Valuable Resource for Curbing Workplace Harassment

Wednesday, March 17, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Jodie from Wisconsin is a tragedy of workplace bullyingI have written several times making the connection between workplace harassment, usually the result of toxic managers, and high employee stress levels that undermine productivity, at both organizational and macroeconomic levels.

Naturally, the question from a business leader who cares about fostering a productive workplace culture is, What do I do about it?

Beverly Peterson has got you covered.  She runs a website you should really check out called NoJobIsWorthThis.com.  Peterson explained why she created the site and what it offers in an email to us:

My online documentary is offered free to the public ... and features several videos about abusive bosses and has tons of resources for victims, HR Reps interested in creating policy, etc.  I survived a vicious boss who played havoc with my career, health, and forced me to leave my job so the Blog section even includes a playlist of music to help you through the tough days.  That's also why I wanted this project to be available online for all to use.

Peterson, whose documentaries have appeared on HBO, PBS, and The Sundance Channel, does the best job I've seen of putting faces behind this issue – which is easy to wrap your head around on paper, looking at the employee engagement research, but very difficult to tackle in the real world.

What policies or practices do you have in place in your organization to prevent workplace bullying?

SmartBrief Inadvertently Finds That Over Half of Leaders Don't Understand Their Workplace Culture

Wednesday, March 17, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Undercover Boss, the CBS TV show that's grown in notoriety since I blogged about it last month, shortly after it debuted, is the topic of a new reader poll on SmartBrief on Leadership.

SmartBrief asked the business leaders in its audience if they'd want to be on Undercover Boss.  The vast majority of respondents (59%) answered yes, they'd want to see what's really going on in their workplace.

Now, according to SmartBrief's media kit, 72% of their over 1 million email subcribers are from companies with 1,000 or more employees (45% are from firms with 10,000 to 50,000+ employees).  This begs the question, are leaders of small organizations – say, under 1,000 employees – inherently more "on the pulse" of their workplace culture, and therefore don't need to use the show as a platform to learn about it?

Because of their small size, which allows the CEO and the leadership team to really engage employees and understand both their personal issues and their professional needs and desires – not to mention reduced or nonexistent hierarchies that are linked to smallness – I would have to say yes.

I think if SmartBrief's poll were limited to respondents in organizations with fewer than 1,000 employees (such as our Top Small Company Workplace award applicants), the most prevalent answer would be different.  Maybe it would be "Other," since I didn't see an answer choice of "No, I already know what's going on."

Related: Learn about employee engagement best practices used in successful small firms in our editorial Small But Great.

Industry is NOT an Excuse for Failing to Create a Great Workplace

Tuesday, March 16, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

There are so many areas of business where industry can be a barrier to entry: access to credit or a loan, recruiting, partnerships.  Yet, industry is NOT a limiting factor when it comes to implementing progressive people practices that drive a productive workplace.

In other words, no leader of a company, small or large, should ever answer the question "How well do you engage employees?" with "Our industry isn't conducive to that."

For proof, check out the 17 distinct industries in which our 40 Top Small Company Workplace award finalists for 2010 are operating:

  1. Advertising
  2. Architecture/design
  3. Business-to-business trade
  4. Chemicals/pharmaceuticals/biotechnology
  5. Computer systems and related services
  6. Construction/Engineering
  7. Consulting
  8. Employment services
  9. Health and wellness services
  10. Industrial Goods Manufacturing
  11. Internet services/data processing and other information services
  12. Natural Resources
  13. Personal services
  14. PR/Marketing
  15. Retail Trade
  16. Software
  17. Travel/hospitality

The bottom line?  Chemicals is about as different from Travel as industries come, but even seemingly disparate firms are united by the common bond of stellar human capital strategies.  And guess what?  These strategies create another bond: steady sales growth and a clear path to achieving or maintaining profitability.

For more on our 2010 small biz award finalists, check out these posts:

Transparency Most Important Leadership Lesson for Container Store CEO

Tuesday, March 16, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Did you see Adam Bryant's interview with Container Store CEO Kip Tindell in Friday's New York Times?  Early on Bryant asked Tindell about his most important leadership lessons to create a thriving and productive workplace culture.  Here's what Tindell said:

The way we create a place where people do want to come to work is primarily through two key points.  One of our foundation principles is that leadership and communication are the same thing.  Communication is leadership.  So we believe in just relentlessly trying to communicate everything to every single employee at all times, and we’re very open.  We share everything.  We believe in complete transparency.  There’s never a reason, we believe, to keep the information from an employee, except for individual salaries.

