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Author: Julie McCoy

Posted on March 8, 2010August 28, 2018

Majority of the Time, Minority Staffing Firms Find Allies Among Non-Minority Companies

Joe Tucker has spent 20 years in the staffing industry, 18 of which have been running his own firm. Yet he admits all that experience doesn’t make him an expert.


Tucker recognizes there are plenty of things he can learn, and he can’t do everything alone. So the African-American president and CEO of Victory Personnel, a small Milwaukee-based firm, turned to Manpower, a much larger, non-minority-owned company, for help.


Manpower has indeed helped Tucker in the decade that the two have worked together. Tucker says Manpower has helped with quality control and provided a deeper understanding of financials, insurance and risk management. Manpower also has helped his company reduce its paper use through automation.


“There is not any aspect of the business that they have not helped me with,” he says.


It may seem odd for a $15 million minority-owned company to partner with a multibillion-dollar non-minority-owned global company, but it works. Tucker gets to grow and improve his firm and Manpower has a chance to work with a company that helps the staffing giant meet its diversity objectives.


Before Tucker started working with Manpower, his company never got over the $3 million mark in annual revenue, he says. But in 2007, Victory hit the $26 million mark, something Tucker says he couldn’t have achieved without Manpower’s help. Manpower has “treated me with the utmost respect and never made me feel like the little guy,” he says. “They’ve always treated me with value.”


If a minority-owned staffing firm partners with a non-minority-owned staffing agency, what’s the best way to do it? What are some tips, tools and techniques that can help ensure that the partnership is successful?


Both companies need to do their homework, says Jorge Perez, senior vice president of staffing for Manpower, who oversees its diversity supplier program. Each company should know as much as possible about the other. Also, each company needs to fully understand the other company’s perspective and what it wants to achieve in the partnership, Perez says.


Both companies need to have a clearly defined business mission and objective, says Michael Larkins, vice president of sales for Lafayette, California-based Zempleo, whose Hispanic-owned company partners with non-minority-owned staffing giants Corestaff, Volt and Kelly Services.


The two companies need to decide what kind of relationship they want to have, Larkins says: Is it going to be mentor-protégé or more transactional?


Also, both companies should designate an internal champion, says Larkins.


“There has to be a vested owner in charge of managing the relationship and making sure it’s healthy,” he says.


Larkins, who used to work for Corestaff, has been on both sides of the minority-owned/non-minority partnership.


Carmen Adames—who is of Puerto Rican descent and owns Philadelphia-based Adames Personnel Service, which has worked with Kelly Services to fill receptionist and customer service jobs—says it’s important to have a written contract between both companies.


Once a contract has been created, read it carefully, says Gene Waddy, the African-American CEO of Diversant, whose New York-based company partners with non-minority-owned staffing giant TAC Worldwide.


“If you’re going to partner with your competition, you really have to read the fine print,” he says.


Review the payment terms, volume discounts and tenure discounts, Waddy recommends.


“The contract might say, ‘We only pay our vendors every 90 days,’ or ‘We only pay our vendors after we get paid,’ which can be difficult for a small minority-owned firm. If you don’t read the fine print, you don’t know these things. You have to understand what you’re signing up for,” Waddy says.


Both companies should establish a sales referral fee before doing any kind of sales work, suggests Tom Kosnik, president of Chicago-based consulting firm VISUS Inc.


“If someone is not willing to sign a referral fee, they are not worth doing business with,” he says.


Both companies need to put together a tactical road map that spells out who is going to do what and when, Kosnik points out.


“The key there is the execution of the agreement,” he says. “The devil is in the details.”


It’s also important for both companies to know each other’s strengths, and there shouldn’t be a lot of competition between them, says Artech Information Systems CEO Ranjini Poddar, a native of India whose Cedar Knolls, New Jersey-based staffing firm partners with more than 50 non-minority-owned firms.


Trust is another key element. Both companies must trust each other from the beginning, says Tucker.


“Trust is huge in order for partnerships to really work,” he says. “Without trust, you can’t get anything done. You have to trust each other. You need to trust that the other party will hold up their end of the bargain and do what they say they’re going to do.”


Both companies must share similar values and culture, Perez points out. He says Manpower won’t work with a minority-owned company if there isn’t a values and culture match.


“My experience has been that values and ethics are probably the most critical thing when a staffing firm is looking to partner with a minority-owned business,” says VISUS’ Kosnik. “There has to be a values and ethics match. Nobody thinks about it. What is going to happen is conflict is going to arise with services, internal employees and paychecks. If you’ve got companies that have different values and ethics, it’s going to be next to impossible to get those companies to reconcile.”


