revolving door



revolving door

A cycle in which employees do not remain in a position for more than a short amount of time before they leave, thus requiring the position to be filled frequently. Likened to a revolving door in front of a building where people can come and go at the same time. Primarily heard in US. Because public sector jobs typically cannot pay as much as private sector jobs, many positions become revolving doors.
See also: door, revolve

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Woodard['wuda:d]
Phanouel-Biblical Greek
JochenYO-khenGerman
Varfolomei-Russian (Rare)
KatherynKATH-ə-rin, KATH-rinEnglish
Korneli-Georgian