Successful Retention Strategies (Part 1 of 4): Onboarding

Onboarding

The current labor and employment market is the most volatile in recorded history.  Never have employee candidates had more choices and power in the market than they do today.  Add to this the pandemic, continued low wage growth for most people below the executive level, technological improvements, and failure of many businesses to appropriately demonstrate caring and support of their people. The result is the current crisis known as The Great Resignation. While the Great Resignation does not impact all businesses, industries, sectors, and career levels equally, all of these segments are nonetheless affected. Even at the executive level (Vice President through C-Suite), where people are arguably treated better than many front-line, entry-level people, and who are recipients of already higher pay and higher pay growth over the last 20 years and more, are cashing in on this wave driving up base salaries, signing bonuses, and restructuring of bonus packages more favorable to them. There is no silver bullet to stop the trend, but one critical focus has received too little attention leading up to and throughout this pandemic.  This focus has the highest probability of making the most positive and significant impact on stabilizing this challenging labor and employment market.  What is it, you might ask? EMPLOYEE RETENTION STRATEGIES. This is the first of a 4-part series that will address Onboarding, Recruiting, Total Rewards, and Organizational Design strategies that collectively affect and reflect the retention strategies of an organization.  Employee Relations and Communication strategies overlap and lend support to these (4) categories, making them more successful at retaining key talent.  Interesting to note that each of these areas (outside of Onboarding and Communication) is a dedicated Human Resources discipline.  Each discipline is far too deep a topic to cover fully and impacts significantly more than just employee retention.  Therefore, each area will be discussed from the standpoint of their impact on employee retention and not the totality of the discipline.   A Typical New Employee Onboarding Scenario Let’s take a look at a typical start to a new hire’s onboarding journey. It’s your first day on the job.  The day is filled with hope and promise.  The interviews were exhausting, lasting several days stretched over several months.  Many were conducted virtually due to the pandemic and precautionary guidelines (thankfully, they didn’t see your comfy fuzzy bunny slippers).  The final interview included an in-person onsite series of interviews and a facility tour.  You are nervous even though you are confident you made the right decision. As you walk into the office building for your first day, you notify the receptionist that you are here.  He looks at you quizzically, not knowing who you are nor whom you are supposed to see.  The receptionist asks you to have a seat, and he will track down who should greet you. “This is odd,” you think to yourself.  “The interview process seemed relaxed, organized, and well-executed.  Perhaps it’s nothing, and I’m just being critical.  Relax – think happy thoughts. Today is going to be a great day!” Twenty minutes go by, and no one has come to greet you yet and begin your onboarding.  You approach the receptionist and ask, “Sir, am I supposed to be meeting with HR first or my direct supervisor?” “I’m not sure,” he replies. “I contacted HR, but they did not answer.  I left a message with the HR Generalist, who typically handles new hire paperwork.  I am sure they will be here any moment.” And so, you go back to the seat in the receiving area where you had been sitting and continue to wait.  Anxiety starts to build into frustration.  “I did get the right start date, didn’t I?” you think to yourself.  You pull out your cell phone, access your personal emails, and search for the welcome email with your start date information.  “Yep, I got the right day and time.” After another 20 minutes, an employee comes in through the front doors.  On their way past the front desk, the Receptionist stops them saying, “Akeem!  So glad you are here.  I left a voice mail for you a bit ago about this person starting today.  Are you supposed to do their onboarding, or is the hiring manager?” Looking a little embarrassed, Akeem says. “I’ll handle it,” and he turns to greet you, arms full of coat, coffee, umbrella, and thick, overstuffed computer bag.  Fumbling with everything to free up a hand, Akeem offers you a proper handshake and greets you. “Hi, I’m Akeem, HR Generalist.  I hope you have not been waiting long.” Mentally you are quite miffed and barely contain the thought, “waiting long?  I have been waiting for nearly an hour now,” from coming out your mouth. “Not too long,” you reply instead.  “Very eager to get started for my first day.” This scenario often plays out in too many companies, from small independently owned businesses with under 20 employees to large publicly traded multi-national companies with over 60,000 employees globally.  It does not matter if there is no HR presence, an HR department of one, or a large 100+ person HR department with defined HR discipline coverage and degreed/certified professionals, this first-day scenario and the corresponding train-wreck of an onboarding experience that follows it can happen anywhere.  An experience such as this starts the time clock ticking towards resignation day. Not what any business wants when they spend so much money, time, effort, and energy to recruit the right person for the position. An effective new employee onboarding program is a critical step in retaining employees.  The only constant in business is change, and change is the greatest source of stress, worry, and concern for most people regardless of career level.  The onboarding process should be designed to reduce the new employee’s stress, anxiety, and concern by transparently and effectively communicating with them.  Effective communication is critical. Each company is uniquely different, so each employee onboarding program should be customized to your company.  Through the onboarding program, necessary compliance forms (such