Both companies should have like-minded services or areas of focus, Kosnik says.


“It’s like starting another business unit,” he explains. “If you don’t have similar sectors, it’s going to be a lot more challenging. It’s not impossible, but if you do it in a different sector, it’s just like a new business unit. It’s going to take the same amount of time, focus and energy.”


ZeroChaos CEO Harold Mills, an African-American whose company partners with a number of non-minority-owned firms, says both companies need to be involved and take responsibility. Sometimes a firm will say it is “partnering” with a minority-owned firm, but in reality that firm is doing all or most of the work, Mills points out.


“The relationship has to be substantive,” he says. “They [the non-minority-owned firm] can’t give [the minority-owned firm] the scraps. They can’t give them all the jobs they can’t fill.”


Mills calls that process window dressing.


“Window dressing happens, and it ruins the whole philosophy around growing minority companies,” he says. “If they aren’t doing any of the work, they aren’t developing capabilities for themselves. Credibility really matters.”


India native Sonu Ratra, president of Sunnyvale, California-based IT staffing firm Akraya, says that what matters most when working with a non-minority firm is quality of service, timing and delivery.


“You never want to work with a company that makes promises and doesn’t keep up with them,” she says.


Ratra also is looking for a company that is going to partner with Akraya for a long time. She makes sure the company has good cash flow and offers good benefits for employees.


Amy Bingham of Bingham Consulting Professionals says the best opportunity for a non-minority firm to partner with a minority-owned firm is when the non-minority-owned firm is functioning as a managed service provider for a large user of contract labor and has diversity requirements to meet.


“A non-minority firm selling managed service solutions should actively seek out and negotiate partnerships with diversity suppliers in advance of the sales process because of the intense focus large corporations have on meeting diversity objectives,” she says. “Even if diversity isn’t a mission-critical objective for the MSP prospect/client today, it likely will be soon, as large corporations continue to expand their diversity focus.


“Having subcontractor agreements in place before an account is sold can create a competitive distinction for the MSP supplier. It also avoids having to replace good non-minority suppliers with diversity firms after the MSP is implemented, simply to meet a client’s new diversity objectives. The bottom line: Form alliances with diversity firms today and avoid headaches tomorrow.”


Diversant’s Waddy, whose company has worked with Adecco, ProUnlimited, Bartech and Agilent in an MSP capacity, says it’s important to have a vendor-neutral model, favorable payment terms, real-time access and reasonable pass-through fees in this kind of partnership.


“A 5 or 6 percent pass-through fee could be almost half your profit,” he says.


Challenges
What challenges do minority-owned firms face when they partner with non-minority-owned staffing firms?


One challenge is that non-minority firms tend to be larger and have more bureaucracy, so the decision-making process takes longer, says Kosnik of VISUS. A small minority-owned company has to accept this reality and work through it, says Victory Personnel’s Tucker. “You just have to get smart about it—what it is, what it means, how to deal with it.”


Another challenge is risk mitigation, says Zempleo’s Larkins. “Smaller companies can’t take as much of a risk,” he says.


Markup also is a challenge, says Tamerra Buckhanan, who is African-American and president of Chicago-based BPS Services. Often minority-owned staffing companies don’t have enough markup in the partnership to make it profitable, she says, noting that the best scenario is when the client allows the minority-owned company to have a markup that makes them money.


Buckhanan’s firm has partnered with non-minority-owned firms for at least 15 years.


“It can be a good opportunity for everyone,” she says. “The clients are certainly stronger because of the diversity. They want diversity. This is a good way to make sure it happens by working with a minority vendor.”


Workforce Management Online, March 2010 — Register Now!

Posted on December 4, 2009June 27, 2018

Businesses Tap Into Staffing Firms for Holiday Help

While some businesses hire holiday help on their own, many also turn to staffing firms to get the extra workers they need.


Joyce Russell, president and COO of Adecco General Staffing, says her company gets holiday help requests from retail and logistics companies, as well as call centers, starting at the beginning of October.


“They need to get that product moved,” she explains. “We have nice ramps around the holiday season. It’s more retail-centric.”


Bill Stoller, one of the founders of Express Employment Professionals, says his company gets holiday help requests from the same types of businesses, but that they come in as early as August and September.


“We feel that companies will come to us [to get some more people on board],” Stoller says. “People need holiday help.”


Kforce gets calls from businesses that need financial assistants, as well as people who can do technology work and compliance for reporting purposes during the holidays, CEO Dave Dunkel says.


JoAnn Wagner, CEO of SOS Staffing, says her firm volunteers temporary workers who can work as receptionists for companies while they’re at holiday parties.


