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Author: Site Staff

Posted on December 23, 2008August 3, 2023

Union Hands Out Leaflets at McDonald’s Restaurants

Union activists distributed fliers at nearly 100 McDonald’s restaurants nationwide Thursday, December 18, encouraging workers and customers to support federal legislation designed to make it easier for workers to unionize.

Members of the Service Employees International Union took the action in response to Oak Brook, Illinois-based McDonald’s Corp.’s encouraging restaurant owners to oppose the proposed Employee Free Choice Act, a union spokeswoman said.


“We want people to support the Employee Free Choice Act so workers have the right to organize without fear and harassment,” the spokeswoman said. “It remains to been seen whether McDonald’s will stop its lobbying activity against the bill.”


The bill, currently pending in Congress and supported by President-elect Barack Obama, would eliminate secret ballots in union organizing votes and allow unions to organize a workplace by obtaining the signatures of a majority of the employees on registration cards.


Business interests vigorously oppose the so-called card-check bill, which is a centerpiece of organized labor’s efforts to reverse a decades-long slide in union membership by breaking into industries like fast-food restaurants, where organizing efforts have had little success.


McDonald’s USA president Don Thompson urged 2,400 franchisees to “contact your U.S. senators and representatives to oppose” the Employee Free Choice Act in a November 25 memo. He also indicated that McDonald’s formed a “response team” to help franchisees “actively participate in the opposition to the EFCA.”


McDonald’s didn’t return calls late Thursday, but issued a statement to the union indicating the purpose of the memo was to “inform and educate our system about legislation that could impact their business,” adding that “McDonald’s is not engaged in an anti-union campaign.”


Filed by David Sterrett of Crain’s Chicago Business, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

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Posted on December 22, 2008June 27, 2018

More California Employers Offering CDHPs

The dominance of managed care in the California market led many benefits experts to doubt if consumer-driven health plans with high deductibles would gain much traction there.


But a recent survey has found that 38 percent of employers in the nation’s most populous state now offer high-deductible health plans to their employees, up from 18 percent in 2007.


However, only 10 percent of employers offering HDHPs to their employees also offer a health savings account, while less than 1 percent offer a health reimbursement arrangement, according to the latest edition of the California Employer Health Benefits Survey, a joint project of the Oakland, California-based California Healthcare Foundation and the National Opinion Research Center.


Even though the percentage of employers offering HDHPs in California surged, the proportion of employees enrolling in the plans remained unchanged from 2007, at 4 percent. By contrast, enrollment nationally in the plans doubled from last year to this year, to 8 percent.


More than three-quarters of California workers were given a health maintenance organization option in 2008, according to the survey, compared with just 41 percent of workers nationally. As such, California workers have been consistently more likely to enroll in HMOs than covered workers nationally, who are more likely to enroll in preferred provider organization plans, the survey noted.


In California, 52 percent of covered workers were enrolled in HMOs in 2008, while 33 percent were enrolled in PPOs, 11 percent in point-of-service plans and 4 percent in HDHPs. By comparison, 20 percent of U.S. workers are enrolled in HMOs, while 58 percent are enrolled in PPOs, 12 percent in POS plans and 8 percent in HDHPs.


Among other findings of the survey:


• Employer-based health care premiums rose by an average of 8.3 percent in 2008, the same as 2007.
• More than half of California employers offered coverage for same-sex domestic partners, more than double the national average. Because of a change in survey wording, the 2008 results could not be compared with those of prior years.
• Thirty percent of covered workers in California were enrolled in a partly or completely self-insured plan in 2008, compared with 55 percent nationally. The gap between the state and national figures is associated with California’s high HMO enrollment since HMOs are less likely than other plans to be self-insured, the survey noted.
• This year’s survey, which was conducted by interview from April to July, included 796 randomly selected participants drawn from the Dun & Bradstreet list of private employers with three or more workers.


For complete results of the survey, visit www.chcf.org.


Filed by Joanne Wojcik of Business Insurance, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on December 22, 2008June 27, 2018

More Layoffs Reported at HR Software Firms

The job cuts infecting the economy have come to the once highflying HR software field. Authoria, one of the leading vendors of talent management software, recently trimmed its workforce partly in response to the sagging business climate.


