Tag Archives: Iowa

What’s your engagement resolution?

Now that 2009 is in the history books, it’s time to turn our attention towards the prosperity we all hope the new year will bring.  Traditionally, this is a time that we confidently look forward and make resolutions designed to better our health, relationships and lives in general.  Maybe you’ll give up the smokes, or drop those extra pounds that have been hanging around for entirely too long.   I wish you the best!

When it comes to your workplace, your resolutions will take the same level of diligence if you intend to succeed.  Chances are, you’ve already been forced to trim down and are as lean as you can be.  The new battle will be maintaining the staff you’ve fought hard to preserve, and keeping them engaged (or re-engaged) as the job market improves and their alternatives increase. 

According to BlessingWhite President and CEO, Christopher Rice, the following steps should be part of your resolution for success:

1. Quit or commit. You need to decide if you are ready for another year leading your company. You have been bruised, so make sure you are ready for 2010. If feel like you are working at Dunder Mifflin, then you need to move along because you cannot lead unless you are fully engaged. Your employees deserve more than a leader who is half-in.

2. Communicate the vision. You need to create excitement and trust in your leadership. You should highlight the initiatives of 2010 and create faith that your company is on the right path. Your employees now have a choice about where they work. The large majority want more than ‘just a job’. You had better inspire them to be part of your future.

3. Talk about careers again. The top reason employees leave a company is a perceived lack of career opportunities. Don’t be fooled into believing that your leaner organization can’t satisfy those cravings. You have more priority initiatives than employees, so there are plenty of opportunities for individuals to build skill sets, acquire valuable experience, or try something new! When you scratch the surface of what people mean by ‘career’ you often find it’s all about meaningful work and personal growth. Today’s careers are built not on promotions but on assignments.

4. Forget about performance reviews. You need to do ‘engagement reviews’. You already got rid of the people who needed their performance ‘fixed’. And when using the right definition, engagement actually covers off on performance: Fully engaged employees are at their peak — of maximum contribution and maximum satisfaction. When you focus on engagement, results — and retention — follow. Engagement reviews are vastly different in tone from appraisals. There is a lot more dialogue, and the manager is more likely to end up with a rating than the employee. Engagement reviews explore:

    a) The strategy of the company
    b) The importance of the employee to the success of the team and the company
    c) What’s important to that employee (overall job satisfaction, meaning at work)
    d) The employee’s career aspirations and growth goals
    e) Focus and alignment of the employee’s talents and goals with critical organizational priorities
    f) Your own engagement and commitment (unless, of course, you aren’t sure of your answer to ‘commit or quit’ above!)

Your challenge: Your employees don’t wear labels that declare their engagement level on their foreheads. And you can’t assume that the chronic complainer is totally burnt out and disengaged or that the team member who never makes waves is fully satisfied and aligned. Engagement reviews enable you to exchange information to ensure that the employees you rely on are connected to your organization’s larger purpose, getting what they’re looking for at work and applying their unique expertise to carve out a successful future in 2010.  See full story…

Now’s the time to start making sure that your organization is as fit as it can be for the year(s) to come.  The journey to success isn’t a sprint, it’s more of a triathlon.  With the proper training and execution, almost anyone can get there.  Me, I’m going to start by working up to ten sit-ups!

Developing the Manager Within

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Below is an article that I wrote for the Des Moines Business Record on Talent Management. Specifically on how to manage and help your up-and-comers.

Article:

There is one nice thing about working and living in America – OK, actually there are a few nice things. But one in particular is an individual’s ability to pursue his or her dream. With the right determination and skills, someone who starts in the mailroom could someday end up in the CEO’s office. Or someone who starts on the manufacturing floor a few years later ends up being the production manager running the floor.

There are tons of examples of how this plays out daily in America’s work force. The only requirements to participate are to have a dream, a solid work ethic and the right attitude. Although, with these scenarios there is a problem that might not be evident at first but eventually becomes more apparent.

The problem is twofold. First, companies believe that because someone is great at one thing, he or she will be great at another. For example, some companies believe that if someone is great at sales, he or she should be the sales manager. That is terrible thinking, because it assumes that the person would be a great manager of people. In the case of sales, if people are great at selling, let them sell and leave them where they are.

To continue reading click here.

Reignite Your Career Hopes

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Below is an article that I wrote for the Des Moines Business Record dealing with employee motivation and satisfaction in tough times.

Article:

I have said and written many times that I love my job, my company and what I do for a living. As I travel and speak at conferences, I know I am not the only one. There are a lot of people in this state who are passionate and highly engaged in their jobs. That said, I know that an even larger number of people are not happy in their jobs and are barely engaged.

I am addressing today’s article to the unhappy. If you are reading this, more than likely you are in some type of leadership position within your company. You are probably scanning the publication for information that can help you in your job or can help your company gain some type of advantage. You saw my headline and were intrigued.

Click here to continue reading.

Friday Funnies: Manpower Films Presents – The Boom

To see more videos and to put a smile on your face visit our site at www.getbackin.biz.

more about “getbackin.biz“, posted with vodpod

Is Your State Sticky or Magnetic or Both?