“The holidays are a hectic time for many businesses, so I believe a lot of them will turn to staffing firms to hire holiday help,” SkillStorm CEO Vince Virga says.

Posted on December 4, 2009June 27, 2018

Its a Wrap Holidays and Staffing

Manpower doesn’t slow down much during the holidays.


The staffing giant was closed Thanksgiving Day and also closes Christmas Day and New Year’s Day, but other than that remains open for business, says Cathy Paige, vice president and general manager for the company’s Northeastern division.


Some of Manpower’s clients close during the holidays, but Manpower wants to be able to continue to serve clients that don’t shut down, Paige explains.


“We’re in the service industry and we’re here to service clients,” she says. “It’s business as usual.”


In fact, some of Manpower’s site offices even remain open on the actual holidays.


“Christmas is a big day if you’re in the call center business,” Paige points out.


Many staffing companies like Manpower don’t take much of a break during the holiday season. Others shut down for a half-day the day before or after the holiday as well. And there are some that shut down the whole week between Christmas and New Year’s because it’s typically a slow time.


Those that shut down that week say they’re not closing longer this year because of the recession. It’s typical that staffing firms need to adjust their schedules to fit a client’s needs, even if that means skipping the holiday turkey.


Nevertheless, staffing firms are affected by the holidays, whether it’s giving gifts to clients or owners taking a moment to reflect on what they’re thankful for.


Business (mostly) as usual
At Express Employment Professionals, “We’re always open, other than the holiday itself,” says Bill Stoller, one of the founders. “During normal business hours, if we have an associate out on assignment we want to be able to service them as well as our clients. We’ve never closed. We’ve never planned on closing during the holiday week [between Christmas and New Year’s], if you will.”


Dave Dunkel, CEO of Kforce, says the holidays aren’t a time off, but a time on at his company, as people work on getting things done that need to be finished by the end of the year.


“There’s always activities,” Dunkel explains. “The clock continues to run. There’s regular operations that continue. The animal still needs to be fed, so we keep on working.”


The only thing that’s different during the holidays is that Kforce’s government and clinical clients close for two weeks, and thus consultants who are assigned to those clients also take that time off, Dunkel explains.


Hire Dynamics and the Nelson Family of Companies are open the day after Thanksgiving, even though a lot of staff takes the day off and they’re operating with a skeleton crew. It’s also business as usual for both companies the week between Christmas and New Year’s.


“As long as our clients are open, we’re open,” says Hire Dynamics CEO Dan Campbell. “We’re really driven by the needs of our customers.”


Gary Nelson, chairman of the Nelson Family of Companies, says, “We have to be available to service those clients that are operating that week. It’s pretty much business as usual except we do see more and more of our clients shutting down during that time.”


There are exceptions to this business-as-usual approach. For example, SkillStorm closes the day after Thanksgiving, says CEO Vince Virga.


“One of our SkillStorm values is ‘work hard, play hard,’ ” he says. “We definitely work hard, but during the holidays we believe in spending time with family and friends.”


Akraya, an IT staffing firm based in Sunnyvale, California, closes between Christmas and New Year’s, although accounting and payroll staff work flexible hours so that people can still be paid on time, CEO Amar Panchal says.


Recruiters do not come in that week, but if they get an e-mail or phone call and they’re not traveling, they’ll usually respond, Panchal explains. He says Akraya always closes the week between Christmas and New Year’s and is not doing anything differently this year because of the recession.


Staff can use sick days while Akraya is closed, so they don’t have to use vacation days, Panchal points out.


“It seems to work well with most of our employees,” he says. “Most want to take off during that time of year. It’s good for people to get a break during the holidays and come back refreshed the next year.”

Posted on November 3, 2009August 31, 2018

Benefits Becoming Crucial in Recruiting Contingent Staffers

Ask temporary workers what they want these days, and one thing they’ll say is important is to be provided with benefits.


In this tough economic climate, many are coming to staffing agencies having lost their regular full-time jobs and their health insurance. If they happen to be single or can’t get on their spouse’s insurance, they want to work for a staffing firm that not only provides medical coverage but also makes it affordable—or at least more affordable than expensive COBRA premiums.


Many staffing firms are indeed offering health insurance as well as an array of benefits because they recognize that it is a great recruiting tool. It’s also a way to attract and retain workers.


Adecco partners with UnitedHealthcare to offer three to five different medical plans from which workers can choose, depending on which line of business they happen to be working in, says Adam Entenberg, benefits director. Those who work for Adecco General Staffing have a different set of plans from which to choose than those who work for Adecco Technical.


