Skip to content

Workforce

Category: Commentary & Opinion

Posted on April 4, 2010June 29, 2023

Managers Don’t Matter

The old saw that “people don’t leave companies, they leave managers” has become outdated—if it ever was true. Recent polls on retention reveal that crummy managers aren’t the principal cause of employee defections. While employers say the manager-employee tie is the biggest or second-biggest reason workers jump ship, employees put many other factors ahead of the manager connection, such as stress and base pay.


Still, some experts argue that getting manager-employee relations right is vital now. Managers, observers say, play a crucial role in inspiring workers in firms that are often in flux, frequently riddled with distrust and increasingly distributed across the globe. Studies show employee engagement has dropped during the recession. And in the wake of company decisions to cut staff, freeze salaries and take other cost-cutting steps, many workers are itching to bolt their firms.


To knit alienated employees into cohesive, innovative teams, companies will have to rely on savvy supervisors, says business consultant Karen Lojeski.


“What I’m finding is, managers matter more than ever,” she says.


Key connection
Linda Devlin says her boss matters more these days. Devlin, a senior manager at consulting firm Accenture who is responsible for leadership development and succession planning, says her supervisor has become more important to her engagement in the tough business climate. Devlin’s boss, global director of leadership development Camille Mirshokrai, has translated Accenture’s overall strategy in concrete terms as well as acted as a kind of sentry, passing on information about how the company is doing, says Devlin.


“The importance has grown in terms of feeling connected to our organization and not feeling lost in a black hole,” she says.


Mirshokrai, for her part, says managers are crucial when it comes to an increasingly important retention factor: shaping jobs so employees get to do what they’re best at each day. Generation Y’ers in particular want to be able to tout their achievements at work, she says.


“The company that offers you the best experience is going to get you,” Mirshokrai says. “And that’s where the manager plays a key role.”


For years, managers have been at the heart of Americans’ job experience. Supervisors not only have delegated tasks to workers, but have also judged their performance. Over the past decade or so, managers have been asked to take on more roles for employees, including career development coach and onboarding guide for new hires. According to research firm Gallup, the relationship with the manager is the largest factor in employee engagement, accounting for at least 70 percent of an employee’s level of engagement.


Employee engagement is a concept that captures retention—how committed employees are to their firms—but also reflects how willing workers are to put in extra effort on the job. Gallup has documented a connection between higher levels of engagement and higher productivity and profitability.


Engagement has fallen during the recession, a number of studies show. A May 2009 survey by consulting firm Watson Wyatt Worldwide (now Towers Watson) of 1,300 workers at large U.S. employers found that engagement levels for top performers fell close to 25 percent year over year. Employees overall experienced a 9 percent drop in engagement year over year.


Sixty percent of employees intend to leave their firms as the economy improves this year, and an additional 27 percent are networking or have updated their résumés, according to a late 2009 survey of 904 workers in North America by advisory firm Right Management.


Influence overstated?
  
  But you can’t pin all that dissatisfaction on direct supervisors. Managers have never been the sole factor in worker engagement and retention, says Jack Wiley, executive director of the research arm of employee survey firm Kenexa. Wiley has reviewed data going back to 1994, finding that the key drivers of retention have remained consistent: confidence in an organization’s future; recognition for contributions; opportunities for growth and development; and a good fit between the job and a person’s skills and abilities.


Managers influence the recognition component and probably the development and job-match pieces, Wiley says. But they have limited power over the confidence component and may be hamstrung on employee development if executives slash training budgets.


“If you’re in love with the company, you can outwait a stinker of a manager,” Wiley says. “The role of the manager is often exaggerated.”


A report last year from Watson Wyatt found that “relationship with supervisor/ manager” was the top-ranked reason employers gave for why employees leave an organization, cited by 43 percent of respondents. But employees themselves rated stress levels as the top reason, followed by base pay. Four other factors tied for third place, none of which was the manager relationship.