Taking the BEST Exit and Succession Planning to a New Level for You

Certified Exit Planning Advisor

BEST invests in current and future business owner clients with the addition of a CEPA Designation BEST keeps getting better – BEST Human Capital & Advisory Group is proud to announce that Chris Cimaglio, a Managing Partner, recently earned the Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA) designation after completing the Exit Planning Institute’s (EPI) intensive executive MBA-style program. For the last four years, BEST has become very involved in the succession and exit planning process to better prepare their clients for the eventual leadership transition of their business. It was a natural extension of their Executive Search services as many owners came to BEST looking for successors and to lower their company’s dependence on them and assist with leadership and family succession. Other engagements arose from BEST’s HR Advisory services. After training and partnering with the ExitMap® and BizEquity®, this has become a growing part of BEST’s clients’ needs. After publishing several articles on the topic and speaking at major industry events, Chris decided to complete the Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA) Program through the Exit Planning Institute (EPI) to serve these growing needs better.  If you aren’t familiar, the CEPA Program is the most widely accepted and endorsed exit planning program in the world, focused on cross-functional consulting and value acceleration.  As a CEPA, Chris belongs to a multi-disciplinary network of high caliber, collaborative advisors in our area and across the globe. According to Chris, “This is personal for me, and I am passionate about it. I grew up in a family business and have worked with hundreds of them throughout my career. I have seen succession and exit plans work well, and others fail miserably. As a CEPA, we can now apply tested methods and approaches to change the outcome for these owners.  We can do it together, collaboratively, and offer a more holistic program that helps business owners maximize the value of their business and personal financial plans to the next level and be prepared for what adventure comes next after they exit their company.” There is one indisputable fact – 100% of owners eventually will exit their business. It could be through family succession, sale, liquidation, closure, death, or any number of reasons – many of which are outside the owner’s control. According to an EPI report, over 75% of business owners who have sold their business profoundly regret it within a year after the sale. 50% of exits will be involuntary, and 40% of business owners lack even a basic business continuity plan should something happen to the owner (death, disability, divorce, or illness). BEST Human Capital and Advisory Group is committed to helping their business-owning clients succeed in their business and personal lives. They see clients working hard in their companies and too many owners delaying their own personal happiness and financial savings. Many do not have family interested in the business, which brings the question of succession planning when there is no succession?  Many owners arrive at the end of their career and find out the business is not positioned nor ready to successfully transfer to a new owner. These owners missed the opportunity to grow transferable value. On the flip side, BEST has also experienced working with owners who try to handle the business transition by themselves, which usually leaves money on the table and leads to regret. We know in our hearts that it doesn’t have to be that way.   The single largest transaction and transition of your life deserves special attention.  Are you planning to exit and sell your business? Business Exit planning is quickly becoming a buzzword in the legal and financial communities. Your professional advisors position themselves to provide tax, risk management, wealth management, and contract preparation services. BEST Exit Plan Advisor has been trained to manage your team of tax, legal, business, and financial planners to navigate your exit strategy. Click here for our Special Section on Exit Planning for more details and a video on how to get started. If you want to see how prepared you are for transition, take the 15-minute Assessment at no charge: There is one indisputable fact – 100% of owners will eventually exit their business. The Assessment is a multiple-choice questionnaire that does not ask for confidential or financial information. Nevertheless, it is a critical first step in starting the discussion and planning process. Click here for FAQs and more information concerning our free, no-obligation exit planning assessment.

What’s Going On with HR?

What’s Going On with HR?