There's a lot to absorb in the leader's answer when it comes to communications team building.  But it boils down to creating a culture of ownership and accountability that is based on mutual trust – workers' trust in the leadership to engage them and provide a nice place to work, and leaders' and managers' trust that a payoff of employee engagement is increased commitment, including offering more ideas to improve processes and ultimately customer satisfaction (and sales).

It is this foundation of trust that has allowed the Container Store to reach true midsize status, with over 4,000 employees, while expanding from 38 locations when I blogged about them in 2007 to 48 today (yes, during this recession).

Related: One of our most popular posts is this one that's also about transparency.

Read the First Chapter of Best Boss Jeffrey Hollender's New Book

Monday, March 15, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Winning Workplaces feels almost like a parent when it comes to Seventh Generation, the company of our Best Boss Jeffrey Hollender.

Hollender's environmentally responsible household products business had annual sales of less than $50 million when we honored him in 2006, at a time when SG's progressive people practices were not widely known; by June 2009, when he named his successor as CEO, that figure had grown to more than $1 billion.  SG recently started airing national TV spots, showing that they're definitely here to stay.

And that's a good thing when it comes to not only green consumerism but sustainable business practices.  Hollender has waxed on the latter topic for some time on his Inspired Protagonist blog.  Now's he's bringing his leading-edge thoughts to the masses through his new book The Responsibility Revolution: How the Next Generation of Businesses Will Win.

I just received an advance copy of the book and am looking forward to digging into it.  You can read the first chapter of it for FREE by visiting Hollender's website.

Related: The forward in The Responsibility Revolution is by Peter Senge, a highly respected author in the area of how to improve employee engagement and workplace team building.  We referenced Senge in the Executive Summary of our 2007 Top Small Workplaces Data Report – see page 5 of this pdf.

In Good Company Workplaces Seeking Women Entrepreneurs' Leadership Best Practices

Monday, March 15, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

What is it about spring and a focus on women entrepreneurship?  Don't get me wrong, I'm not complaining – I think discussing business leadership by the gender that is most dominant in our country, most employed as adults, and, according to BusinessWeek, does more with less venture capital is a good thing.

Last April I blogged about the "flurry of press on the topic of women in business," and a similar flurry seems to be going on now.  In addition to the BusinessWeek article I mentioned above, this has been a hot topic of Reuters, USA Today, and even the U.S. State Department.

Among this press is a call by In Good Company Workplaces – a workspace, networking, and training provider led by two women – for female entrepreneurs to share their workplace culture stories and tips.  Adelaide Lancaster and Amy Abrams are gathering this feedback for a new book they're working on.

In Good Company has gathered a few comments so far on their blog.  You can add yours by clicking here.

It will be interesting to read their book when it's out and hopefully see more real-world evidence of the payoff of employee engagement.

Related: This report by The Center for Women's Leadership, archived on our website, finds that entrepreneurial activity is highest among women who are also employed in a wage job.

Our 'Move Your Money' Survey Closes This Friday - Take It Today

Monday, March 15, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

We've had our short survey on the increasingly popular "Move Your Money" movement up for almost a month.  But as of this Friday, we need to close it so we can write our April IDEAS newsletter article on the results (subscribe to IDEAS here; it's free).

If you haven't taken the survey yet, please do so today:

Take the survey

As a thank-you for your participation, check out this new post on the Small Business CEO blog on what to look for when searching for a new bank to suit your business needs.  Note that in a highly transparent workplace culture, employee engagement can help you make your final decision.

If you have any comments on Move Your Money you'd like to share with your fellow readers, please do so below.

Patagonia Making a Triple Bottom Line Focus More Public

Friday, March 12, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

If you were among the over 41 million people who watched the 82nd Academy Awards telecast last Sunday, you might have seen one of our 2010 Top Small Company Workplaces award finalists: outdoor clothing designer/distributor/retailer Patagonia.

During the program American Express ran an ad for their Members Project, a new partnership with social action network Takepart.com.  Here's the commercial if you missed it:

The ad features Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard, who according to their application for our award – and the company's own press materials – is still actively involved in the business he established almost 40 years ago.

This post on Patagonia's employee and customer blog explains the set piece in the ad, the Matilija Dam, and why removing it would be good for the planet and people (which, along with profit, make up the three pillars of the growing triple bottom line business movement).