“We’re moving toward consolidating it [and offering a similar program for everyone],” Entenberg says. “We’re trying to standardize wherever possible.”


Additionally, workers can enroll in dental and vision plans and short-term disability insurance, which are offered through UnitedHealthcare, Entenberg says. Adecco also offers life insurance and accidental death and dismemberment insurance through UnitedHealthcare.


Workers who want to save money for retirement while they’re with Adecco can enroll in a 401(k) program through Wells Fargo. Another benefit Adecco offers is tuition reimbursement for workers who want to go back to school to learn new skills.


Early this year, Adecco began providing legal insurance through Transamerica. Workers who are closing on a house or want to have a will prepared can pay a premium to have access to a lawyer. Consultation with a lawyer is free, and for those who are preparing a will, the will is free as well.


Another service Adecco began offering this year is group accident insurance through Allstate, which pays workers if they are in a car accident. Adecco also offers critical illness insurance through Allstate.


Someone who is diagnosed with a heart attack or stroke, or undergoes bypass surgery, for example, can be paid benefits. Entenberg estimates that just less than 10 percent of workers are taking advantage of at least one benefit that Adecco offers.


At Manpower, workers can take advantage of various medical plan options through a national insurance provider, according to Mike Steinmetz, vice president and general manager of the company’s Midwest division. Those who sign up for the insurance have access to a nurse line and an employee assistance line.


Additionally, Manpower offers vacation and holiday pay, a dental plan, life insurance, accidental death and dismemberment insurance, and a 401(k) plan. Workers are eligible to receive benefits within one week of receiving their first paycheck.


“We believe it’s an advantage for both our associates and clients,” Steinmetz says. “We believe it’s a differentiator in the recruitment process, from competitors who don’t offer benefits or whose benefits aren’t as robust. We’re committed to providing valuable benefits options that our employees need and that assist us in attracting and retaining strong candidates for our clients.”


Express Employment Professionals provides medical, dental, vision, short-term disability and life insurance, also through a national provider, says Sam Fox, director of compensation benefits. Workers are eligible to sign up for the benefits immediately.


Fox estimates that about one-third of workers are taking advantage of them.


Workers also receive six paid holidays (after they have worked 500 hours) and paid vacations. They get two days of paid vacation after 1,000 hours, three days after 1,500 hours and five days after 2,000 hours. Employees can also enroll in a 401(k) plan, which doesn’t have a waiting period, according to Fox.


“We certainly do find it is helpful in recruiting and retention to offer benefits,” he says. “We have found that offering benefits [is] pretty doggone important to our clients too. So, our experience has been that offering benefits has been important with two very important groups: our employees and our client companies.”


Spherion offers medical and vision insurance through Aetna, according to Loretta Penn, the company’s senior vice president and president of staffing services. Additionally, workers can enroll in a life insurance policy and a stock purchase plan.


Also, Spherion offers service and retention bonuses, both of which are client-specific, Penn says. The service bonus is paid annually and is the equivalent of about a week’s worth of pay. About a third of workers qualify for the service and retention bonuses.


“It’s a unique time in the economy,” Penn says. “You have individuals who have been laid off, downsized. For those [who] fall into that category, they are looking for a company that will offer them a job and then, even better, a company that offers benefits.”


She adds: “[Offering benefits is] not only a great attraction tool but [also] it is certainly a great retention tool. It certainly represents both of those. Our goal is to make Spherion an employer of choice.”


Labor Finders provides a limited medical plan that is offered by Strategic Resource Co., which is part of Aetna, according to Jonathan Klorfein, director of client services.


“We basically did it because we value our workers,” he says. “We created this program to ensure their well-being and health—give them an option.”


The broker of the plan, McGriff Seibels and Williams, customized the program to meet Labor Finders’ needs, Klorfein says. Employees pay $20 a week for $5,000 worth of coverage for themselves, or about $60 a week for $10,000 worth of coverage for not only themselves but also their families. In some cases, clients have paid the cost, Klorfein says. Workers only have to work one day a week for the coverage to be in effect.


At SOS Staffing, workers can enroll in a health care plan called the American Worker Plan, according to Lynn Richardson, vice president of human resources. It’s “not a full-blown medical plan but provides front-end coverage,” Richardson says.


There are different levels of the plan that are different prices. The plan includes not only medical but also dental and vision coverage, no matter which level workers choose.


Additionally, workers can enroll in SOS’ 401(k) program. They also are eligible for a week’s worth of paid time off once they have worked a specific number of hours, which varies by region.


Yet, despite the fact that SOS offers these benefits, Richardson estimates that 10 percent or less of workers are actually taking advantage of them.


