Retaining Employees with Disabilities: Evidence-Based Strategies That Work
Why Retention Matters
Hiring diverse talent is pointless if you cannot keep it. The cost of replacing an employee is 50โ200% of annual salary (SHRM, 2022) when accounting for recruitment, onboarding, training, lost productivity, and institutional knowledge loss.
Yet the data on disability retention is encouraging:
DuPont study: Employees with disabilities had 90% above-average retention rates
JAN: 83% of accommodations had zero ongoing cost, and employers reported an average return of $28 for every $1 invested in accommodations
i4cp: Companies with mature disability inclusion programmes reported 72% higher retention across their entire workforce
The message is clear: retaining disabled employees is not expensive โ losing them is.
Accommodation Review Cycles
Accommodations are not "set and forget." Conditions change, roles evolve, and technology improves. Best practice is a structured review cycle:
Quarterly Check-Ins
Brief (15-minute) conversation between employee and manager
"Are your current accommodations still working?"
"Has anything changed in your role or condition that might require adjustments?"
Document any changes agreed
Annual Accommodation Review
Formal review as part of the annual performance cycle
Assess whether current accommodations are still fit for purpose
Identify any new technology, equipment, or processes that could help
Update the accommodation plan
Trigger-Based Reviews
When the employee changes role, team, or location
When the employee returns from extended absence
When the workplace changes (renovation, office move, new systems)
Inclusive Performance Management
The Problem
Standard performance management can disadvantage disabled employees:
Metrics that penalise disability-related absence
"Potential" assessments based on presenteeism or social networking
Feedback that confuses disability-related differences with performance issues
Promotion criteria that require skills irrelevant to the role
The Fix
Measure outcomes, not process: Judge the quality of work produced, not the hours or methods used
Adjust metrics for disability-related absence: Separate disability-related absence from general attendance tracking
Train managers: Ensure they understand the difference between a performance issue and a disability accommodation need
Discuss career aspirations: Do not assume disabled employees have limited ambitions
Employee Resource Groups (ERGs)
Disability ERGs provide:
Peer support: Connection with others who share similar experiences
Voice: A channel for raising systemic issues with leadership
Advocacy: Policy recommendations informed by lived experience
Retention signal: Employees who participate in ERGs are more likely to stay
Building an Effective Disability ERG
Executive sponsor with genuine commitment
Budget for events, speakers, and resources
Paid time to participate (not on top of regular duties)
Regular meetings with clear agenda and outputs
Influence on policy decisions (not just social events)
Mentoring and Sponsorship
Mentoring: Experienced colleague provides advice, support, and guidance
Sponsorship: Senior leader actively advocates for the employee's promotion and development
Disabled employees are less likely to have sponsors (Disability:IN, 2023) โ address this gap proactively
Return-to-Work Programmes
When a disabled employee has been absent due to a health crisis:
Phased return: Gradual increase in hours and responsibilities
Accommodation reassessment: Needs may have changed
Manager briefing: Ensure the manager knows what to expect and how to support
Occupational Health involvement: Professional guidance on work capacity
No "welcome back" pressure: Let the employee set the pace of reintegration
Resources
JAN Retention Research: [askjan.org](https://askjan.org)