Patagonia's work maintaining a strong triple bottom line is readily apparent.  On their website homepage, a vast Environmentalism section is given equal weight to revenue-friendlier sections such as Clothing & Gear and Product Information.

This perfect weave (pardon the pun) of company mission and like-minded employees and customers has kept business strong, even in a down economy.  I can't get into specifics, because our Top Small Company Workplaces media partner Inc. Magazine will share those with you in its June issue should Patagonia be named a winner for 2010.  But trust me that they're doing very well on the key business metrics you're concerned about in your own organization.

Watch for the June issue of Inc. on newsstands to read about this year's winning firms and their workplace culture improvement and team engagement activities, which you can adapt for your company.  You can also subscribe to Inc. and get the issue as soon as it comes out.

Southern Californians: Let's Connect at LA Chamber Green Biz Event March 23

Friday, March 12, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Click to learn more about the presenter of this eventClose to 1 in 5 readers of this blog is from California – a greater share than from our home state of Illinois.  And of those, most hail from where I've called home since last July: SoCal.

I speak now to you folks – and others if you want to fly or drive in: You can connect with me on March 23 by registering for this LA Chamber event on green entrepreneurship.  "Going Green for California," part of Occidental Petroleum's Power Hour Series, features Huell Howser, host of California's Gold on PBS.

According to the LA Chamber, this session will highlight "what innovative and creative Californians are doing to solve environmental challenges."  The registration fee is only $20.  Learn more and register to attend here.

If you can make it, I look forward to seeing you there.  I'll have business cards in hand – though not too many for environmental reasons – and I'd love to hear about what you do and answer any questions you may have about our work to equip small organizations with proven people practices.

Related: This week Taiga Company (a fellow user of our bloging platform, Compendium) shared 6 reasons why going green is a payoff of employee engagement, and makes for a more winning workplace.

Photo credit: Huell Howser Productions

Forbes Endorses 'Share the Pain' Employee Engagement Strategy

Friday, March 12, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

[I]f the current recession turns out to be very long and deep and a business finds it must take further action, the fact that sharing the pain was tried first makes the next steps more palatable for all stakeholders involved, especially employees.  For one thing, those who stay after one or more round of layoffs will be better equipped to mitigate the dreaded "survivor syndrome."

Our Founder and Chairman, Ken Lehman, gave this advice a little over a year ago in a Winning Workplaces editorial titled "Share the Pain."  Since then I've blogged when I've found others concerned with how to improve employee engagement endorse this same strategy.

Last week a major player, Fortune magazine, came out in support of sharing the pain – specifically, going above and beyond to provide the softest landing possible for those you've laid off.

In their article HR outsourcing provider CEO Burton Goldfield recounts how one of his clients invested only $5,000 for two, half-day-long workshops for a good portion of his workforce that he was forced to let go within the last 14 months.  The ROI on that money would seem to be well above 100%:

  • 10 (60%) of the 17 participating employees had found new jobs just a few weeks after attending the company-sponsored workshops – helping to, as Goldfield says, "put food on the table for those who once slaved on your payroll."  This reflects our view that Winning Workplaces are better for employees and the greater society.
  • This practice was also better for the business: Goldfield says his client told him that many of the remaining employees told the CFO how impressed they were that a company that small would take a step like that.  Guess what?  That's going to make it much more likely that they won't bail – even if the economy takes a bigger dip and more team sacrifices need to be made.  This means the CEO's investment of $5,000 can be worth many multiples in terms of the costs saved if they needed to recruit to replace less committed workers who would leave.  (The cost to replace an employee has been found to range from 50% to 150% of his/her salary.)

Have you needed to engage employees in sharing the pain in your firm during this recession?  If so, how did it help them and your business?

5 + 2 Small Business Time-Saving Tips

Thursday, March 11, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Time is money, and in a down economy you might as well double whatever you think your – and especially your stakeholders' – time is worth.

So I really appreciated freelance copywriter Denise McGill's 5 time-saving tips for small business owners that appear on Small Biz Survival.  These run the gamut from things you're likely already doing if you place a premium on communications team building (put your full contact info in all email signatures – automate this and you're done), to less-used but no less powerful tactics like deleting or archiving outdated electronic materials on your computer.

In the spirit of saving you time, I'll keep this post short and conclude by sharing two more related tips:

  1. File under startups, legal considerations: employees = payroll service (thanks to Paula at Workplace Fairness).
  2. File under work/life balance: outsource your more tedious household responsibilities.

Do you engage employees in discussions of saving everyone time and, thus, your company money?