“We did do a reduction,” Authoria chief executive Jim McDevitt said Thursday, December 18.


McDevitt, who took the helm of the Waltham, Massachusetts-based firm last month, declined to specify the number of pink slips, but he called the trim “fairly minimal.” McDevitt said the reduction focused on nonrevenue-generating areas, citing human resources and information technology.


Authoria now has between 260 and 270 employees, McDevitt said. Among the Authoria staff members being cut is Nina McIntyre, the firm’s senior vice president of marketing.


Authoria’s staff reductions are part of massive cuts under way at U.S. businesses, which are retrenching amid a recession. More than 1.2 million payroll jobs were lost in September, October and November.


HR software has been one of the fastest-growing corners of business software, and talent management applications—which refer to tools for key HR tasks such as recruiting and employee performance management—helped lead the boom.


Some in the HR software industry have argued that such products as succession planning applications would be desirable in a downturn because they can help companies downsize. But it’s unclear how well spending on talent management systems is holding up given the faltering economy.


Terry Tillman, equity analyst at investment firm Raymond James & Associates, questioned the demand for performance management software as he downgraded his rating on shares of software vendor SuccessFactors on December 17.


“We had believed that performance management would represent a much more resilient spend category given the strategic nature of more systematically measuring employee performance and enabling high-value activities such as succession planning and compensation management,” Tillman wrote as he downgraded SuccessFactors shares from “strong buy” to “market perform.”


“Unfortunately, economic dislocation seems to have become so great that even the low-cost nature, ease of use of the company’s solutions, and derived operational benefits are not enough to get deals closed and/or prevent project delays,” Tillman added.


Tillman also wrote of cuts at SuccessFactors: “We have heard the company has done another round of job cuts, above and beyond its prior 10 percent reduction in force executed in early November.”


Asked whether the company laid off employees recently or in some way reduced its headcount, Stacey Epstein, SuccessFactors’ vice president of marketing communications, said she could not comment.


In the first quarter of this year, SuccessFactors terminated dozens of employees. The company declined to call the reduction a layoff, even though SuccessFactors cut employees in conjunction with the elimination of a business group.


Not all talent management software firms are handing out pink slips.


“We have not had any job cuts,” said Nate Swanson, head of investor relations for Taleo.


—Ed  Frauenheim


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.


 

Posted on December 22, 2008June 27, 2018

TOOL Finding an IT Consultant

Finding the right consultant for your organization’s project can take time, a luxury that some managers may not have. But TechSoup recommends investing the time: “You are going to be investing significant time and money in this; it’s best to shop around and interview several candidates.” So, where to begin? The Web site offers several matters for consideration by managers at nonprofits (TechSoup’s target audience) and for-profits alike. Among them: “Does the consultant’s technical experience match your needs?” “How busy is the consultant?” “Can the project be completed remotely?” For the specifics, check out “Choosing the Right Consultant.“

Posted on December 19, 2008June 27, 2018

Taleo Facing More Legal Challenges

In the weeks since Taleo revealed a review of its accounting policies, the HR software vendor has received plenty of attention from the legal profession.


Two law firms have filed shareholder suits accusing Taleo of misleading investors. About 10 other law firms have issued press releases related to the litigation—in most cases alerting Taleo investors that they could become lead plaintiff in the matter.


Such plaintiff attorney actions are common in securities litigation, as firms seek the role of lead counsel, said Kevin LaCroix, a partner in Beachwood, Ohio-based OakBridge Insurance Services, which helps firms buy liability insurance.


“They’re trolling for plaintiffs,” LaCroix said. “It’s a complicated race to the courthouse.”


It’s not uncommon for companies to face shareholder suits after their stock drops sharply—something Taleo experienced November 11, the day after it announced the accounting review. In many instances, the lawsuits are quickly dismissed, LaCroix said. But there’s still something of a stain on firms.


“It’s not good publicity,” LaCroix said.


Taleo is one of the leading players in the fast-growing field of talent management software, which refers to tools for key human resources tasks such as recruiting and employee performance management. Over the past 15 months, Taleo has made a splash with its performance management software, its acquisition of rival Vurv Technology and its plans to develop an online hub for talent management matters.


