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FMCSA looking to Mandate Electronic tracking Facebook ROI for Business Explained ISSUE 01/ MAY 2014 MOTORCOACH Why 80 Percent of Your Employees Are Job Hunting Maryland Association No small-business owner can afford the costs of high turnover. Here’s how to identify these missteps and rectify them The Top 5 Hiring Mistakes

MMA May 2014 Newsletter

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Page 1: MMA May 2014 Newsletter

FMCSA looking to Mandate

Electronic tracking

Facebook ROI for Business

Explained

ISSUE 01/ MAY 2014

MOTORCOACH

Why 80 Percent of Your EmployeesAre Job Hunting

Maryland

Association

No small-business owner can afford the costs of high turnover. Here’s how to identify these missteps and rectify them

The Top 5 Hiring Mistakes

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MCI_AdGen2_Final_RnkMag_OL.indd 1 1/2/13 3:20 PM

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COMPANY CULTURE/Today’s working environment is global in scope, rife with uncertainty and lacking...

STAFF STRETCHED/Chances are during the recession you called upon your employees to pitch...

HOW TO SELL/ I hear it all the time from business owners: “We have a great product or service but I just don’t know...

WHY 80 PERCENT/Take a good look at your employees. Did you know 80 percent of them are ready to bail?

FOUR REASONS/Value is the killer app in sales. Without it, you are relegated to competing on price.

5 STEPS FOR LEADERS/Our research shows nearly three out of four organizations are infected with one or more of the costly behaviors of gossiping, shifting blame and turfism.

EXPERTS AGREE/There are tons of books about time-management, but increasingly...

FACEBOOK ROI/Have you been using Facebook for your business but are unsure if its providing any real return on invest-ment?

THE TOP 5 HIRING/As a business owner or manager, you know how tough it is these days to recruit the right people and keep them happy so they’ll stick around. The war for talent rages on,...

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PRODUCTIONProduction layout&design:

ADVERTISING opportunities:

deliverabilitiesPhone: 1.888.798.1802Email: [email protected]

GreenazinePhone: 1.866.996.6452Email: [email protected]

FMCSA LOOKING TO MANDATE ELD’S/A Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) proposal...

FMCSA NEW WEBSITE/The new revitalized FMCSA’s website puts services front and cetnter.

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57 CERTIFIED MEDICAL CHECKS/Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Attention Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) Drivers and...

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Prevost coaches do more than transport your passengers in style and safety. They move your business forward by giving you the

best in dependability, fuel effi ciency and support. Our high deck H-Series Coach offers state-of-the-art amenities that elevate every

passenger’s experience. Our longer-wheelbase X3-45 Coach combines the smoothest possible ride with a wider entry and 80" high

interior passenger space. All Prevost coaches deliver exceptional performance with lower operating costs. Which means they’re as

perfect for your business as they are for your passengers.

YOU’RE HEADED FOR SUCCESS. WE’RE FAMILIAR WITH THE ROUTE.YOU’RE HEADED FOR SUCCESS. WE’RE FAMILIAR WITH THE ROUTE.YOU’RE HEADED FOR SUCCESS. WE’RE FAMILIAR WITH THE ROUTE.

Please contact your Prevost Regional Sales Manager for more information.

USA 1-877-773-8678 CANADA 418-883-3391 www.prevostcar.com The u l t imate c lass.

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Maryland Motorcoach Association (MMA) hosted its 2014 Annual Group Leader Marketplace on March 20, 2014 at the Valley Forge Casino Resort in conjunction with Pennsylvania Bus Association (PBA). The one-day event included 164 vendors and approximately 450 group leaders from senior centers, social clubs, church groups, and reunion groups allowing all of them an excellent opportunity to meet representativesof destinations, hotels, restaurants, and attractions.

Approximately 25 Coach companies and tour operators attended Marketplace says Al Spence, President of A.S. Midway Trailways and MMA current President. Our group leaders had a great time and enjoyed the local sights. We thank everyone for making this event a huge success.

A group of travel-industry suppliers, along with Rich Gilbert, MD Department of Tourism, Aimee Reef and Stephanie Weaver with the Valley Forge CVB were extremely helpful in organizing this event. A HUGE THANKS TO THEM.

Group leaders were treated to lunch, and exciting familiarization (FAM) tour options at; Valley Forge Casino Resort, Peddler’s Village, Asher’s Chocolates, Philadelphia Premium Outlets, American Treasure Tour, Reading Terminal Market, National Constitution Center, QVC Studio Tour, Herr’s Snack Factory Tour, following the three-hour session at Marketplace

“Plans are underway now for 2015 so watch for more exciting news as it develops” says Mary Presley,

Executive Administrator for MMA. “The 2014 marketplace was MMA’s best show ever and will be a hard act to follow”. Anyone wishing to submit a proposal or obtain more information for the 2015 marketplace should contact Mary at [email protected].

Copy and paste the link below to view the Slide Show Pictures of Marketplace. Feel free to share with your friends and co-wokersh t t p s : / / w w w . d r o p b o x . c o m / s /k5lfmr yr0h8dn13/MMA%202014%20Group%20Leader%20Marketplace%20-Mobile.m4v

We hope as everyone finds himself or herself busy during this peak travel time of the year and that we don’t forget the importance of safety and compliance. As we manage our schedules, perform maintenance, and try to meet customer demands, we must keep safety and compliance in our thought and decision patterns.

Al Spence,President,Maryland Motorcoach Association,A.S. Midway Trailways

NEW MEMBER BENEFIT: Maryland Motorcoach Association joins Maryland Chamber of Commerce giving all MMA members eligibility to participate in Chamber activities and events. Participating in the Maryland Chamber is a great way to grow your network, promote your business and stay up to date on the latest legislative and regulatory developments. Explore this section of the site to learn how you can: Contact Mary Presley for more information or go to: https://www.mdchamber.org/member-resources

President’s Message:

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company culture and how to do it

right“Corporate cultures are real … they

can be effectively managed, and that, if managed properly, they will

also produce long-term economic performance that far outstrips the

results of companies that do not manage their cultures.”

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Today’s working environment is global in scope, rife with uncertainty and lacking in long-term guarantees. In such a setting, company culture has been emphasized, whether to assuage employees and shareholders or provide a rallying point, a mission or a common set of business goals — and even as the difference between success and failure.

But what is culture, and what does “getting it right” mean?

Why emphasize culture, and if companies do value it, how should they act on that?

Who’s doing it right, and how?

I recently sought answers from Ryan Estis, a sought-after speaker and consultant who helps “companies, leaders and sellers more effectively connect to their two most important audiences: employees and customers” and recently published the white paper “Winning with Culture: How Leadership Drives Engagement & Performance.”