Alaska apparently isn’t much good at hanging on to its native sons and daughters. Just 28% of adults born there still live there, placing it last among the 50 states on this measure of population “stickiness.”

Texas, by contrast, knows how to hold ‘em. More than three-quarters of adults born in Texas still live there, making the Lone Star State the nation’s stickiest.

Nevada, meanwhile, is the nation’s most “magnetic” state: Fully 86% of its adult residents were born in a different state. And New York is the least magnetic: Just 19% of adult New Yorkers were born in another state.

Using Census data, the Pew Research Center’s Social & Demographic Trends project has created a typology that groups all 50 states and the District of Columbia by whether they are “magnets” or “sticky” — or both, or neither. (Here is a list of magnet and sticky numbers for all states and D.C.)

First, let’s define these terms. “Magnet” states are those in which a high share of the adults who live there now moved there from some other state. “Sticky” states are those in which a high share of the adults who were born there live there now.

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To see the full study click here.

Certain Uncertainty at Work

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This is an article I recently wrote for the Des Moines Business Record dealing with the current uncertainty people are feeling at work. I try to give some prescriptive measures to company managers and leaders in what I think are good ideas to help quell worker insecurity.

Article:

Preacher and author Leroy Brownlow once said, “There are times when silence has the loudest voice.” Of course, what he did not say is exactly what that applies to. Though I agree with him, I think there are some very definite positive and negative effects of being silent, especially in uncertain times. I think there are times when silence is needed more than a loud voice, and conversely I think there are times when a loud or at least a consistent voice is needed.

Click here to continue reading.

Hit the Road: Laid Off but Not Forgotten

Veriatas Logo

This is an article I recently wrote for Des Moines’s Veritas Magazine. With all the uncertainty around us, it is a good reminder to know that some things are unchangeable.

Article:

Let me start by first asking a simple question: Do you believe God has a plan for your life? Now, before you rush to answer, I want you to take a moment and search your heart. Do you really believe, in your heart, God has a plan for you? If you are not sure because of your current circumstances of unemployment or dissatisfaction with life, I have great news for you.

Click here to continue reading.

Agriprocessors Has One Option – Step-Up

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After the infamous Postville raids, the Iowa meatpacking company has attempted to keep production up by hiring the most marginalized populations: ex-offenders, Somali refugees, homeless people, and workers from Palau (and when not able to employ on their own using unscrupulous staffing companies to act as a proxy for worker mistreatment).  But since the raids, the company has been unable to reach previous staffing levels.

The company has filed for bankruptcy and reopened with a skeleton crew but haven’t come close to pre-raid production levels.  To continue production, Agriprocessors may have to (*gasp*) start paying its workers a living wage.

A Chicago Tribune article details the history of low wages in the meatpacking industry:

“There was a time when meatpacking plant jobs paid well, when there was no difficulty at all in obtaining native born workers ” said Stull, the Kansas professor. “Beginning in the 1960s, that changed. The wages were driven down and plants were moved to states where being a union member wasn’t required.”

When adjusted for inflation, meatpacking wages have plummeted since the 1960s, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Slaughterhouse jobs paid an average of $2.60 an hour in 1960, which when adjusted for inflation would be about $19 in current dollars.

Slaughterhouses paid an average of $11.81 an hour in 2007, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The decline in wages has been especially steep since around 1980, when the $8.49 average hourly wage would now be worth $22.31 when adjusted for inflation.

As the economy worsens and the anti-immigrant folks continue protesting any comprehensive plan for immigration reform, it seems hard choices are emerging.  Will companies that have been raided raise wages to provide jobs for native born workers?  And if so, how will the consumer react to higher food prices?

To read the entire article from the Chicago Tribune, click here.

Iowa’s Local 33 Rolls Out Mobile Unit to Address Welder Shortage

America is experiencing a shortage of skilled welders. To ensure the ongoing success of Iowa’s construction efforts, United Association Local Union 33 is striving to train more welders, more quickly — with no reduction in their skill levels — and has acquired a special mobile unit to assist in recruitment and training.

“We now offer a Hybrid Welding Program that provides apprentices with the skills they need to join the welding workforce in 18 weeks,” said Greg Foshe, business manager of Local 33. “To let potential welders know what the program holds in store for them, we will be taking the mobile unit to future employment events.”

To continue reading click here.

Political Correctness Does Hurt Retention

Below is a couple of paragraphs and a link to an article I wrote for the Des Moines Business Record on political correctness. I encourage you to read it and think through the subject – would love to hear comments and thoughts on it.

Article:

This is a subject I have put quite a bit of thought into. For the last decade or so, I have been a manager of people. I am always thinking about retention, and wondering if I am doing everything I can to keep my employees engaged in their jobs. I also come from California, where political correctness is the theme of every management training session.

I have noticed that in employers’ zeal to not offend anyone, they have sucked the life out of the work environment. I admit Iowa is not nearly as bad as what I experienced in California. Still, I would bet there are some organizations here that take things to what I would consider an unhealthy level.