Less positive publicity began November 10. That’s when Taleo said it would not file its Form 10-Q report for the quarter ended September 30 with the Securities and Exchange Commission by the November 10 due date.


Taleo also said its independent accounting firm asked it to re-evaluate whether the company’s practices with respect to the timing for recognition of application and consulting revenues were appropriate. Taleo said it was reviewing the issues raised by its auditors to determine if an alternative accounting treatment should be adopted.


The next day, shares of Taleo fell nearly 30 percent, closing at $7.83. On Thursday, December 18, Taleo shares closed at $7.41, down 6 percent from their closing price Wednesday.


On November 14, Vermont-based law firm Johnson & Perkinson filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California accusing Taleo of a scheme to defraud investors.


Just over a month later, on Wednesday, December 17, the Radnor, Pennsylvania, law firm of Barroway Topaz Kessler Meltzer & Check also said it filed a shareholder suit against Taleo. Its suit, it said, accuses Taleo of failing to disclose and misrepresenting “materially false and misleading” financial statements.


Nate Swanson, Taleo’s head of investor relations, gave the same response to the Barroway complaint as he did to the earlier Johnson & Perkinson suit. “We think the suit is without merit and premature,” Swanson said.


He added that Taleo continues to work with its accounting firm, Deloitte & Touche, and that Taleo accounting policies have not changed since before the company went public in 2005.


LaCroix said plaintiff attorney firms in securities litigation seek to represent the shareholder with the greatest financial loss, who may get to serve as lead plaintiff in a class-action case. Over the course of five years, roughly 10 percent of publicly traded firms get hit with shareholder lawsuits, LaCroix said. But about 40 percent of those suits are tossed out on an initial motion to dismiss the case, he said.


Securities issues can become a bigger deal if the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission decides to investigate a firm. Executives also can find themselves distracted by a big legal hullabaloo. “It can be a burden,” LaCroix said.


—Ed  Frauenheim 


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.


 

Posted on December 19, 2008June 27, 2018

The Rankings

Top Five Customized Programs
(BusinessWeek)
SchoolCountry
1. Duke Corporate EducationU.S.
2. IMDSwitzerland
3. INSEADFrance/Singapore
4. HarvardU.S.
5. London Business SchoolU.K.
Top Five Open-Enrollment Programs
(BusinessWeek)
SchoolCountry
1. HarvardU.S.
2. INSEADFrance/Singapore
3. IMDSwitzerland
4. StanfordU.S.
5. ColumbiaU.S.
Top Five Executive MBA Programs
(Financial Times)
SchoolCountry
1. Columbia/London Business SchoolU.S./U.K
2. Kellogg/Hong Kong UST Business SchoolChina
3. Trium: HEC Paris/LSE/New York University, SternFrance/U.K./U.S.
4. University of Pennsylvania, WhartonU.S.
5. IE Business SchoolSpain
Top Five Executive MBA Programs
(The Wall Street Journal)
SchoolCountry
1. Northwestern University, KelloggU.S.
2. University of Pennsylvania, WhartonU.S.
3 Thunderbird School of Global ManagementU.S.
4. University of Southern California, MarshallU.S.
5. University of Northern Carolina, Kenan FlaglerU.S.

Workforce Management, December 15, 2008, p. 24 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on December 18, 2008June 27, 2018

Opponents of FMLA Changes Seek Redress

The Bush administration is making the most of its waning weeks by issuing regulations that will take effect just before President-elect Barack Obama is sworn in.

Among the highest in profile are changes to a major employee leave law that has not been modified since it was enacted in 1993. In mid-November, the Department of Labor circulated rules that it said would clarify rights and obligations under the Family and Medical Leave Act.


They take effect January 16, which should prevent Congress from halting them. But Capitol Hill critics want to change them nonetheless.
The FMLA allows workers to take 12 weeks of unpaid leave for the birth or adoption of a child or to deal with a personal or family member’s ailment. The new regulations expand the law to provide 26 weeks of leave for people who care for seriously injured or ill military personnel.