“What’s going on with HR?” you ask. Well, frankly, a LOT. Human Resources is a diverse collection of disciplines. We all love a succinct answer. In short, Human Resources includes anything that impacts the people working in and around the business and may even impact the vendors, clients, customers, and consultants to the company. But even that does not quite capture all that Human Resources is and does. So, to ask, “What’s going on with HR?” you can quickly see how expansive of a question that is. Rather than share all that is going on with HR, let us look at some current events occupying a lot of time, effort, and energy within Human Resources. While the industry, unique operations, organizational headcount, and revenue volume all impact the priorities of the HR function within each business, some commonalities have a high probability of being experienced by the largest number of HR functions across all industries, operations, headcounts, and revenue volumes. Talent Acquisition This is currently the most pressing issue facing businesses today. The sourcing, screening, interviewing, hiring, and onboarding of top talent to either grow the business, stabilize the business, or backfill positions vacated through voluntary or involuntary terminations is taking up an unbalanced and overwhelming amount of HR’s work today. The pandemic is a primary driver of the issue and not just because of the dangers to the health and even lives of the employee population. Many employees are resigning their positions not to go on unemployment or even to move to a competitor but instead because of their perception of how they were treated in the early stages of the pandemic when layoffs and closures happened; because of their perception of how they are being treated today with the controversies around masking, testing, and vaccinations; and because they have discovered during the layoffs in the early stages just what is important to them or the need and benefits of a better work/life balance; and so are leaving to go into different industries, open their own businesses, or into jobs they perceive will provide better opportunity to support themselves and their loved ones. Because of this, finding top talent and convincing them to join your organization is more challenging than ever before. We are further seeing massive exits from the workforce. There have been significant drops in the labor participation rate. Many attributed this to the pandemic alone, and that is not the case. We have known since the early 2000’s that the baby boomer generation would eventually retire. Up until February 2020, it appeared they would continue working far longer than any other generation in the workforce, but the pandemic did have an effect in accelerating the exit of Baby Boomers from the workforce. They began to ask themselves, “Is this really what I want to deal with in the twilight of my life? Isn’t family more important? Shouldn’t I enjoy all that I have built, gained, and acquired throughout my life rather than add more stress or risk my life and those I love by working through this pandemic?” So while the pandemic has affected the decline of labor participation, it is primarily the exit of a generation already known to be leaving the workforce that is having the significant impact we are seeing today. And with those exits, who is left to fill the void? If the labor participation rate decreases, Talent Acquisition has a big problem on its hands. They cannot recruit people who do not exist.” Total Rewards This is the second most time-consuming issue for many HR professionals today. Closely tied to Talent Acquisition and Talent Retention necessary to stave off or stem the tide of this Great Resignation, astute HR professionals are examining pay equity and pay parity. They are researching the benefits that are offered, and not just medical/dental/vision benefits but also all wellness initiatives, continued professional education coverage, and perks which make their employees’ lives easier. Many businesses are discovering they do not have the right combination in their total rewards program to obtain and retain top talent. There are adjustments that must be made, and some of these are costly. What is the alternative? Doing the same thing the same way and expecting a different result – well – we all know what that is. The only constant in business today is Change. HR professionals should be reexamining their total reward programs to improve the mix and meet or exceed organizational and employee needs. Talent Retention This is tied closely with Talent Acquisition and Total Rewards. It is what many businesses hope is an outcome of the efforts in Talent Acquisition and Total Rewards, and that is a mistake. Retention should be an initiative all its own. While the right Talent Acquisition and Total Rewards initiatives and strategies will have a significant and beneficial impact on Talent Retention, there is so much more to it. To retain talent, businesses must understand that people do not join a company exclusively for the role into which they are hired, they enter a company for that role and the potential for personal as well as professional growth. They look for increased responsibility, contribution to organizational success, giving back to the community, and income growth to achieve their own financial goals. While companies profess to provide this growth to employees, too many have been quick to replace employees before and even during this pandemic, and it has left a sour taste in the mouths of many employees. Businesses that are successful at reducing or eliminating the impact of the Great Resignation are genuinely focused on defining how they treated and currently treat their employee population differently and better than their competition; they provide a strong and positive culture that exemplifies caring and support for their people; they develop an active social cause employees welcome giving back to, and they clearly articulate a career path and the learning and development programs that will help their employees meet personal and professional objectives. While this

