The Smartest Investment You’ll Make in This Economy
The smartest investment you’ll make in this economy is your investment in your employees. Companies that plan to survive, even thrive, in this economy should increase their investments in their employees. That’s right. Companies should invest more in their employees during this challenging economic period.
Forget those CDOs (collateralized debt obligations) or CDSs (collateralized debt swaps) and Wall Street banks hoping for a comeback or those secret Santa Claus-like portfolios of sub-prime home loans you’ve heard are all the rage. Forget about green energy technologies like wind or solar or geothermal. The smartest investment you’ll make in this or any economy is your investments in your employees.
Now’s the time to not only maintain your current investment program of salary and benefits (You do offer benefits, don’t you?), but find ways to increase that investment. Here’s why: Employees are your company’s number one asset. Oh sure, we’ve all heard that cliche bandied about. Peter Drucker, the legendary management expert, coined that phrase decades ago. It stuck. It stuck because it’s true.
Who makes your company’s products and services? Who talks to your customers? Whose efforts make them love your company and tolerate your mistakes to their credit cards and bank accounts that ruin their day and waste their time? And, who comes up with the systemic solutions to those problems?
Who sacrifices their family, their day and evenings for your company’s goals? What’s your company’s one asset which your competitors cannot duplicate, copy, re-engineer or fake? Your employees. Which corporate asset, if lost, would create the biggest and most negative impact on your company’s operations? Think it’s your intellectual property? How do you monetize that asset? Yeah, your employees market it, brand it, sell it, service it, bill it, solve it, refine it, improve it, defend it, collaborate with it.
They add up your revenues and pay you and your execs and themselves. They find partners and vendors to help further monetize that intellectual property. They give it life. And, they get up and do it again, amen, every day. Otherwise it’s as valuable as the file folder where it hides in the Patent Office. And, so’s your company.
I Can’t Afford It. Honestly, you can’t afford to NOT invest in your employees. And, invest more during this economic period. However, the good news is that it doesn’t always cost more money. Financial incentives, while important, make up only a small percentage of the incentives that employees feel are important. In fact, of the top 10 motivators for employees, money usually ranks 6 or 7. It ranks below inexpensive motivators like:
- peer recognition
- recognition by their manager
- realistic opportunity to grow professionally
- opportunities and resources to showcase their talents
- resources to accomplish their tasks
- placed in a position where they can succeed
- being part of a bigger mission for a greater cause
And here are some ways you can offer the incentives that are meaningful to your employees:
- Organize a company snitch program. The big difference with this program is its focus on spreading good news via the same grapevine that exists in every company. The good news are the accomplishments and heroic acts and beyond-the-call of duty type efforts that too often go unnoticed, unrecognized, uncelebrated. I wrote on this in more detail at Can Company Gossips Serve to Inspire?.
- Say Thank-you more often.
- Be specific in your thanks. Tell the person exactly how you were helped by what they did.
- Make it a habit. Make sure you schedule appreciation or recognition as an agenda item in your meetings.
- Recognize your employees outside your company walls. Tell your customers and partners and vendors how great they are.
- Write hand-written thank-yous. My wife just received one today. It made her day. (Made mine, too, when I read it.)
- Flowers, candy, pastries, coffee…paid out of your pocket, work wonders.
- Help them. Help them do their job. I regularly answered the calls on our sales or customer service line when they were busy. But, I stayed away from our servers.
- Be their defender.
- Listen, listen, listen.
- Find their strengths. Then organize their job description to showcase those strengths.
- Find their happiness and do the same. If they like talking with customers, make sure they talk to customers every day. If they like programming…make sure they can spend time doing that every day.
- Make connections. Spend time connecting their achievements with the company’s performance, overall and specifically in their area. Show how their work has an impact on everyone else’s work.
These, and many others, cost little but your time and have only positive impact on your company cash-flows. While inexpensive in that regard, they generate a very positive ROI and increase in positive cash-flows. I recommend discovering the “strengths movement.” It’s the movement in business management to lead and manage employees by finding their strengths and placing them in positions that feature them. You build your brand around your employees’ strength. You make them strong; your brand becomes strong.