The 762-page final regulation, which was the product of a two-year information-gathering process, tightens FMLA rules. It allows employers to demand recertification of a medical condition twice annually. An HR department can directly contact an employee’s health care provider.


Employees taking leave must tell their supervisors the same day or following day. Previously, notice could be delayed. Employers can deny “perfect attendance” awards to workers on FMLA leave and don’t have to grant it in increments smaller than they allow other leave.
Under the new rules, the time an employee spends in “light duty” work doesn’t count against FMLA. Also, a company must explain in writing why it is denying leave.


“Generally, this is a step in the right direction,” said Lisa Horn, manager of health care at the Society for Human Resource Management. “It should improve communication between employers and employees.”

The changes fell short of defining “serious health condition” or ironing out problems with intermittent leave.


“It’s a mixed bag for employers,” said Debra Friedman, a partner at Cozen O’Connor in Philadelphia. “The Department of Labor did not address all of the employer’s concerns or resolve them.”


While praising military leave, FMLA advocates charge the Bush administration with limiting other leave rights.


“This is no time when workers can afford to lose their jobs,” said Sharyn Tejani, senior policy counsel at the National Partnership for Women and Families.

She criticized the agency for not doing an empirical FMLA study. “You shouldn’t change regulations for the entire country based on employer complaints,” she said
.
An FMLA champion on Capitol Hill is drawing Obama’s attention to the changes.


“I respectfully request that the president-elect’s transition team take a close look at how we may expeditiously redress any new regulations that undermine access to FMLA leave,” wrote Rep. Carolyn Maloney, D-New York, in a letter to Obama chief of staff Rahm Emanuel.

Maloney’s staff acknowledges that the regulations can’t be stopped. They would have to be rewritten by the Obama administration.
In the meantime, employers will have to significantly revise leave procedures.


“You’re going to have to dot all your i’s and cross your t’s in order to make certain the information you’re providing the employee vis-à-vis the new forms and new procedures is correct,” said Ellen McLaughlin, a partner at Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago.


—Mark Schoeff Jr.


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Posted on December 18, 2008June 27, 2018

Mumbai Attacks, Piracy Heighten Need to Manage Deadly Risks

The November terrorist attacks in Mumbai, India, bumped reports about new Somalian pirate attacks off the front page and appear to have reset the immediate agenda for corporate risk analysis.


The loss of life and the commercial threat posed by both incidents, however, pale in comparison to the December report from Mexico’s attorney general that 5,400 people were slain in the first 11 months of 2008 in the drug-fueled war gripping cities that are home to U.S. maquiladoras.


“Now I’m getting more calls from companies concerned about northern Mexico than Mumbai,” said Mike Ackerman, managing director of Miami-based Ackerman Group, which specializes in counterterrorism and serves 65 of America’s top 100 multinationals. “Northern Mexico is a shooting gallery.”


The State Department has issued a travel alert for both Mexico and India, and the European Union has provided new resources to combat piracy, but no initiative addresses the immediate business need to conduct global operations or the ultimate responsibility HR executives bear for protecting employees in an increasingly dangerous world.


Piracy, like kidnapping and drug running, is a profit-oriented business that operates with some predictability. The terrorists who attacked Mumbai pose a far greater challenge for corporate security.


“No one foresaw the nature of the attacks in Mumbai,” Ackerman said. “But Mumbai has a history of terrorist attacks and proper precautions could have been taken.”


In fact, any Ackerman client traveling to Mumbai would have been warned off staying at the two hotels that were targeted because they did not have strong perimeter security.


The business risk posed by global terrorism is now a permanent part of the landscape.  


“It’s not going to go away,” Ackerman said. “I don’t want to discount what happened in Mumbai, but India has larger problems, with extremists operating on a number of fronts, and a separate problem with ransom kidnappings. There are both criminal risks and terrorist risks in India and beyond.”


HR executives must be aware of both criminal and terrorist activity but also understand that the countermeasures are different. In high-risk areas for kidnappings in India, incidents involving executives for Adobe, Expedian Solutions and Satyam Computer Services have occurred when the executives or family members were walking or driving. Proper precautions and training to avoid kidnappings are now part of standard corporate security offerings.