“Culture is the character of the organization”

The definition of culture depends on whom you talk with. I noted that the white paper opens with this overview: “Welcome to the new economy, where culture is

the competitive advantage. People who enjoy and believe in what they do — and feel valued for doing it — invest more of themselves in their work.”

Estis distilled it further: “Culture is the character of the organization.” Again, what does that mean? For Estis, it’s not a matter of what system you’re using, or what client or consultant you have to measure or improve your company. Culture is more of a unique reflection of everything a company is doing and of its characteristics, not a static something you can point to or a generic checklist you can pass around.

“It’s the DNA of the company,” he says. “It’s

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how you work, what you value — there’s what a company does, right, and there’s what a company’s trying to accomplish, and there’s also the method by which you go about getting there. And I think culture informs all of those things.”

What happens when culture is ignored

Sometimes, the word “culture” can be downplayed, a synonym for “soft skills” or something human resources is in charge of communicating. But it’s larger than that, Estis says, particularly in a global business environment where everyone has access to the same information and tools.

Another way that culture is underappreciated is when large companies combine or when a company makes multiple purchases without much regard for how disparate cultures will co-exist.

Airlines are a great example: They make for difficult, costly mergers, with the following culture issues examined mostly as cost and financial problems: union contracts, customer service and perks, flight schedules, computer systems and operational attitudes.

Even when culture is acknowledged, it’s too often after the fact, and as just a hurdle rather than a focal point.

Be proactive: As J. Robert Carleton and Claude Lineberry have noted with airlines and in general with mergers, there is a common misconception that cultural discord must simply be survived during mergers that does not bear out with the facts. As they wrote in 2004 about culture broadly:

“[C]orporate culture are real … they can be effectively managed, and that, if managed properly, they will also produce long-term economic performance that far outstrips the results of companies that do not manage their cultures.”

What makes managing culture during a M&A more difficult, Estis says, is {Continued on page 12}

that merging cultures is not easy. He says you almost have to create “a third culture,” which is a difficult, involved task that requires compromise and analysis. Too many companies don’t put in that work during a merger or acquisition — exactly when it’s most needed.

Talking about the mission statement

Let’s return to companies that do want to do culture, and want to do it better.

Most companies have a statement that seeks to define what the business is about, what it intends to do and how it will do so. The question about these words, “whether a mission statement, vision or values,” Estis says, is not about having such a definition but about executing and embedding it.

The white paper found that only 41% of surveyed employees have confidence in senior management, with only 46% feeling they received sufficient communication. Clearly, there is a gap in the U.S. workforce between the lofty values and what the employees find to be the case (and what they are hearing from above).

A company’s values, or mission statement, or culture, Estis says, is really about “who gets hired, who gets rewarded, who gets promoted and who gets let go. And that really comes down to leadership, and being consistent, and holding people accountable — not only to what you accomplish, but how you get there.”

Companies should ask, “Are our values and mission understood and embraced internally?” If, as Estis has done, you asked a room of people how many had core values at their companies, many hands would be raised. If you offered those people a reward for being able to stand up and recite those values, you might end up rewarding no one.

Of course, some companies can’t communicate until they know what their values and purpose are. This may

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be because they are new or in turmoil, but it also applies to companies that have been acquired, merged or spun off.

One example of successfully building a mission statement is Red Hat. “They actually, in many respects, crowdsourced their mission statement,” Estis says. “They asked for employee opinion … they got input from all their employees and took that into consideration as they developed these things.” The lesson is to get together with your people, helping to align values with actions from the beginning.

Implementation, and the role of managers

Communication from the top down, through frontline managers and down to rank and file, is crucial if the desired culture has any chance of taking hold. It’s not just a matter of strong performance but also of retention and recruiting, Estis says.

One consistency among organizations that get culture right, he says, “is a desire to keep getting better.” Complacency is not an option.

Farm Credit has a highly rated company culture, with 92% of employees saying they are “fully engaged,” with eight years of strong performance and growth, but the CEO asked Estis during their last meeting, “You’ve been with us the whole day. I just want to know from your perspective, what else can I be doing to make us better?”

Managers can face a dual challenge of getting the right communication from their bosses, passing it on properly, and then handling and filtering feedback from their reports. It can be “caught-in-the-middle syndrome,” Estis says, but it’s really a great opportunity rather than a problem: “I think middle management can be a catalyst to create more open, transparent communications throughout a large, complex enterprise.”

Estis recently spent a day with AT&T, which is shifting its culture and focus from being a phone business to being a broader telecommunications service company. The communication challenges include scale, resistance from old-liners, etc. The key for managers, whether at AT&T or elsewhere, is transparency and listening, he says.

“I think part of being a great leader is being a great two-way communicator,” he says, and being consistent in your efforts in order to help your team aim at the same goals. Honesty and openness, too, can help ease the wound of bad news and help your team move beyond it. Whether it’s one-on-one meetings, town hall events, or other means, Estis says, employees are eager to communicate more and to be aware of the company’s performance and challenges.

However your company defines and implements culture, it’s going to be a primary way to win in this modern, global era. “We’re living in an open-source economy,” Estis says. “What becomes the differentiator or the competitive advance?

I think culture increasingly is a catalyst to outpace, outperform the competition, grow, innovate, attract the best people, keep the best people, and win in business.”

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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Don’t be fooledby its pretty face

Once again, Setra has raised the benchmark in the North American luxury motorcoach segment, with over 30 innovations in design, passenger and driver comfort, safety and environmental efficiencies. Daimler’s new, unique Front Collision Guard (FCG), for instance, is a passive safety system engineered to protect the driver and tour guide in the case of a frontal impact. Experience the all-new Setra TopClass S 417. From Daimler Buses North America, the worldwide leading manufacturer of buses and motorcoaches.

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Staff Stretched to the Limit?

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Chances are during the recession you called upon your employees to pitch in in ways you wouldn’t have in more flush times. And chances are you’re still running with a streamlined staff, even if you see better times ahead. While “stretch roles,” as experts call them, can help employees grow, they can be bad for business in the long-term, affecting not only your employees’ behavior but your efficiency and your bottom line. Here, four experts share signs to help you identify if someone, or something, in your organization is about to snap:

Symptom: Business Bottlenecks. Look for places in your business where process has stalled, and you’ll likely find an overburdened employee, says Dave Berkus, superangel and author of the popular blog Berkonomics. He says bottlenecks are caused when someone, maybe even you, is so booked he or she can’t break away to complete an important task or make a crucial decision.