Start by reading 2 books by Marcus Buckingham: First, Break All the Rules and Now, Discover Your Strengths. Then consider the logic of putting people in positions that allow their strengths to express themselves. Your employees are your brand. Everything they do is everything your brand becomes. Your brand not only has no meaning without them, it ceases to exist with them.
Your brand needs to be stronger than ever during times like we have now. The only way to make your brand stronger is to make your employees stronger, more vibrant, more inspired, more committed, more engaged. And for that, you have to invest more in them and their success and help them reach their goals. They’ll help you reach your goals, because they share them with you.
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About the Author: Zane Safrit’s passion is small business and the operations’ excellence required to deliver a product that creates word-of-mouth, customer referrals and instills pride in those whose passion created it. He previously served as CEO of Conference Calls Unlimited. Zane’s blog can be found at Zane Safrit.







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Money Advice Guy | October 20th, 2008 at 11:27 am
[…] The SmartestInvestmentYou ll Make in This Economy […]
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Chris | October 20th, 2008 at 11:56 am
These are all such wonderful points you mention and insightful, too. I think many people overlook the value of a simple thank you and many people are not used to listening as oppossed to instructing. Thank goodness I don’t have that situation in my current employment though. I couldn’t be happier where I’m at right now and I work for someone wonderful who does all of these things and more!
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Amanda | October 20th, 2008 at 11:57 am
These are really good tips here. I definitely think your employees can make or break you. I do agree that it helps your business in the long run to create happy & content employees. A strong, unified team can take your business beyond your own expectations.
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BizOp Blogs - Small Business Opportunities For Entrepreneurs | October 20th, 2008 at 3:26 pm
[…] Continue reading… […]
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Mary Grace Ignacio | October 21st, 2008 at 12:31 am
Yes, Zane. You’re correct. Since the company’s number one asset is the employees then should also be the first one to be treated well. But what can you say with the vast lay-offs today because of our crisis today? Is this also one of the smartest investments these companies have made to save their status during this tough times of the economy?
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Zane Safrit | October 21st, 2008 at 8:04 am
Mary Grace. It’s a great question. The inevitability of the decision to layoff hundreds or thousands of workers represents their failure to invest in these employees as assets and as people. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy. You create your own reality. In this case, these companies created the reality that their employees weren’t their number one asset, reinforced that perception with failing to invest and then the inevitable decision was easily made: lay them off. “We don’t need them.”
You have to wonder what would happen if these companies invested as much time and resources in creating the opposite reality: that their employees are the foundation of their success, their number one asset. Where would the companies be? What would they be and what would our economy be like?
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Mary Grace Ignacio | October 22nd, 2008 at 3:23 am
Yes. Thanks for sharing the same sentiments as me Zane. I just hope that employers would find a better way to save their businesses without hurting their most important asset - their employees.
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Above All Invest To Your Employees « Small Business Lessons | October 22nd, 2008 at 6:06 am
[…] above is quoted from a wonderful article by Zane Safrit about The Smartest Investment You’ll Make in This Economy. Check it out and learn more what you have to take care more […]
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Catherine Eberlein Pfister | October 22nd, 2008 at 9:55 am
Excellent points. For anyone who would like more information on employee engagement, please see my series of articles at http://www.pipmag.com
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Rose Anderson | October 22nd, 2008 at 8:52 pm
Okay Catherine. I’ll check it out. Thanks for sharing it here.
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HRM Today - Blog Archive » The Smartest Investment You’ll Make in This Economy | October 23rd, 2008 at 11:42 am
[…] from OPEN Forum: The smartest investment you’ll make in this economy is your investment in your employees. Companies that plan to survive, even thrive, in this economy should increase their investments in their employees. That’s right. Companies should invest more in their employees during this challenging economic period. […]
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Faol-Inc.Com - Business Company » The Second Best Investment To Make In This Economy | November 13th, 2008 at 2:07 am
[…] An investment in your employees is the smartest investment you can make in this economy. That was my post a few weeks ago, titled The Smartest Investment You’ll Make in This Economy. […]
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