Business Succession Planning When There is No Succession

Business Succession Planning When There is No Succession

Insights into Preparing for the Business Transition and Transaction of Your Life The phone call was a jolt and shook us to our core. Tragically, we received news that a grower we had met during our Succession/Exit Planning Seminar at Cultivate ’21 in July was killed in a car accident. He was a good man, who had built a fine operation, but the business was highly owner-centric – everything passed through him. He had no accountant, lawyer, financial planner, or exit plan advisor and certainly no business continuity plan. We had a few discussions with him after the Seminar, but he had put things on hold. Now a strategic partner of ours is helping the family, amidst their grief, with the disposition of the business. Unfortunately, there is a long and challenging road ahead. There is one indisputable fact – 100% of owners eventually will exit their business. It could be through family succession, sale, liquidation, closure, death, or any number of reasons – many of which are outside the owner’s control. According to the Exit Planning Institute (EPI), 50% of exits will be involuntary, and 40% of business owners lack even a basic business continuity plan should something happen to the owner (death, disability, divorce, or illness). Suppose there is no family to take over the reins? In that case, the logical choices are to transition the business to new leadership and/or your employees (often through an Employee Stock Ownership Program, or ESOP), sell the business outright (to an investor, competitor, or investment group), or close up shop and liquidate. Since a company can often represent about 80% of an owner’s net worth, we will address the more wealth-saving and positive options of transitioning and/or selling the business. 48% of business owners don’t know how or have even thought of preparing for the sale of their company (PWC Family Business Survey). We have found that the best business transitions begin early and have a team of people working in tandem to maximize the value of the business and get you and your business transition ready.   The Challenges “If you fail to plan, you are planning to fail!” – Benjamin Franklin The numbers are staggering. 10,000 Baby Boomers hit retirement age every day, and 60% of all business owners are over age 55. Yet, according to EPI, PNC Bank, and Kent State surveys, 80% of business owners have no transition plan or have not documented or communicated a succession plan. Furthermore, 80% of these businesses are not saleable, nor do they have a proper talent or family pipeline to continue. Of the remaining 20% sold, 12% will be lower than the original asking price. Even though 98% of business owners feel that succession planning is essential, they rarely have a plan. When they do have a plan, there are several reasons why they fail: Many think it is unimportant and choose to focus on the transition rather than the transactional nature of a business. Potential future leaders and family leave the company looking for greener pastures. As a result, owners do not adhere to the plan and stay long past their expected departure date. New leaders are ill-prepared to take over or do not perform to the level of the original owner. A focus on the past or a mindset fixed on “this is the way it has always been done” not only cripples future leadership but puts the future of the business in jeopardy. Time, lack of commitment, and fear. Successful Succession Planning = Transition Ready Not all hope is lost. We have been a part of many business succession and exit plans that have been and continue to be successful. We begin with an assessment and evaluation of four critical areas of personal and business transition readiness that have a direct impact on value from an investor’s perspective and the questions they will be asking: Financial Preparedness: Valuation of the business and industry comparisons, reviewing financial metrics (ratios, receivables, banking situation, and overall financial health), and the tax impact— on the owner and the business. Is the company operating at a high level and doing more with less? Planning Preparedness: Review potential buyers, professional advisors (accountant, lawyer, financial planner, exit plan advisory, and broker), business continuity planning, and addressing owner centricity. Can the business operate independently of the owner? An owner with all the key relationships and is responsible for most of the sales, especially to larger customers, can be an issue. Are customer relationships spread out among your staff? Workaholics, who are in their operations 7-days a week and micromanage their businesses, are bad bets for a potential buyer. If the owner should suddenly leave or pass away, how easy would it be to transition to new leadership or potentially sell the business for a high return? Revenue and Profit Preparedness: Consistent sales and profits— The ability to drive revenue but not at the expense of margin. New product/service offerings, new markets, diversification, and those elements of your operation that deliver consistent sales and profitable results. The presence of recurring revenue is also important (long-term contracts, vendor agreements, and leases). Bankability— Are there well-prepared financials and key performance metrics with predictable and reliable cash flow? Operations Preparedness: Do you have up-to-date modernized systems, and are your processes and procedures efficient? Is information readily available? Review management, systems, technology, standard operating procedures, and operational efficiencies. Are you staying on top of trends? Website, eCommerce, email lists, social media are all critical. Are there efficient processes and procedures in place that can be easily managed and communicated? The next step is to optimize and accelerate the value of the business before a sale or transition and understand that effective succession planning is more than just transitioning to new leadership. It is a process that could take several years, so it is never too early to get started. There are transactional components at work as well. Owners need to take an objective investor’s approach to their business— Is the risk at a low level, and is there a potentially high ROI? Addressing