This can have serious impact on an entire organization because everyone before or after the bottleneck is left in limbo. For example, Berkus says, if you run a computer company and your installer is two weeks behind, billing is delayed on one side of the bottleneck, and trainers are left waiting on the other. In this case, bringing on some help could break the bottleneck free.

“That one person you hire will make 20 people more efficient if that person solves the problem at the point of constriction,” Berkus says.

Symptom: Customer Complaints. The downturn might have forced you to get creative, pulling a customer service rep to help with sales or getting your IT guy to handle your Twitter feed. This is the wrong approach if client satisfaction suffers. If your metrics reveal lower than expected customer service scores or you’re getting mixed reviews from clients, it’s time to take stock of stretch roles.

“That feedback could be an early indicator

{Continued on page 16}

Staff Stretched to the Limit?

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that things are starting to fail and that there’s risk,” explains Jamie Latiano, vice president of human resources for In Flight Entertainment, based in Irvine, Calif., and president-elect of the Orange County chapter of the National Human Resources Association. “An assessment has to be made to see whether your internal team members have the strength and experience to meet the growing needs of your growing business, or if they’re capped where they are.”

Latiano suggests staffing for the future. “I encourage leaders to think a few years ahead,” she says. “You may be investing in talent that’s a little heavy hitting right now but that’s the experience that’s going to help you meet your objectives.”

Symptom: Behavior Changes. You don’t

need to look far to find signs of burnout in employees, especially during a time when job satisfaction is at one of its lowest levels in 22 years. Overstretched employees may exhibit a wide variety of behavior and personality changes, according to Debbie Zmorenski of Orlando, Fla.-based Moren Enterprises, and bosses should look for red flags.

She says someone who used to be upbeat and outgoing may appear anxious, critical, angry or withdrawn. An employee once known for accuracy might make careless mistakes. Staffers may call in sick more often, or use more physical and mental health benefits. Conflict between employees may also bubble to the surface, and turnover rates may increase. Says Zmorenski, “One symptom can lead to an entire

list of things that damage the bottom line of the company.”

But isn’t as difficult or expensive to restore morale as you might think. Extending flex-time, increasing recognition programs and remembering to say ‘thank you’ go a long way. “It shows you appreciate not only the fact they’re carrying an extra workload but that they’ve stayed with you through the tough times,” Zmorenski says.

Symptom: Decreased Productivity. Ironically, the more individuals work the less they may be getting done, says HR expert Margaret Greenberg, founder of The Greenberg Group, a consulting and executive coaching firm based in Andover, Conn.

“You’ll see people that are just chained to their

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READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

desk and don’t feel like they can leave. They think ‘If I just work longer and harder, I’ll get more done and catch up’ when in fact that’s a fallacy,” she says. Ask employees to log their projects, and if longer hours don’t seem to translate into increased output, it might be time to intervene. Encouraging e-mail shut-offs and mid-afternoon walks can actually increase efficiency, Greenberg says, as does taking time to plan before diving into tasks.

But Greenberg, co-author of Profit from the Positive, says there is a bright side to stretching staff beyond their original job descriptions, one that you can take advantage of. The increased responsibilities incubated talent and a greater perspective on how the company operates. “They can spot efficiencies and interdependencies to your benefit,” Greenberg says. “Stretch roles are not all negative all the time.” Take another look at job descriptions to see if promotions are in order or if you need to recast roles to fit what your company needs now. If so, encourage your employees to rise to the challenge.

But isn’t as difficult or expensive to restore morale as you might think.

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I hear it all the time from business owners: “We have a great product or service but I just don’t know how to sell it. I hate sales!” Unfortunately for these entrepreneurs, selling is a necessary evil. Unless your product is so revolutionary that people are willing to line up at your door for it, you need to learn how to sell; otherwise, your days as a business owner are numbered.

How can someone who either hates selling or doesn’t know

how to sell learn the fine art of getting customers to say yes? It starts with three simple steps:

1. Understand Features vs. Benefits

Look at your business from your customers’ perspective. They don’t initially see the “features” of your product or service; they see the “benefits” of your product or service to them. Theodore Levitt, a Harvard marketing professor,

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How to Sell (For People Who Hate Sales)

These three tips will help

you master the art of

getting customers to say

yes, even if you’re not a

born salesperson.

used to tell his students, “People don’t want to buy a quarter-inch drill. They want a quarter-inch hole!” If you approach selling to your customers in this manner, then what are the most common benefits of your product or service to them? If you’re not sure, ask some customers why they buy from you. They will be more than happy to tell you.

2. Help Others Help You

Paraphrasing a quote, “There are two types of salespeople that enter a room—the first one walks in and says, ‘Here I am!’ The second one walks in and says, ‘Ah, there you are!’” If you are uncomfortable with sales, the best and easiest approach is to be the second salesperson. Shine the spotlight on your customers and their needs. When you help them solve a problem or find the solution they sought, they will thank you, pay you money and hopefully become an advocate for your brand. If they have questions, answer

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If you want increased sales without heavy lifting, the

simplest and surest way to get there is by delivering the best

possible customer service on the planet.

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them. If you don’t know the answer, let them know that you don’t want to give them misinformation and you will make it a priority to get back to them with the correct response. Selling is problem solving. Someone comes to you with a need or a problem; you provide the solution.

RELATED: 5 Reasons Your Website Visitors Aren’t Buying

3. Deliver Exceptional Customer Service

If you want increased sales without heavy lifting, the simplest and surest way to get there is by delivering the best possible customer service on the planet. Your credo should be “Happy Customers are the Best Customers.”

RELATED: 12 Tips for a Perfect Pitch

Problems arise with every product and service. How your company responds to those problems is critical to your sales success. As a customer, I will go out of my way to buy from people I know who put in the extra effort in making me feel like they really appreciate my business. When things go wrong, they make it right—without question. I then become their sales champion. I tell all my friends about their wonderful service or

their terrific product. I feel good knowing that I’m delivering new business to a company that makes me feel like family. At that point, you are no longer selling. You’ve become a trusted advisor. I respect your work and your opinion. I trust you!

Selling can be an arduous task. Not everyone possesses the gift of gab and enjoys dealing with all kinds of people. If you struggle with picking up the phone, greeting potential customers or making presentations about your business, address your fears. Don’t worry about rejection—just know that it’s coming. It won’t kill you and it’s not personal. Believe in your product, focus the spotlight on your customers and deliver world-class customer service.

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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Why 80 Percent of Your Employees Are Job HuntingHere are 6 things you can do to get them to stay.

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Take a good look at your employees. Did you know 80 percent of them are ready to bail?

