make decisions without their input.
They found someone who appreciates them. Another yard offered them $2 more an hour. But it’s not about the money. It’s about feeling valued.
What Good Retention Actually Looks Like
Last fall, I had the opportunity to tour OEM Auto Recyclers in Bluffton, Ohio, with owner Tim Stout. His 25-person operation runs smoothly. Not because he pays people to stick around; it’s because he actually pays attention.
Tim told me his office doesn’t have a chair. “It’s not that I don’t like people,” he said. “I always have stuff to do.” But here’s the thing: when his people need him, he stops and listens.
He values different personalities. “We like people with different personalities, because everybody’s got a different personality,” he explained. But there’s one line he won’t cross: disrespect. “It has to be respectful. You cross the line here, and you’re just gone on the spot, because I have no temperament for meanness.”
That’s not complicated. That’s just basic human decency applied consistently.
Tim also respects that his people have lives. “These guys, they all have families. They all have lives outside this. Just because I don’t doesn’t mean they shouldn’t.” Most days, the doors lock by 5:10, and everyone walks out.
When he hired Brandon, one of his dismantlers, Tim saw potential that others missed. Brandon processes 100 pieces of drivetrain while others struggle to hit 50 or 60. Instead of seeing high performance as a threat, Tim saw it as an asset.
That’s the difference. Tim doesn’t just tolerate good workers. He creates space for them to excel.
How to Spot It Before It’s Too Late
You can’t fix what you don’t see.
Start paying attention:
Watch for changes in behavior. If someone who used to engage suddenly goes quiet, ask why.
Track participation. Who’s speaking up in meetings? Who’s contributing ideas? When that changes, dig deeper.
Listen to what’s not being said. If your crew stops giving feedback or bringing up problems, that’s not progress. That’s disengagement.
Notice who’s checking out mentally. Are they present, or just going through the motions?
What to Do When You See the Signs
Don’t panic. Don’t overreact. Don’t corner someone and demand answers.
Pull them aside. Not in front of the crew. Not in passing. Set aside real time.
Say something like: “I’ve noticed you’ve been quieter lately. Everything okay? Anything going on I should know about?”
Then shut up and listen. Really listen. Don’t defend. Don’t dismiss. Don’t problem-solve yet. Just hear them out.
If they open up, take what they say seriously. Even if it’s hard to hear. Thank them for being honest, then follow through on what you can control.
If they say they’re fine, don’t push. But keep watching. Sometimes people need to know you care before they’re willing to talk.
The Bottom Line
Your best employees won’t quit loudly. They’ll leave quietly. And you’ll be left wondering what you missed.
The answer? You missed the moment they stopped believing their work mattered to you. You can’t automate appreciation. You can’t delegate engagement.
And you can’t wait until someone quits to start caring. If you don’t value your people, someone else will.
Your move: Pick one person on your team who’s been quieter than usual. Pull them aside this week. Ask how they’re doing. Then listen. That’s where retention starts.

Lisa Ryan, CSP is Chief Appreciation Strategist at Grategy ®, helping manufacturing and trades leaders keep their best people through gratitude-driven retention and engagement. She’s the author of Thank You Very Much and host of The Manufacturers’ Network podcast. Learn more at LisaRyanSpeaks.com.