A Quick Triple Bottom Line Tip from Chris Brogan

Thursday, March 11, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Our tagline at Winning Workplaces is "better for people, better for business."  Lately we've taken to tacking on "better for society" to this, reflecting the focus of some of the double and even triple bottom line businesses we've honored over the years for their demonstration of the payoff of employee engagement practices.

A new blog post by small business new marketing guru Chris Brogan re-reminded me of this focus, in a small but powerful way.  In outlining his expectations for himself and his readers he might meet at the 2010 South By Southwest festival that starts tomorrow, Brogan made his case for limiting the distribution of business cards:

Unless you want to do business with me, don’t give me a business card.  We both know how to reach each other, so unless one of us asks for one, let’s not hand them out.  ...

Save a card.  Save the planet.  Rewire the way humans do business.

I think this is a great tip for individuals, and applied en masse it has the potential to help all three stakeholders I mentioned above:

  • Employees – less materials to worry about in sales presentations, networking events, etc.  (As an aside, you can use technology – smart phones, laptops, PDAs – to store a contact's info if you really want it and are sans biz cards.)
  • Businesses – printing fewer cards because employees hand out less of them can slim down your marketing budget.  On a larger scale, more money to play with can spur more effective strategy work to meet customer demands, which can mean more (wait for it) jobs!
  • Society – fewer demands on printers means more trees!  And that's good for everyone because they absorb more of the CO2 caused by global warming and produce more oxygen.

My question for you: How do you engage employees to innovate how you communicate with customers and other stakeholders to cut costs while still achieving your goals?

Photo credit: ChrisBrogan.com

Top 5 Reasons Why Gen Y is Entitled to Its Job Wants

Thursday, March 11, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Yesterday after the Associated Press reported on the results of a San Diego State University study finding that Generation Y (or Millennials) highly value compensation and vacation time, some in the blogosphere asked if, especially in this economic environment, Gen Y needs a wake-up call.

I don't think so – and I'm not saying that because I'm a card-carrying Millennial.  As someone interested in progressive people practices for a more productive workplace, I look at these two sticking points as the carrot at the end of a very lucrative stick for businesses.

Here are my top 5 reasons why I think Gen Y is entitled to its job wants:

  1. It's now the most dominant generation in the workforce.  When you rise to that position and make decisions that benefit companies in both front-line and managerial roles, you get to call the shots when it comes to "skin in the game."
  2. As Donna Fenn reports from a number of sources in her book Upstarts!, not only are record numbers of Millennials enrolling in entrepreneurship/MBA programs, but a greater share of those students than ever before are coming in with a business already in tow.  IMO, if these young people invest the ridiculous amount of time it takes to create and nurture a thriving business – and help our economy in the process through taxes and job creation – they deserve these two rewards.
  3. As Penelope Trunk pointed out in a blog post I cited last year, Gen Y more readily embraces a proven leadership approach known as "fast failure."  Since our employee engagement research shows this can greatly improve innovation and thus productivity and customer satisfaction, again, I think Millennials deserve some just rewards for significantly scaling up a company's revenue and giving them a greater shot at achieving or maintaining profitability.
  4. As organizational development guru David Lee argued on ERE.net last month, Gen Y doesn't beat around the bush on satisfaction – if they're not, you won't see them because they'll have left.  The cost-effective flip side of this for businesses is that they're much less likely than other generations to be "what the Gallup Organization calls ROAD Warriors — Retired on Active Duty."
  5. Finally, as The CEO of YOU author Marsha Petrie Sue wrote in the California Chronicle, "Gen Y won't retire – they will reinvent."  Aren't greater pay and more time off fair tradeoffs for more productive ideas coming back from breaks and a longer work life spent helping companies improve their sales and bottom line?

Do you agree or disagree with my assessment?  Why?

How Our 2010 Small Biz Award Finalists Beat the Competition

Wednesday, March 10, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Yesterday I blogged about our announcement of our finalist organizations for the 2010 Top Small Company Workplace award, showing where these businesses are located across the U.S.

You may be wondering, OK, so what made these 40 firms stand out among the almost 500 that applied?

Our finalists stand out when it comes to their use of effective, progressive employee engagement best practices to drive improved business outcomes.

The two tables below spell this out in detail.  Here are some key best practices/benefits where the finalists stood head and shoulders above all applicants, on average...