Take a good look at your employees. Did you know 80 percent of them are ready to bail? According to a sobering new Monster.com survey, nearly half (42 percent) of workers are unhappy with their current jobs, and a whopping 81 percent plan to job hunt this year.

Monster.com polled workers to find out what was driving them to look for a new job and how confident they were about finding a job. Surprisingly, the lingering effects of the recession don’t seem to be weighing on employees. An astounding 79 percent of employed survey respondents—and 74 percent of those who are unemployed—are confident about their prospects for landing a new job in the next year. That’s the case even though 56 percent admit they’re struggling to find a job, 47 percent say they can’t find a job that matches their experience and qualifications, and 38 percent believe potential employers

don’t understand the value of their skills and experience.

What’s motivating employees to look for greener pastures? Here’s what they say, and what you can learn from it.

1. Money Matters

Almost all (96 percent) consider salary an important reason for seeking a new job, and 32 percent say “higher compensation” is the primary reason they’re job hunting.

What you can do: Bite the bullet and find a way to make sure your salary is at least commensurate with, if not better than, those offered by competing businesses. Keep in mind that wage or salary raises aren’t the only ways to accomplish this. You can also institute bonuses tied to individual performance, or a

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profit-sharing plan that rewards employees if the company does well. Adding or expanding benefits is another option—as long as those benefits have some financial value. For instance, if you decide to do a 401(k) match, make sure employees know that you’re essentially giving them X amount of dollars tax-free. Talk to your accountant about the best options for your business.

2. Security Blanket

95 percent of employees say they are looking for a job with more job security, and 26 percent say this is their main reason for seeking a new job.

What you can do: Job security is often a perk for small-business employees, so be sure to emphasize that any time you’re hiring. If you did go through layoffs during the downturn, employees

may be extra skittish. Be open with your remaining employees and, if you have no plans for layoffs in the foreseeable future, let them know. Remind them of the long-term history your team has.

3. A Little Respect

Intangible issues are a big factor in the job search. Some 97 percent of employees say “respect and appreciation” are crucial factors in a new job.

What you can do: Are you disrespecting employees without even knowing it? Many entrepreneurs have a tendency to micromanage, which can make employees feel as if they can’t be trusted to do their jobs. Tell employees what you want them to accomplish, then let them figure out the best plan for reaching

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those goals. Check in with them, but don’t loom over them. Ask for their insights and opinions. Last but not least, acknowledge their achievements in front of the rest of the team.

4. Searching for Fulfillment

Nearly all (97 percent) the respondents say being able to use their skills and feeling fulfilled by what they do are important factors in choosing a job. In addition, 27 percent say the top reason they’re looking for a new job is to feel more fulfilled, and 27 percent say the top reason is to find a better match with their skills.

What you can do: As a small-business owner, you have an edge over big companies here, because you can really get to know each employee and see what makes him or her tick. Work with your supervisors and managers to pinpoint each employee’s strengths. Then work with the employee to identify skills that he or she can build on to become an even better member of your team. Develop a plan to use each worker’s skills to maximum advantage. You’ll benefit your business—and build employee loyalty at the same time.

5. Flexibility

While four in 10 job seekers say flexible work schedules and the option to work from home are important in choosing a job, this factor was far less important than many others.

What you can do: Don’t get me wrong—for certain jobs or types of workers, flexibility can be key. But make sure the other four factors are in place before you worry about offering remote work or flexible hours.

6. Employee Engagement

Though this was not covered in the Monster.com survey, a recent study from Gallup indicates about 70 percent of American workers are disengaged from their jobs.

What you can do: Kristen Parrinello, advisor of human potential at The LBL Group, says entrepreneurs need to realize “employees are the key to your sustained competitive advantage.” To increase engagement, she advises, “Take the time

to really listen to your employees—not only to their words, but to the feelings behind them. This is where trust is earned.” Parrinello says business owners should increase the “quality time” they spend with their staffs, and notes, “Walking meetings are becoming more popular. Pick a topic to brainstorm,” then take a group walk to discuss everyone’s ideas.

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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Four Reasons Your Sales Force Is Unpreparedto Create Value

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Four Reasons Your Sales Force Is Unpreparedto Create Value

Value is the killer app in sales. Without it, you are relegated to competing on price. Here’s why your sales force is unprepared to create value and what to do about it.

No Business Acumen: Your sales force doesn’t have the business acumen, the experience, or the situational knowledge. To succeed in sales today you have to be a bigger salesperson. Being a bigger sales person means being a better business person. It means thinking about your client’s problems through the eyes of the business owner. We use words like “trusted advisor” and ”consultative,” but we don’t prepare the salesforce to be those things. If you want real sales enablement, this is where it starts and ends.

No Differentiation: Your sales force can’t present your defining differentiators in a way that creates value in the minds of your clients. Ask a salesperson to differentiate their offering from their competitors in a way that is compelling. Most of them will tell you that they’re not very different from their competitors. They don’t believe that you’re very different from your competitors. Without defining differentiators, those differences that make a difference, it’s very difficult to demonstrate the real value in your value propositions. As a sales leader, you have to sell this differentiation all the time.

Transactional Disease: Your salespeople behave transactionally because that’s what they believe they’re supposed to do. As a leader you have to build and protect a culture. You have to share your worldview and you have to enforce it. The world outside is telling your sales people that they are only going to win on price, that you’re supposed to be Walmart. They’re being led to believe that the only value customers really perceive is lowest price. It doesn’t matter that none of this is true, and it doesn’t matter that the sales people working in your organization don’t

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If you allow discounting in order to win new opportunities then you are contributing to the problem of sales people not being prepared to create value.

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understand the ideological inconsistency of believing this while carrying an iPhone and a new MacBook. What matters is you continually reinforce the perception of value and that you enforce the mindset that you will accept nothing less than value creation and reject all transactional beliefs and behaviors.

You Allow Discounting: Leadership and management sometimes doesn’t protect own business model by enforcing the creation of value when winning an opportunity. If you allow discounting in order to win new opportunities then you are contributing to the problem of sales people not being prepared to create value. If you do so for short term revenue at the expense of your business model, you’re breaking the business. You challenge every deal to see what value you are creating that makes you worth paying more to obtain. Or you end up not creating value, and you step onto the slippery slope to a declining profit margins.

Ultimately, the sales leaders is responsible for the results of their team. If your sales team is unprepared to create value, improve their business acumen, their ability to differentiate, enforce a value-creation mindset, and don’t contribute to the problem by discounting.

Questions

How do you learn to create more value? What experiences contribute to that outcome?