With terrorists, however, the dangers lie in hotels, commercial aircraft and government facilities such as train stations. “In Mumbai, the focus was on the hotels where Westerners stay because the terrorists wanted to strike at the economy, which they did with huge success,” Ackerman noted.


The fatal mistake, Ackerman said, is that companies undervalue risk analysis. The first step in risk mitigation is to use at least one intelligence service that also suggests preventive strategies.


“Companies can purchase intelligence services for $6,000 to $10,000 a year for two sources,” he noted. “But then you’ve got to read the stuff. The corporate security director may be the first line of defense, but ultimately the HR director is responsible for gauging the risk to employees.”


A 2008 survey of 600 large multinational companies conducted by iJET Intelligence Risk Systems found that less than half track terrorism as part of their risk monitoring process. HR executives will also need to step up their screening procedures for employees.


The Ackerman Group’s assessment of the Mumbai attacks cites an Indian police report that a software engineer for the local division of U.S.-based Yahoo was responsible for putting out the Mumbai terrorists’ e-mail claiming credit for the attacks. 


Ackerman advises HR executives to not only conduct a formal screening during the hiring process, but also continue screening employees every two years for indications of criminal or terrorist behavior.


“In addition, local managers and HR staff should constantly monitor employees for any attitudinal changes, lifestyle changes or signs of intensified religious beliefs or disaffection,” he said.


Besides terrorism, piracy remains a significant risk not only for the shipping industry but for any company that relies on commercial cargoes. In the first nine months of 2008, 199 acts of piracy occurred, including 115 vessels boarded, 31 hijacked and 23 fired on, according to the International Maritime Bureau’s Piracy Reporting Center.


Worldwide, 581 crew members were taken hostage, nine were kidnapped, nine were killed and seven are missing and presumed dead. As of December 1, 14 vessels with more than 250 crew members remained in the hands of Somali pirates.


In 2008, pirates collected more than $30 million in ransom money from their work in the Gulf of Aden, according to BGN Risk, the London-based business security and anti-piracy firm. The special risk insurance levy for crossing the Gulf of Aden jumped from an average of $500 per vessel per voyage in 2007 to $20,000 in 2008.


Proper insurance coverage for all commercial ships crossing the Gulf of Aden would add $400 million a year in insurance and transport costs, according to BGN Risk, with these costs passed on to commercial customers.


—Fay Hansen


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.


 

Posted on December 17, 2008June 27, 2018

GM Pays Inflation Bonuses to UAW Retirees

General Motors, which is seeking a government bailout, paid up to $700 in year-end inflation adjustments to each of its 284,000 hourly retirees on Monday, December 15, said GM spokesman Tony Sapienza.


With an additional 73,000 surviving spouses receiving as much as $455 each, the total cost to GM may surpass $200 million.


Ford Motor Co. intends to make its payments next week, said Ford spokeswoman Marcey Evans. They will go to 115,000 hourly retirees as part of longstanding contract provisions with the United Auto Workers. Chrysler LLC did not respond immediately to a request for numbers on its payments.


GM’s cash crisis had retirees worried whether the so-called Christmas bonuses would come this year. GM has indicated it barely has enough cash on hand to stay in business into January.


Dick Danjin, a GM retiree and retired UAW representative, said he wasn’t surprised since payment is called for in GM’s union contract.


“Both the corporation and union are fully aware of the obligation,” said Danjin, who lives in northern Michigan. He said he received his payment.


The lump-sum payments help to offset inflation much as cost-of-living allowances paid to active employees do. They are often called “Christmas bonuses” by retirees because they arrive in December every year.


GM’s lump sums pay retirees $23.33 for every year of service, Sapienza said. The minimum payment is $233, and the maximum is $700. Ford’s payments are similar.

The money comes from the automakers’ pension funds.


GM and Chrysler are awaiting word from President George W. Bush on whether they will receive a federal rescue package. GM is asking for $8 billion. Chrysler wants $7 billion.


The president is weighing what strings to attach to the loans, which may be drawn from either the Federal Reserve or a $700 billion bailout package for banks and financial institutions.