To continue reading click here.

Study: Iowa Women Work More, Paid Less

A new study shows that women in Iowa are more likely to be in the workforce than their counterparts around the country and that they are paid substantially less than women elsewhere.

The Iowa Policy Project study showed that 67% of Iowa women in Iowa are in the workforce, compared to 59% nationally. According to the study, they earn about 78 cents for every dollar men earn, compared to 81.4 cents nationally.

The study shows that after two decades of closing the pay gap, that disparity has grown over the last two years. The median wage for women dropped slightly to $12.50 per hour, while the hourly rate for men grew slightly to $15.98.

Original Source: Associated Press

Fourth Quarter Employment Outlook for Iowa

Below is a link to the latest Manpower Employment Outlook survey for the state of Iowa. The survey covers the larger counties in the state and should give you a pretty good feel for what hiring will look like in the state for the next three months.

Click here for the full results for the state of Iowa.

Iowa Workforce Conference 2008

If you have any involvement with the Iowa workforce at all I cannot encourage you enough to attend this state wide event. I am not just saying that because I am one of the speakers. This will be a great event hosted and put together by Iowa Workforce Development.

Iowa Workforce Conference
October 1 – 2, 2008
Polk County Convention Complex
Des Moines, IA


Register Here!

Keynote addresses from:

Richard L. Ferguson
CEO & Chairman
ACT, Inc.
Preparing for a World of Opportunities

Richard Seline
Principal & CEO
New Economy Strategies
Making the Complex Simple

Pamela Tate
President & CEO
Council for Adult and Experiential Learning

Creating a World of Learners

Homeland Security Attacks Iowa SHRM

Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Stewart Baker said, "I suppose corporate hiring is easier if you can hire illegal workers."
Photo: John Shinkle

It’s one thing to have officials question a lobbying group’s motives behind closed doors. But, as the Society for Human Resource Management found out, it’s quite another to be slammed publicly on a government blog.

The author of the controversial July 11 post was Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Stewart Baker, who took issue with the group’s push to replace the E-Verify system, the on-line program that allows employers to check the legal immigration status of its hires.

SHRM lobbies for the HR execs who do corporate hiring. It also opposes E-Verify,” Baker wrote on the department’s blog. “I suppose corporate hiring is easier if you can hire illegal workers, so perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised that SHRM wants to kill a program that makes it harder to hire illegal workers.” The society of HR professionals hasn’t taken the jab lightly. On Friday, the group sent a letter to its 240,000 members, decrying the “uninformed and insulting” characterization. By Tuesday morning, about 4,500 members had contacted lawmakers to complain about Baker’s inaccurate and sarcastic conclusions, said the society’s lobbyist, Mike Aitken. To read the full article click here.

SHRM fight’s back – click here to read the SHRM President’s response to the blog post by Mr. Baker.

What are your thoughts or experience on this? Is E-Verify all it is cracked up to be or does SHRM have a real argument.

Full Disclosure: I am a member of SHRM’s Central Iowa Chapter and believe that they do have the best interest of business’s that they represent in mind with their concerns.

Iowa’s Minimum Wage vs. Other States

Below is a listing of states that keep their minimum wage above the federal guideline minimum of $6.55 an hour. As wages are always a debate in Iowa I thought it would be interesting to see how we stack-up to these other states:

  • Alaska (the state minimum wage is $7.15)
  • Arizona (state minimum wage is $6.90, indexed to inflation)
  • California (state minimum wage is $8.00)
  • Colorado (state minimum wage is $7.02, indexed to inflation)
  • Connecticut (state minimum wage is $7.65)
  • Delaware (state minimum wage is $7.15)
  • Florida (state minimum wage is $6.79, indexed to inflation)
  • Hawaii (state minimum wage is $7.25)
  • Illinois (state minimum wage increased to $7.75 on July 1)
  • Iowa (state minimum wage is $7.25)
  • Kentucky (state minimum wage increased to $6.55 on July 1)
  • Maine (state minimum wage is $7.00)
  • Massachusetts (state minimum wage is $8.00)
  • Michigan (state minimum wage increased to $7.40 on July 1)
  • Missouri (the state minimum wage is $6.65, indexed to inflation)
  • New Jersey (the state minimum wage is $7.15)
  • New York (state minimum wage is $7.15)
  • Ohio (the state minimum wage is $7.00, indexed to inflation)
  • Oregon (the state minimum wage is $7.95, indexed to inflation)
  • Pennsylvania (the state minimum wage is $7.15)
  • Rhode Island (the state minimum wage is $7.40)
  • Vermont (the state minimum wage is $7.68, indexed to inflation)
  • Washington (the state minimum wage is $8.07, indexed to inflation)
  • West Virginia (The state minimum wage rose to $7.25 on July 1. Note: Many employers in West Virginia are exempt from state law and can pay the lower federal minimum wage.)

After seeing this listing do you think Iowa has a fair minimum wage or do we need an increase?