Can each person on your team easily differentiate your offering from your

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competitor’s? Is each member of your team part of the differentiation?

How much does the worldview that price is the only real value permeate your team’s mindset?

What do leaders do that contributes to the

Ultimately, the sales leaders is responsible for

the results of their team.

sales force’s lack of ability to create value for their clients?

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has one mission: safety. And to pursue that mission, we offer a wide variety of useful services and important information to bus and truck drivers, to carrier companies, and to consumers.

Today, I am proud to announce a significant advance in getting those resources into your hands more easily, our redesigned www.fmcsa.dot.gov.

The new site puts our best foot forward by featuring the pages visitors access most often. We’ve also restructured our content based on who you are --driver, carrier, or consumer--

and what you’re interested in --news, safety, registration, or regulations.

In addition to helping us move the needle on safety, the new www.fmcsa.dot.gov improves our stakeholder service. Whatever you’re looking for from FMCSA, from registering for a DOT number and learning about medical requirements to our popular consumer pages “Look Before You Book” and “Protect Your Move,” the new site makes it easier to find.

And with all of the resources we offer, we hope you’ll check back often to discover something new.

Revitalized FMCSA websiteputs service front and center

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5 Steps for Leaders Struggling to Lead Positive Change

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three out of four organizations are infected with one

or more of the costly behaviors

The positive news is that solutions are possible. The six percent who succeeded used the same approach—they targeted the problem with multiple strategies aimed at personal, social and environmental influences. The leaders who failed relied on a single strategy, such as incentives or verbal persuasion. The key to success was combining multiple sources of influence into a potent solution.

Interestingly, the amount of time leaders spent on the issue had little impact on their success; the correlation was barely significant. But how they spent their time, including the number of sources of influence they applied, had a huge impact.

Here are a few tips to help you enlist multiple sources of influence in leading positive change in your own organization.

1. Focus on behavior. Leaders who simply repeat vague values drive little change. Those who identify concrete and clear behaviors they hope people will enact are far more effective influencers. For example, five million people were spared from AIDS in Thailand when one leader moved beyond vague awareness campaigns and focused on 100 percent condom use in the sex trade.

Our research shows nearly three out of four organizations are infected with one or more of the costly behaviors of gossiping, shifting blame and turfism. According to the study, infected organizations experience significantly worse results across the board—with decreased productivity, quality, safety, customer satisfaction, employee morale and higher turnover. For example, the data reveals that organizations suffering from one or more of the most common infections are nearly twice as likely to experience quality problems. Here is how one respondent described it:

“Two departments in my company are responsible for quality for the entire organization. Each created their own way of being compliant, as a way of protecting their silo. As a result, employees have a hard time knowing which process to follow, and quality has actually worsened.”

Unfortunately, these common and costly infections are also highly resistant to change. Only six percent of the leaders surveyed said they’d been able to root out these behavioral problems. In fact, 94 percent of respondents reported that these bad behaviors had persisted for a year or longer, and a third reported the problem had persisted for more than 10 years.

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2. Connect to values. Use potent stories and direct experiences to make change a moral and human issue. New York restaurateur Danny Meyer helps employees connect to the value of “hospitality” rather than just “customer service” by repeatedly sharing powerful stories of meaningful guest experiences their colleagues create.

3. Invest in skills. Most leaders see influence as a matter of motivation. Influencers invest more in building ability than simply motivating the masses. For example, healthcare CEO Matt Van Vranken influenced massive increases in hand hygiene habits in his nearly 20,000-employee hospital system by helping employees develop skills for speaking up when they saw a colleague violate hygiene standards.

4. Leverage peer pressure. Social influence is the most potent force for change. Research shows that if people believe bad behavior is normal they are far more likely to follow suit. A Ghanaian gold mine reduced vehicle accidents by engaging respected drivers in training other drivers in proper safety practices. Peers were far more effective at gaining compliance than either staff professionals or senior leaders had ever been.

5. Change the environment. Use tools, technology, information and surroundings to make people conscious of the need to change and enabled to make better choices. For example, software entrepreneur Rich Sheridan cut employees’ time fixing errors from 40 percent of working time to no time at all by putting code writers in teams of two, sharing one computer. This environmental change significantly increased employee productivity and morale.

The most important takeaway from this research is to combine these strategies together. Cherry picking one or two won’t work. When it comes to resistant strains of behavioral infections, the cure requires multiple sources of influence.

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Experts Agree, Don’t Start The Day By Answering Your Emailrecurring advice across many of the 20 experts who contributed essays to the book was simple: don’t start the day by dealing with your email. Instead, the experts overwhelmingly suggest that you start with your hardest work of the day and defer the distractions of email for later.

In some work environments this may seem impractical, or even impossible, but the principle can be applied to any situation. In some cases, the answer may be to get to work early in order to carve out some sustained thinking

There are tons of books about time-management, but increasingly I hear the topic discussed in terms of energy management. Our minds, the thinking goes, only have so much capacity for any one type of activity, so we have to build that limitation into our daily routines if we want to work effectively. Our email inbox may seem to be our highest priority, but “inbox zero” can lead to “energy zero” if you are not careful.

I just finished reading a new book by 99U called Manage Your Day-to-Day: Build Your Routine, Find Your Focus & Sharpen Your Creative Mind. The

experts suggest that you start with your hardest work of the day and save email for later.

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Experts Agree, Don’t Start The Day By Answering Your Email

Excerpts from NTSB Accident report: http://www.ntsb.gov/doclib/reports/2005/HAR0501.pdf

time at the start of the day. For others it is just a matter of retraining yourself to not assume that the priorities of your inbox match up with your own personal goals and responsibilities.

We start with email is not only because we need to respond to others, some of them clients or superiors, in a timely manner, but also that re-acting is easier than pro-acting. Generally whatever is most important to do is difficult and requires skills that one uniquely possess. That is why it is your work. As much as we may revel in our individuality,

expressing that individuality—especially in corporate situations—can make us feel vulnerable and exposed.

A report from McKinsey last year estimated that the average knowledge worker spent 28% of their workday on email. Tech consultant Linda Stone has coined the term “email apnea” (and the more general “screen apnea”) to describe the curious behavior that most of us display when reading email and other screen related tasks: we actually hold our breath. And like sleep apnea which is

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the trend and not answer every message immediately, your assertion of priorities will make it easier for your co-workers to assert theirs.

The more people in an organization who take this approach, I think, the less superfluous emails will get sent. If you don’t assume an immediate response you will often just figure it out yourself. Voilà, one less email exchange! Taming email is a group endeavor, but it starts with you.

the interstices between meetings, but rather to allow for some unstructured time for your mind to both recharge and also absorb what just happened.