The Importance of Thank You Notes

The Importance of Thank You Notes

Our client had told us that the candidate had hit it out of the park during her interview – she checked off all the boxes, save one. Unfortunately, they did not receive a post-interview thank-you note (via email), so they went with another candidate. The other candidate had similar qualifications, although slightly less stellar in the interview. However, he had taken the time to send a thank-you email to express his interest in the position, the projects they were working on going forward, and how he could contribute. Our client was direct and to the point – “No thank you note – no offer.”  A missed opportunity. In 2019, Jessica Liebman, the Executive Managing Editor of Insider Inc., stated in a Business Insider article that she has a simple rule when she is hiring. “We shouldn’t move a candidate to the next stage in the interview process unless they send a thank-you email.” Liebman went on to state that bringing someone into your company is always risky. However, a thank you email (not snail mail – too slow) signals a candidate’s motivation and desire for the position and generally means they’re a “good egg.” There are only so many data points one can collect in an interview, she reasoned, that sometimes the thank-you note will make the difference in the selection of candidates. Our client obviously agrees. She further clarified and stated, “To be clear, a thank-you note does not ensure someone will be a successful hire. But using the thank-you email as a barrier to entry has proved beneficial, at least at my company.” So, it makes sense, right? Not necessarily. Unfortunately, back in 2019, and it continues today, social media went into hyperdrive to cancel her and her statements. Other hiring managers, reputable organizations (SHRM and LinkedIn), and publications joined the fray, with several siding in large part with those who disagreed. Liebman followed up with another article humorously titled, “Thank you for reading my story about thank-you notes!” to clarify what she meant a few days later. Many people were seemingly offended that anyone would actually “require” sending a thank-you note after an interview. She went on to explain she was trying to be helpful and shed some light and that, “The biggest factors we consider are a candidate’s talent and fit for the role.” It was a “rule of thumb” and not official company policy. What are the disagreements with Liebman’s piece on sending thank you notes that continue today? Any online search regarding the necessity of thank you notes after the interview will bring up a lot of articles and pundits that say they are not necessary. For example, thank you notes are antiquated and pointless [apparently not to her and the many hiring managers and business leaders we talk to regularly at BEST]. Thank-you notes are to stroke the ego of the interviewer. Seriously? A thank-you note? The application and job description said nothing about sending a thank you. Liebman’s response was priceless on this point, “Neither is being on time to the interview.” Our favorite? Expecting a thank-you note is elitist and shows discrimination and bias because many people have never been taught this skill. Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) are critical to any organization today. Different perspectives can lead to increased creativity, innovation, productivity, better decision-making, and a better work environment and culture, among many other benefits. Since 2019, we have been through a pandemic and social justice movement that has brought DEI to the forefront in hiring. However, we have never seen it be used as an excuse not to be courteous and to send a thank you. Laziness would be a better excuse. After all, especially in a customer-facing role, would you want anyone on your team that doesn’t know how to say thank you? But it’s a candidate’s market – you see the news – there are more jobs than people to fill them. So they [the interviewer] should be sending the candidate a thank you. We can concede this point to a degree in that all companies need to do a better job notifying candidates and letting them know why they did not get the position. Point well taken, and it is also something we strive for at BEST. A lot of the consternation on this could be the culturally questioning and upending times we live in – where being contrary on social media is expected and merely aiming for “likes” and that all-important re-share. However, at BEST, we can only speak to our own experience working with clients and candidates and heartily thank those who disagree (because it is indeed helpful). As business leaders, hiring managers, and recruiters, it is often about overcoming buyer’s remorse. When a hiring manager or company leader is getting ready to make a hiring decision, they are looking for those elements, however small, that can put a candidate over the edge and calm their fears about making a bad hire. For example, our client mentioned that they liked the candidate, but she had not sent a thank you. To the client, it was a reasonable expectation – another box to check. By sending a thank you note, the other candidate checked that box and received the offer instead. For the candidates we work with, our resources stress the importance of the thank-you email. A candidate should always ask for the interviewer’s email address during the interview (whether on the phone or in person). Rarely, if ever, has it been questioned. After all, it is another opportunity to sell yourself to the prospective company. It doesn’t have to be a long note – say thank you, say that you want the position, and use it also to state why you are the best fit for the role (one or two reasons you are the best candidate for the job or maybe there was something you missed during the interview) and that you would welcome further discussion. Then, send it within 24-hours while you are still fresh in the interviewer’s mind. Is that so hard? As the “Great Resignation” continues, there

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