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The Path To Business Success? Treat Employees As Assets, Not Expenses.

asset management

The Path To Business Success? Treat Employees As Assets, Not Expenses.

Any number of factors can cause businesses to struggle. A lack of working capital. Poor planning. Ineffective management.

But one factor that always affects business performance is employee engagement and the degree to which employees feel valued by their company, says Bill Lyons, the ForbesBooks author of We Are HR: The Business Owner’s Definitive Guide to Professional Employer Organizations.

“Your company’s profitability depends on its people – and you want your team to be composed of the brightest and the best,” says Lyons, who also is the CEO of Lyons HR (www.lyonshr.com), one of the largest privately held Professional Employer Organizations in the country. “In this labor market, to recruit and retain the best people you have to first make your company a desirable and compelling place to work.”

That means offering attractive wage and benefit packages, along with a healthy workplace culture that keeps employees engaged and productive.

“Instead of seeing employees as an expense,” Lyons says, “businesses need to view them as assets that help improve the bottom line.”

In his work, Lyons says he has learned that there are four pillars of profitability that are critical to business success, and all four in some way impact employees. Those pillars are:

Payroll. Employees expect the correct amount of money to arrive in their bank accounts on time and they want their information easily accessible online, Lyons says. That sounds basic, but businesses sometimes fail to make payroll, or they commit errors when deducting for things like taxes and benefits withholdings. “An employee’s paycheck is what enables them to meet life’s responsibilities,” he says, “so payroll errors and omissions are not things that can be tolerated.”

Employee benefits. If businesses don’t offer such benefits as health insurance or a retirement plan, the better employees will look elsewhere, Lyons says. But smaller businesses usually are at a disadvantage when compared to larger competitors. For example, in 2018 about 85 percent of workers at businesses with 100 or more employees were offered a retirement plan. In contrast, just 53 percent of workers at businesses with fewer than 100 employees had such plans, according to a Department of Labor report. The report said cost and regulatory complexities are factors discouraging small businesses from offering retirement plans.

Risk management. Many small businesses have a certain level of risk baked into their business models, Lyons says. “They may rely on heavy equipment, vehicles, machinery or other factors that can potentially threaten the safety of the workplace,” he says. “The question is: How effective is your risk management program?” Often small businesses that have a clear exposure to employee injuries do not have any formalized risk management program in place. “It’s important to prioritize and clearly communicate this risk management program so employees know the company views their safety as paramount,” Lyons says.

HR compliance. A myriad of employment laws and regulations have been passed through the years and businesses need to make sure they are in compliance, Lyons says. “The workplace is a melting pot of liability for employers,” he says. “Are your hiring practices lawful? What about your compensation plan, is it discriminatory? What about terminations, do you have all the bases covered? How do you determine when an employee deserves a promotion or a raise?” It’s important to have an updated employee handbook that addresses all these issues along with current job descriptions that are compliant. This makes things clearer, Lyons says, for both management and employees, who like to know where they stand.

“To truly drive employee performance,” Lyons says, “you also need to drive employee engagement – the emotional commitment that each individual team member has to their organization and its goals. Healthy employee engagement means a person truly cares about their work and their company. It’s up to owners and managers to create an environment where everyone is allowed and encouraged to consistently produce their best work.”

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Bill Lyons, the ForbesBooks author of We Are HR: The Business Owner’s Definitive Guide to Professional Employer Organizations, is the CEO of Lyons HR (www.lyonshr.com), one of the largest privately held Professional Employer Organizations in the country. Lyons has more than three decades of experience and has helped hundreds of businesses drive performance, control HR and labor costs, increase profitability, and mitigate employment liabilities. Before starting Lyons HR Prior in 1995, he held positions in accounting and finance for both private and publicly held companies.

leadership

How Your Leadership Style Affects Company Culture

When you think of company culture, many things may come to mind. Of course, there are the flashier aspects of company culture (think in-office happy hours or team bowling outings). There are also more subtle elements, such as how workspaces are arranged. While these are undoubtedly parts of a company’s culture, they are not what is at the core.

The culture of a business starts at the very top. The leadership styles of executives set the tone for a company’s internal culture. Leadership affects all aspects of business, including perceived values and goals, communication norms, and employee engagement.

Aspects of company culture are most effective when they solve a problem that employees care about. When improving your company’s culture, think about the issues that affect your staff and the solutions that could be implemented to resolve them. Then, sell this idea to your team. If they truly believe in the “why” that backs up an idea, they are more likely to get behind it.

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Joel Patterson (www.JoelPatterson.com) is the founder of The Vested Group, a business technology consulting firm in the Dallas, Texas area, and ForbesBooks author of The Big Commitment: Solving The Mysteries Of Your ERP Implementation. He has worked in the consulting field for over 20 years. Patterson began his consulting career at Arthur Andersen and Capgemini before helping found Lucidity Consulting Group in 2001. For 15 years he specialized in implementing Tier One ERP, software systems designed to service the needs of large, complex corporations. In 2011, Patterson founded The Vested Group, which focuses on bringing comprehensive cloud-based business management solutions to start-ups and well-established businesses alike. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration from Baylor University.