Taken as a whole, the suggestions in Manage Your Day-to-Day urge us to take responsibility for our own time and energy by not letting email or other forms of reactivity blunt our focus. It is, of course, important to be responsive to other people, but as James Victore writes, “we are losing the distinction between urgent and important—now everything gets heaped in the urgent pile.” As hard as it may seem to buck

responsible for a host of maladies, email and screen apnea sap our energy and increase our body’s tension.

So beyond the suggestion to not let others shape your own priorities, starting your day with email can literally have a detrimental effect on the rest of your day. Best-selling author and founder of The Energy Project, Tony Schwartz, argues that we have to build renewal of our energy into our work day. Scott Belsky, co-founder on Behance and now VP of Community at Adobe, recommends not reaching for your smartphone in

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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A Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) proposal that would require the use of electronic logging devices (ELDs) by drivers of commercial motor vehicles has been officially published. The supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking, published in the March 28, 2014, Federal Register, would require use of ELDs by all drivers who are currently required to maintain a record of duty status (driver’s log) to record their hours of service. Under the proposal, ELDs would have to be installed within two years after publication of the final rule. The devices would have to meet specific standards, including be connected (“integrally synchronized”) to the engine of the vehicle so that driving time can be automatically recorded. Only devices that are registered with FMCSA and appear on the agency’s website would be considered compliant with the proposal’s requirements. Carriers who currently use automatic on-board recording devices (ABORDs) that do not comply with the technical specifications outlined in the proposal, would be required to replace those systems no later than four years after the effective date of a final rule.

There are no proposed ELD exemptions based on vehicle or fleet size alone. The rules would apply to all interstate “commercial motor vehicles” as defined in Sec. 390.5 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations and drivers of commercial motor vehicles who are required to use logs. Drivers using the 100- or 150-air-mile exceptions will continue to be exempt from maintaining a record of duty status and will also be exempt from the ELD requirement, but ELDs will be required for drivers who don’t qualify for those exceptions on 9 or more days within any 30-day period. The proposal also addresses supporting documents as well as concerns about driver harassment resulting from the mandatory use of ELDs. FMCSA is accepting comments on the supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking until May 27, 2014. Comments may be submitted via the Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov, using Docket number FMCSA-2010-0167.

Electronic Logging Devices

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Have you been using Facebook for your business but are unsure if its providing any real return on investment?

Are you thinking of starting to use Facebook for your business?

For any business, return on investment (ROI) is the deciding factor in whether they will execute a specific marketing tactic - and Facebook is no different.

The Problem with Facebook ROI for Businesses

The problem with Facebook though is that its ROI is a different beast than that of traditional online marketing like Google Adwords. The ROI from Adwords is easy to determine because you can see the direct revenue generated from each click. Facebook can provide such direct returns, through its Ads platform, but it also gives you returns such as leads, traffic and customer testimonials at fractions of the cost.

In this article I’ll explain the top 5 types of Facebook ROI for businesses, why they’re valuable, how you can get them and how you can track them.

Facebook ROI for Business Explained

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What You’ll Learn from this Post:

1. Learn what ROI to expect from Facebook

2. Understand the value of Facebook ROI for Business (and how to utilize it properly)

3. Find out how to achieve Facebook ROI for your Business

Tweetable Takeaways (for those who want it ASAP)

1. Asking people to share your Facebook posts is a big no-no. It sounds like begging and will turn people off.

2. 46% of U.S. adults trust online reviews written by customers, but only 10% trust online ads

3. Online retailer Nasty Gal has used social channels to grow 500% each year since its inception in 2006

4. Mine user’s interest data (using FB Apps) to create engaging posts, weaving in your own products & business

Facebook ROI for Businesses #1 Fans Sharing with Friends

This occurs when one of your fans shares, comments on or Likes on of your Facebook Posts. These interactions show up in their friends News Feeds and not only introduce your business to them, but includes a social recommendation from their friend.

Here is an example from my own News Feed from one of my friends:

This is far more powerful than a simple ad. Why? Because people care about what their friends think and do, not what a business wants to sell them. If a person’s friend is talking about an experience that involves your business, it’s a story with personal interest.

Compare the above example to Ad below. Which do you think I’m more likely to click on?

According to a recent Forrester Research report, “70% of US online adults trust brand

or product recommendations from friends and family”. That same report indicated that 46% trust online reviews written by customers, but only 10% trust online ads and company written text messages.

Don’t beg for shares though. In a recent article, The Five Most Common Facebook Posts Mistakes, I wrote that asking people to share your Facebook posts is a big no-no. This sounds like begging and will turn most people off. You need to provide some form of incentive or interest to propel people to engage with you. Liking and sharing can be the mechanisms that people are told to use to engage with you, but it has to be done in a way that is fun or useful.

Here are two Facebook posts, made right after each other, from Walmart showing both the right and wrong ways to drive Likes and shares from Facebook posts. The post on the left is asking people to share the Facebook post to tell their friends about a sale happening at Walmart. This can be taken as basically asking you to spam your friends. And it provides no interest or value for the person sharing. The post on the right is done correctly. It’s giving people a venue to express their opinion on how they like their steak cooked, which for some people is a part of who they are! As you can see its getting much more engagement:

How do you track shares by your Fans?

Facebook’s new Page Insights makes it super easy to see how many shares each of your posts is getting and which are the most popular. Check out a piece from Wishpond’s Insights below. The orange bar represents “Reach”, the purple represents “Clicks” and the red “Shares”:

Facebook ROI for Businesses #2 Referral Traffic to your Website

People are turning to sites like Pinterest more and more to engage in “Social Shopping Sessions”. Instead of going to comparison shopping sites

Rich Revelance recently analyzed 15 billion shopping sessions between December 2012 and April 2013 to see how social media affects purchases.

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Take a look at the infographic to see Facebook and Pinterest’s effect on ecommerce sales:

How do you use Facebook to drive Referral Traffic to your Website?

The best way to do this is to create posts that tell a story about your products or how people can use them. If you just post about your new product line or what’s on sale, nobody will care. Those are not interesting posts. But if you give them some advice on how to solve a problem or how to improve their life, then they will listen.

Here are a couple types of Facebook Posts you can use to drive referral Traffic to your website:

Give a Preview with a “See the whole thing: [Link]” Call-to-action

This type of Facebook post is meant to tug on a person’s curiosity. It makes them want click a link to see or read something that are getting just a small preview of in the post itself.