Craig Fitzgerald, an auto analyst with Plante & Moran in suburban Detroit, said that if GM had failed to make the payments, the company would have risked a “world war” with the UAW.


Said Fitzgerald: “GM didn’t need that given all the other battles it’s fighting.”


Filed by David Barkholz of Automotive News, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


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Posted on December 16, 2008June 27, 2018

Good Times or Bad, HR Still Gets Little Respect in the C-Suite

Even though the economic downturn has made the potential value added to companies by strategically oriented human resources departments all the more important, two out of five corporate management teams still don’t view HR as a strategic asset, according to a new study.


But the survey of 250 global human resources decision makers by Workforce Management and EquaTerra, a Houston-based information technology and business process transformation consulting firm, also had some good news for HR professionals. Among companies with 50,000 or more employees, 71 percent of management teams now see HR as a strategic player. Many HR leaders report recent progress in increasing HR’s strategic role, often as the result of new management refocusing HR operations on more business and mission-critical activities.


Additionally, the study found companies that recognize HR’s strategic importance also tend to report higher levels of satisfaction with the entire HR function, including non-strategic transactional activities.


EquaTerra Global Research managing director Stan Lepeak, who co-authored the study with executive director Lowell Williams and managing director Brad Everett, said that the sizable minority of companies that don’t recognize HR’s strategic potential are putting themselves at an increasingly serious disadvantage.


“I would think the need [for strategic HR] is exacerbated by the economy,” Lepeak said. “Organizations are in turmoil, some of them are on the edge of bankruptcy, executives are being pushed out. How do you recruit new talent when you’ve got a tarnished image, or keep from losing all your best people? How do you keep productivity up? You should be looking to HR to help address these problems, and to put in changes that can keep them from happening again in the future.”


Though HR leaders have made progress in becoming strategic players, most still see executives’ lack of understanding of HR as an impediment to progress. Seventy-eight percent either somewhat or totally agreed that making HR more strategic would require “a significant change in the mind-set of executives and business unit leaders.”


Lepeak said that although shortsighted executives are part of the problem, much of the responsibility lies with HR departments themselves.


“The HR people may feel that executives see them just as a back office group that runs the payroll, and they may complain that they’re not being offered a seat at the table,” Lepeak said. “But sitting back and waiting for the opportunity isn’t a good idea. In most cases, if you step up and show value, you’re going to be invited in, not pushed back. If you’ve never taken the initiative, it’s kind of your own fault.”


Most HR leaders in the survey seem to have a clear idea of what sort of activities were strategic and added value to the organization, but a minority may be hindering themselves through misplaced priorities. When asked what HR activities would contribute the most value to the business, 70 percent of respondents cited human capital management, and 63 percent picked “perform as a strong partner in corporate and strategic planning efforts.”


Competence at traditional HR functions generally ranked further down the scale—except, notably, among HR leaders at companies who primarily see HR as a cost center. They were 11 percent more likely than the rest to select “achieve operational excellence” as the best way to generate value and make HR more strategically important.


Lepeak said that while achieving adequate performance at functions such as payroll and benefits administration is crucial to keep organizations running smoothly, there’s relatively little value to be generated in improving beyond that. “Executives are looking for HR to be good enough at the operational work—the basic blocking and tackling—but to perform a lot of other activities as well,” he said.


Indeed, the study found that in companies where HR is viewed more strategically, there tends to be a higher opinion of HR’s overall capabilities, even in parts of the function that aren’t strategic.


Lepeak said that although it may be that companies with strategically minded HR departments also happen to be better at performing payroll or benefits administration, “it’s more likely that if you act more strategic and are seen as adding value, you get the benefit of the doubt from management in other areas. If you’re succeeding, people are happy, and they’ll assume the processes are working great. On the other hand, if you’re not seen as adding value, maybe your transactional work is going to get more scrutiny.”


In other findings, 88 percent of respondents said that making HR more strategic has more to do with innovative thinking and executive support than having a bigger HR budget. Fifty percent said that finding enough time to devote to strategic activities was the biggest obstacle to being a strategic player. Slightly more than half favored the use of automation and outsourcing to enable HR staff to concentrate upon value-creating activities.


—Patrick J. Kiger


Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.


 

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