Metric/Best Practice 2010 TSCW Applicants 2010 TSCW Finalists Finalist Improvement

Average percentage of employee health insurance premium paid

73%

85%

16%

Average percentage of premium paid for dependent

38%

58%

53%

Percent offering flexible work arrangements

81%

95%

17%

Percent offering child care assistance
(some form available)

45%

67%

49%

Percent offering wellness support

58%

77%

33%

...which helped them produce the following outcomes:

Metric/Outcome 2010 TSCW Applicants 2010 TSCW Finalists Finalist Improvement
Percent profitable in 200991%95% 4%

Average years in business

16 years

28 years

75%

Average employee turnover

19%

8%

138%

Average % open positions filled from within in 2009

22%

28%

27%

Average employee tenure

4 years

7 years

75%

So, yet another employee engagement research sample that shows the payoff of winning workplace engagement strategies.

Help a blogger out: Have you seen any new workplace research showing that better people practices bring better business results?  Let me know by commenting below.

Wally Bock is Right on Potential of First-Line Managers

Tuesday, March 9, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Business speaker, author and coach Wally BockThe comments are coming in fast and furiously to Wally Bock's latest post on his Three Star Leadership Blog.  That's not surprising given his topic: first-line managers.

Bock cites a blog post by Tom Peters in which he goes so far as to call these managers a "peerless strategic opportunity" for innovation and growth.  Expanding Peters' case, Bock explicitly links nurturing these integral staff to more desirable outcomes in engagement, turnover, and, yes, profitability.

In addition to Bock's "boss's bottom line" that employee leadership development helps a company grow even as its key players do, he provides value in these three qualities to look for in first-line managers to assess their longer-term leadership potential:

  • They talk to others about behavior and performance,
  • They make decisions, and
  • They enjoy helping others succeed.

I hope more leaders read the advice of Peters, Bock, and other respected authorities who are pointing to this pivotal cog in the machine of small business – and business in general – as one that can easily be improved, for the benefit of their bottom line, and ultimately everyone through the job growth more thriving enterprises create.

Related: We wrote an editorial a few years ago on the importance of new manager training to more robust (and productive) employee engagement and people practices, and it still holds up today.  Read it here.

Map - The 2010 Top Small Company Workplace Award Finalists

Tuesday, March 9, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Today Winning Workplaces announces the 40 finalists for our 2010 Top Small Company Workplace award, in partnership with Inc. Magazine.

We started our search in November 2009 for small and midsized organizations (750 or fewer employees) that engage employees and create a great workplace culture and, in turn, deliver improved business results.  Almost 500 firms completed our online application by the deadline in late January.

Our staff then pared these down to the 40 finalists that appear in the interactive map below.  Click on a marker to access a finalist's website, as well as to see when they were founded and their size and industry:

The next steps in the 2010 selection process include:

  • Later this month our final panel of judges will choose this year's winners.
  • These winners will be announced in the June 2010 issue of Inc. Magazine.
  • The winners will be honored at Inc.'s conference in Denver on Oct. 27-29 (more info on this event coming soon).

If you know anyone interested in human capital strategies for a more productive workplace, I encourage you to share this post with them by using the button below.  Thanks!

Your Unwanted Tickets Can Fuel Small Business Growth

Monday, March 8, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Today Winning Workplaces is formally announcing our partnership with a new, Chicago-based startup called Tix4Cause.

The brainchild of consumer products industry veteran Kevin Nemetz, Tix4Cause is the realization of Kevin's very cool idea: benefit charities of people's choosing with the up to 60% of season tickets that go unused, while at the same time getting those tickets to folks at fair market prices and providing ticket donors with a tax deduction.

Why is Winning Workplaces joining other charities on Tix4Cause's roster such as Heritage YMCA Group and Ronald McDonald House Charities of Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana?  Because we're a nonprofit and our mission to equip small and midsize businesses with proven, practical, and affordable team building and employee engagement activities is as needed as ever, as our president explained on her blog last week.

So let's connect the dots here:

Here's our affiliate link to register (free) on Tix4Cause, after which you can donate your unwanted or unused tickets to our cause and purchase tickets for ours or other causes.  Thank you in advance for any help you can offer!

Engaging Employees the Hard Way

Friday, March 5, 2010 by Gaye van den Hombergh

In my last post I mentioned the employee satisfaction level (45%) recently reported by The Conference Board and concluded by asking "whose fault is this anyway?"

When I've asked similar questions, I get a range of answers.  Some are adamant that it is the leader's fault.  Some say the employee should switch jobs if they are so dissatisfied.  Others can't come up with an answer.