This type of post includes two things:

1. A photo that shows a small piece of a larger, more intricate object. This can include a location, a product, an outfit, or even a piece of content.

2. A short description of what the photo shows and a call-to-action to see the rest of it.

Lowe’s Home Improvement does a great job using this formula to promote a bathroom makeover.

Posts like these that provide real-world ideas for doing cool things are perfect. And people are always interested in seeing a makeover. Before-and-after photos have big impact on people’s minds because they show what is possible in a believable way. A photo of a beautiful kitchen is nice, but if you add a photo of how the kitchen looked before, it can spark new ideas in your Fans’ minds on how they can do a makeover of their own.

“Learn how to [Do Something]: [LINK]”

One of the reasons Pinterest is so popular is that it is an idea machine: It gives people tons of ideas and examples on new and interesting ways to do things. Making your Page a source for cool new activities and tips for things that are relevant to your target audience is the best way to create lasting engagement with your Fans.

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Walmart made a killer post recently with a link to a guide on growing your own salsa. Many people in their target audience (families) have gardens at home, but probably never thought to grow the ingredients necessary to make their own salsa. This will provide them with a new activity they never thought of trying before.

Check out the post:

One added ingredient to boost this formula is to tell people they can learn how to do something just like real-world examples. This builds a trust factor into your material that will drive a lot more clicks from skeptics. Etsy did this perfectly by showcasing a real person who successfully started an Etsy Store to drive clicks to a helpful article:

How do you track Referral Traffic from Facebook to your Website?

Google Analytics makes it easy - and you don’t even need to use special parameters and Google Analytics tracks traffic from Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites automatically via its Social Reports tool.

If you want to get more in-depth to see which posts are driving the most referral traffic, the easiest way is to use Facebook’s new Page Insights (which are awesome IMHO).

It allows you to see which posts are getting the most clicks:

And then dig deeper to see how exactly people are interacting with your posts and clicking:

Facebook ROI for Businesses #3 Sales Leads

Facebook contests are an easy way to generate new sales leads for your business. By providing even a small prize, such as a $25 gift card to your store, you can collect hundreds of leads who are interested in your products.

The prize is the most important piece of your contest. It’s what entices people to enter. Make the prize something relevant to your business.

A great prize is a gift card for your business. Why? Two reasons:

1. A gift card is enticing to all of your potential customers – it’s the prize that is the most enticing to the largest group of people. If you give away a certain product or service, you will only get entries from people interested in that specific product. With a gift card though, you will attract entries from those who are interested in the products you sell.

2. It will only attract people who are interested in your products, which is what you want! If you give away an ipad you will get a ton of entries, but those people will only be interested in ipads, not your products. This will make it almost impossible to convert these users into actual sales for your business. Giving away a gift card ensures that entrants have an interest in your products, which makes it easy to convert them into sales.

How does a Facebook contest get me leads?

Every person who enters your Facebook contest gives you their email and contact details, making them a new lead to sell to. To maximize new emails and leads you need to maximize entries. You can do this by making the barrier to entry as low as possible. Do this by asking only for an email in order to enter. Minimizing your entry form to just one field will make it as fast and easy as possible to enter, maximizing your entry rate.

How do you convert Facebook contest leads to sales?

If you followed my advice above (RE: Choosing an in-store gift card as your prize) this will be easy!

The best way to convert these leads into sales is to send them a follow-up email immediately after they enter your contest with a coupon or promotion to entice them to visit your website or store. At that moment they will be most interested in your business, as they just interacted with you. Providing a small coupon will give them the incentive to visit NOW, especially if they are first-time customers.

Wishpond’s Facebook Contest Apps give you the ability to send automatic follow-up emails to entrants. Learn more at http://corp.wishpond.com.

Facebook ROI for Businesses #4 Understanding Your Customers

Facebook has created an unprecedented repository of information about people. And for you, as a business, this gives you the opportunity to understand who your customers are and optimize your marketing, and product line, to boost sales.

How do you use Facebook to understand your customers?

There are two ways to do this:

1. Facebook Page Insights

Facebook Page Insights allows you to see the gender, age, language and location breakdown of your Fans. You can access this information by going to the People tab in your Page Insights:

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2. Facebook Contests that Utilize Facebook’s Open Graph

Facebook Contest Apps, like Wishpond’s, allow you to mine even more data through Facebook’s Open Graph. The most important data is user’s interests. This allows you to see other Pages, People, movies, etc. that they like on Facebook.

How do you use this information to optimize your marketing and product line?

This information will allow you to create targeted Facebook content that resonates with them. If you see they like certain movies, sports teams or celebrities, you can write posts about them, weaving in your own products or business, that they’ll be interested in.

If you know what types of activities your Fans are interested in, you can add products to your product line that can be used in those activities or in similar ones. You can even change the value propositions of your products on your website or in-store to show how they can be utilized for those activities.

Facebook ROI for Business #5 Sales

Facebook’s Ads products give you the ability to drive people to your website through paid clicks. This is the same format as Google Adwords, but there is one major difference: Google Adwords are intent-based, meaning a person only sees an ad when they search for a specific related keyword. This means they have an intent to find that thing and possibly buy it. Facebook Ads do not have that intent though, so they must be used a bit differently.

How do you use Facebook Ads to Drive Sales?

You cannot target ads to people at the exact time they are looking for it, so you need to provide an incentive to get people to click. The best type of incentive to drive a direct sale is a coupon or limited-time promotion. Give them a reason to click NOW. If you don’t they will see the ad, have no real reason to click because they are not thinking about buying your products right now, and ignore it.

Once you have created an Ad with a great incentive to click, you need a great landing page to send them to. A landing page is a page on your website with a clear value proposition and call-to-action. If your ad included a coupon, send them to a page that includes the coupon code and a call-to-action to products on your website on which they can use the coupon. Make it as easy as possible to understand how to use the coupon and where to go next to use it.

Conclusion

Facebook is still relatively new for businesses. As such, most don’t know the best practices for how to use it and end up abandoning it after seeing poor results. But like any business tool, it has the potential to help your business, you just need to set your expectations of what you’ll get out of it.

If used properly, Facebook can be a catalyst for your business. Businesses like Nasty Gal have proven that when used effectively, social networks can lead to explosive growth. Check out our infographic on Nasty Gal to see how they have use social networks to achieve over 500% every year since its inception in 2006.

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

Because people care about what

their friends think and do, not what

a business wants to sell them. If a

person’s friend is talking about

an experience that involves

your business, it’s a story with

personal interest.