A lot of SOS’ clients ask if the company offers benefits because they want to know SOS has some way of retaining workers and making them happy, Richardson points out. And if workers are weighing the options of going to work for SOS or another staffing firm that doesn’t offer benefits, “we’re going to win that game,” Richardson says.


QPS offers a mini-medical plan, says Dan McNulty, executive vice president and COO.


“They like it,” he says. “It’s competitively priced. It’s affordable for sure. People find it really attractive.”


Employee Chris Darge—who didn’t have health insurance for himself or his two children—is thankful he can get it through QPS.


“Just the fact that they offered that was a huge plus,” he says.


In addition to medical benefits, QPS offers holiday bonuses that are distributed five times a year, and year-end bonuses that are paid out the week before Christmas, McNulty says.


“We don’t wait for our year to end and pay it in January,” he says. McNulty estimates the company spends $25,000 a year on year-end bonuses.


The Nelson Family of Companies offers medical insurance through three providers, including Blue Cross/Blue Shield and Kaiser, according to Debbie Beardslee, senior staffing supervisor.


“Many of the candidates we work with are in a position where they could not do it on their own,” she says. “I think that makes us more attractive as a staffing partner.”


Workers also receive holiday pay and bonus checks after 1,200 hours. The bonus checks are the equivalent of 30 hours of work, Beardslee says.


Akraya, an IT staffing firm, provides contract workers with medical and vision insurance through Kaiser Permanente and dental insurance through Premier Access, says vice president Narayanan Duraiswami.


Contract workers can also enroll in Akraya’s cafeteria plan, which is designed to save them 25 to 40 percent in taxes (depending on their income tax bracket) on out-of-pocket medical, dental, vision and day-care expenses. They’re eligible to participate in the cafeteria plan from the first day of their employment with Akraya.


Additionally, contract workers are eligible to enroll in Akraya’s 401(k) program after they have been with the company for a year. Each year Akraya matches their 401(k) contributions on a discretionary basis. In 2008, Akraya matched 25 percent of the first 6 percent of employee deferral. Duraiswami estimates 75 percent of contractors take advantage of the benefits the company offers.


Workway CEO Matt Johnston says the fact that his company offers a global cash card has been beneficial in its recruiting efforts. If Workway didn’t provide the cash card, it wouldn’t be able to pay people who want or need to be paid on a daily basis, he points out.


“It allows us to pay daily without stretching our resources,” Johnston says. “That’s the one thing we can prove we get most of our candidates from.”


Workway also provides referral bonuses to those who refer someone to Workway after that person has worked a specific amount of time.


“We’re constantly looking for more referrals,” Johnston says. “That’s where you find the majority of good people.”


While large and medium-sized staffing companies are more likely to offer benefits, many small staffing firms offer them as well. Small staffing companies that don’t offer benefits at all are missing out on an opportunity to compete with larger firms.


For small staffing companies that are reluctant to offer benefits because of the cost and time involved, outsourcing benefits to a professional employer organization would be one way to even the playing field with larger firms and to be distinguished in a positive way from other small firms.


Bloomington, Minnesota-based Award Staffing provides three medical benefits options through Essential StaffCARE, president Tom Thissen says.


Workers can choose from plans that cover just themselves, or themselves and their families. Award Staffing also offers dental coverage, vacation and holiday pay, life insurance, and short-term and long-term disability insurance.


Thissen says he has had clients tell him the benefits Award Staffing offers are better than the benefits they offer their own employees.


“It helps with not only attracting the right talent but also retaining the right talent. Health insurance is one of the hot items with employees right now, and this way they’re able to have that with us,” he says.


Reliable Staffing Services works with Essential StaffCARE to offer Mini Medical, which provides coverage up to $5,000, according to CEO Larry Kidd.


In addition to medical coverage, workers can add on vision and dental insurance through Mini Medical. There aren’t any restrictions on getting into the program. For example, workers don’t have to be employed a certain amount of time to be eligible.


“We certainly advertise it,” Kidd says. “I think it does make some difference. I’m not sure if people are coming in because of the benefits or the economy.”


The Accuro Group offers medical and vision insurance through a national paid-provider-organization provider, and dental insurance through another national provider, says president Jennifer Dunleavy. Accuro also offers life insurance administered through an outside agent.


“It has allowed us to build a recruitment and retention model. It’s really our responsibility to provide a level of support where they can support their families and be able to have a career,” Dunleavy says.


If your firm isn’t providing benefits, maybe now is the time to start. It’s a good way to attract new temporary workers and keep existing ones. Plus, it can help ensure that your organization remains competitive with all the other staffing companies that provide benefits.


 

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