Here's the answer: It is the leader's fault and the employee's fault.  In organizations with an effective workplace culture, all parties have a sense of ownership. 

In creating a culture of ownership and in turn a productive workplace, we often write about what leaders should doI'm going to look at the flip side of the coin and point out what leaders shouldn't do if they want to contribute to a culture of trust, employee engagement, or team building.

  1. As your organization's leader, DON'T be so intensely focused on results that you forget people are your most important means of getting to those results.  A quick story: Years ago, during the first six months of becoming a CEO, I learned this the hard way.   I overused the phrase "I expect" and the majority of my interactions with my team were about what they were doing to deliver the numbers.  Thank goodness a combination of my own experience, an executive coach, and feedback from a couple people on my team helped me realize that the intense focus on results was backfiring.  Clearly, a productive workforce requires building engaged employees. 
  2. DON'T ask for input and then ignore it.  This approach squashes open communication in the workplace.  This approach says "I don't care about your ideas or expertise."  Without communication and caring, building trust is unlikely. Guess what?  Poor communication + minimal trust = less than optimal results.
  3. DON'T decide that you are going to launch an initiative (large or small) to improve employee engagement unless you plan to follow through.  Not surprisingly, this reinforces a perception that you as the leader really don't care about employees and you can't be counted upon to do what you say you will do.  And that goes back to one of my beginning points: In a great workplace, the culture of ownership contributes to results. 

This list of "don'ts" is endless.  Have you been on the receiving end of a don't?  As a leader, have you learned a valuable lesson from a don't?  Those of us at Winning Workplaces would love to hear your story.

Pushing Back: Keep Your Finance Department In-House for Greater Innovation and Productivity

Friday, March 5, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Like the roots of a big tree, your financial function should be firmly embedded in your company and its culture.I'm all for outsourcing when it makes sense for a business leader.  In fact, this week I retweeted Adam Toren's suggestion that busy executives can save time by outsourcing some of their more tedious household responsibilities.

But I think that if employee engagement or the workplace culture could suffer, then don't do it.  Building trust in the workplace, IMO, should always be the top item on any CEO's to-do list.

So therefore I can't endorse Douglas R. Palmer's pitch on the Small Business CEO blog to outsource your finance department.  I have two thoughts here as to why (in addition to the line in the sand I laid out above):

  • First, while Palmer's list of the pros of doing this does make business sense, one associated risk is the loss or accidental distribution of sensitive information.  Even if you've thoroughly researched your options and chosen a winning partner, that can still happen.  Would you take that chance with your company's balance sheet and salary info?
  • Second and more importantly from a productivity standpoint, keeping this function in-house is one more piece of the intellectual capital pie that can benefit from leadership, if not team, involvement.  One of the themes of our Top Small Workplaces over the years has been their ability to anticipate marketplace changes, which especially helps them navigate tough times like these, in large part because their leaders engage employees by sharing financial information with them and teach them what it means, which spurs actionable ideas on creating efficiencies and optimizing revenue sources.  If they outsourced their financial component, this outcome would be difficult if not impossible to achieve.

Where do you stand here?

Hitachi Foundation Helping Young Entrepreneurs Address Needs of 'New Poor'

Thursday, March 4, 2010 by Mark Harbeke

Learn about the Hitachi Foundation's Yoshiyama ProgramLast month in The New York Times, Peter S. Goodman wrote about "the new poor" – a growing segment of the U.S. population slipping out of the middle class due to falling or nonexistent unemployment benefits at the same time that sluggish economic growth is keeping companies from adding jobs for which they could apply.

Goodman warns that this phenomenon may be a factor for years.  Yet, the Hitachi Foundation is following the old life-lemons adage and taking this opportunity to provide assistance to young entrepreneurs whose missions align with helping this very population.

Triple Pundit, a site that writes on the triple bottom line of "people, planet, profit," shared the details of Hitachi's Yoshiyama Award.  It's for entrepreneurs aged 18-29 – the demographic of the Upstarts that Donna Fenn writes about.  Hitachi is offering six winners up to $50,000 over two years to help support their work.

If you know someone in that age range who runs a business aimed at helping America's poor, tell them about it by using the Share button at the bottom of this post.  And tell them to hurry if they want to apply for 2010: the deadline is March 22.

Related: All social entrepreneurs should get in the habit of doing a "social audit."  There's a story in today's Wall Street Journal on this topic which profiles The Redwoods Group, a specialty insurance provider that Winning Workplaces honored in 2008 for their incredible team building and employee engagement best practices.