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No small-business owner can afford the costs of high turnover. Here’s how to identify these missteps and rectify them

The Top 5 Hiring Mistakes

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The tight market also means you can’t afford to make many hiring mistakes. The consequences of doing so include increased staff turnover, recruitment and training costs. As well, they include lost

The Top 5 Hiring MistakesAs a business owner or manager, you know how tough it is these days to recruit the right people and keep them happy so they’ll stick around. The war for talent rages on, even if a bit less intensively in the past few months due to the slowing economy.

With unemployment still near a 34-year low, employers in most sectors are scrambling to fill vacancies. In such a tight job market, employers can gain a vital advantage by adopting

smart strategies to recruit and retain top talent. The tight market also means you can’t afford to make many hiring mistakes. The consequences of doing so include increased staff turnover, recruitment and training costs. As well, they include lost productivity and weakened customer service while you get new hires up to speed, as well as the potential loss of major accounts and key intellectual capital to your competitors.

As a human-resource strategist and recruiter, I see the same

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mistakes over and over. But I also see the same opportunities to learn from them and to craft a hiring strategy that will make it easier for you to land and hang onto the best people. Here, based on my experience, are the five most common hiring mistakes. For each, I suggest solutions that will help you not only avoid these mistakes, but develop an approach to staff recruitment that will give you a leg up on the competition.

YOU LACK AN HR STRATEGYWould you run your company without a business plan, sales or financial targets? Of course not. Yet many employers operate without a human resource plan to manage their most valuable resource: their people. To create a basic HR plan, you need a well-defined strategy to hire the best people who fit your company culture.

How to fix it:At the start of every fiscal year, look at your growth targets to figure out the skill sets, head count and timing you’ll need for new employees over the next 12 months. Review your current head count and turnover rates so you can identify the gaps and build a plan. A good visual tool is to put an organizational chart up on the wall with current staff and future resources needed, then plan to fill in the gaps.

YOU OFFER A POOR ‘CANDIDATE EXPERIENCE’It’s a job-seekers’ market. You need to treat candidates and customers the same way: like gold. Candidates form their impression of you as an employer during the selection process, so make sure you wow them.

How to fix it:Identify all the points of contact you’ll have with candidates during your hiring process and make sure you exceed your applicants’ expectations. For instance, you should call all applicants to thank them for their interest. Remember, even candidates who don’t meet your needs today might in the future—and they might send you some great referrals if you treat them with respect. As well, you should clearly outline to candidates your recruitment and selection process so they’ll know what to expect and when. If you find a top candidate, get her in quickly and make her an offer. Don’t leave her hanging, because odds are she’ll have other offers on the table.

YOU WAIT UNTIL THERE’S A VACANCYYou can’t afford to wait for turnover to trigger your search for new employees. You need to build a pipeline of talented candidates and constantly be on the lookout for top talent—everywhere.

How to fix it:The people you want are most likely happily employed somewhere else: they’re what we in the HR business call passive candidates. Look for them at networking events or on social-networking sites such as Facebook or LinkedIn. Create a relationship with them and engage with them until future needs arise. Tell passive candidates they’re the kind of talented people your firm is looking to hire. Offer to put them on your career-opportunity mailing list, send them company newsletters, invite them to speaking engagements and send them press releases.

You can also turn all your employees into talent scouts. Create a referral program, offering your staff a finder’s fee of $250 to $500 or a gift certificate to their favourite store if they refer a candidate who is hired and passes the probation period. And develop referral tools, such as business cards saying “We Want You” to give to potential candidates when you find them.

YOU FAIL TO CREATE SOME BUZZIs your HR team in the dark ages of administrivia, pushing paper and policies? Or are they a polished sales and marketing machine that can sell your company to attract top talent?

How to fix it:Be honest. Would you apply to your own job postings? You need to sell the opportunity, and these days a posting that’s merely a standard job description just won’t cut it. You need to create postings that highlight the opportunities at your firm and key career achievements for the applicant. As well, you should have a polished career page on your website where you can educate potential job candidates about what your firm can offer them and what you expect from them, as well as helping convert clients into employees.

Applicants who are happily employed elsewhere, need to be convinced to join your team. Ask yourself, “What do we have to

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offer candidates that differentiates us from other employers?” Ask your current employees to write down the top five reasons why they joined your team and why they stay. Examples might include a great team environment, learning and development opportunities, a top-notch boss, challenging work and opportunities for career advancement. Pull together a list of the five reasons cited most often and include it in your job postings and, most importantly, your website. Even better, profile current employees on your career page or post video testimonials on YouTube.

YOU DON’T TEACH YOUR MANAGERS HOW TO HIRELet’s face it: not all great managers are great interviewers. While your HR people might be sourcing and screening candidates, it’s the manager who does the final interview and chooses who to hire. To avoid bad hiring decisions, you need to ensure that your managers follow a standard process.

How to fix it:Create a checklist outlining the steps in the recruitment and selection process, including how to set clear expectations for candidates and actions required to wow them. This list should include interview etiquette, post-interview guidelines and the minimum time to call applicants back—say, individual calls within five days if there are a limited number of applicants or a templated e-mail or form letter if there are a large number. As well, you should develop a list of standard interview questions about company fit and desired answers with your team. (Visit www.jobinterviewquestions.org as a resource to get started.) This will get everyone on the same page, looking for the same talents and talking the same talk.

READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE ONLINE

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Page 57: MMA May 2014 Newsletter

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration Attention Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) Drivers and Carriers: Did you know an important law affecting you goes into effect May 21, 2014? To keep America’s interstate CMV drivers healthy and our roads safer, all interstate CMV drivers will soon be required to have their medical examinations performed by a Certified Medical Examiner listed on the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners. If you’re an interstate CMV driver, you already need a valid medical certificate signed by a medical examiner. The only change is that after May 21, 2014, you’ll need to go to a certified medical examiner for your medical certificate. If you’ve already had an exam and have a current certificate that certificate will be valid until its regular expiration date.

You can find certified medical examiners in your area—or anywhere in the country—easily by following 1. Visit the National Registry Web site and search by Zip Code, State, or examiner name. 2. Choose a certified medical examiner from the list and call to make an appointment. 3. If your preferred health care professional isn’t on the list, simply refer him or her to the Certified Medical Examiners page to learn more about getting certified. Please spread the word and encourage your fellow CMV drivers to find a Certified Medical Examiner by May 21st. They can find more information in the Fact Sheet for Drivers or by going to the National Registry Web site, so pass it along! Thank you for keeping America moving and for your commitment to safer roadways.

CERTIFIED MEDICAL EXAMINERdrivers will soon be required to have their medical examinations performed by a Certified Medical Examiner

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Page 58: MMA May 2014 Newsletter

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