Similarly, a report last year by Salary.com found that employers ranked “poor relationship with manager(s)” as the second-most-important reason employees leave a job. It was cited as a significant factor by 38 percent of employers. But bad blood with the boss didn’t rank in the top five reasons employees gave for leaving a job, which included inadequate compensation, inadequate professional development opportunity and boredom.


Managers may be less central to employees these days in part because of the lingering recession. The downturn threatened the very survival of firms, forcing employees to pay more attention on their organization overall. The ways companies have responded to the recession also is a factor, experts say. Rusty Rueff, a consultant and board member of job feedback site Glassdoor.com, says lower-level managers used to act as a buffer between employees and company policy, with some control over workers’ destinies. But much of the downsizing and cost-cutting during the downturn has been dictated by top executives, leaving frontline supervisors without any influence.


“At that point, you’ve neutered the manager,” says Rueff, who worked as an HR executive at Electronic Arts and PepsiCo. The result, says


Rueff, is that workers have less reason to care about their connection with their supervisor. “The employee feels they’re out there on their own,” he says.


Brian Kropp, analyst with the Corporate Executive Board, says managers have had less time for their direct reports, which has made it harder for them to be effective at spurring above-and-beyond efforts from their team members. The average manager worked about 10 percent more hours a week in the first half of 2009 compared with the first half of 2008, but spent 20 percent less time with their team members, Kropp says.


Recession’s effect
Kropp also says the ongoing upheavals at so many firms have loosened the bonds between bosses and workers. In a recent Corporate Executive Board survey, 60 percent of employees said they had a change in manager in the past six months or expect one in the coming six months. Given that grooming employees is a long-term process that pays dividends over the course of years rather than months, managers are bound to pour less into their people, Kropp says. “I don’t have the same incentives I had to be with them, to develop them, to care for them, to invest in them as I had before,” he says.


In addition, changes in the workplace that predate the recession have made the immediate manager relationship less relevant for workers, says Ilene Gochman, a consultant with Towers Watson. She notes that many companies have adopted “matrix” structures in which people have multiple managers. Firms have been conducting work in the form of ad hoc projects that may utilize employees from different business units. Rather than asking managers questions about company policies or training courses, employees can get much of the information they need from online portals.


And, Gochman says, companies often have mentoring programs that give employees a connection to another more-senior person in the organization besides their manager. “You don’t have to ‘leave your manager,’ ” Gochman says. “You can work around them now.”


Still, some observers say managers remain crucial to company efforts to win over a workforce that is skittish, skeptical and seeking greener pastures.


By giving employees a good understanding of how their individual efforts contribute to broader company goals, managers increase workers’ sense of control amid challenging times, Gochman says. “A good manager is going to be that guide for you,” she says.


Companies also are under pressure to redefine a worthy employment deal for workers in the wake of layoffs, salary freezes and benefit cuts. Gochman says managers play a key role in reinforcing messages about the new “employment value proposition.”


Managers continue to be essential to engagement at financial services firm Ameriprise, says Nick Nyhus, vice president of talent management at the 11,000-person company. Ameriprise cut about 300 positions early last year, and the firm is highly matrixed—factors that can diminish the importance of the manager-employee tie.


But Nyhus says Ameriprise has a culture of fostering strong relationships, which is a foundation of the firm’s work as a financial advisor. And in an employee engagement survey conducted in the third quarter of last year, Ameriprise found that the significance of the manager-employee bond remained steady. “That relationship was pretty key, still,” Nyhus says.


Building trust
Managers are vital to reducing the “virtual distance” that can exist in geographically distributed teams, says consultant Lojeski. Virtual distance refers to feelings of isolation among colleagues who typically communicate through e-mail, telephone or other technologies, and it can hamper financial performance and innovation, Lojeski says.


Managers need to develop “techno-dexterity,” Lojeski says, which means knowing how to communicate through a range of tools depending on the message and the audience. She cites the example of an executive who sends “video e-mails,” which gives people the richer experience of seeing facial expressions and hearing a voice rather than simply reading text.


Kropp, of the Corporate Executive Board, says a key is to make sure managers are focusing only on the handful of things that matter most. Companies, he says, have pushed many HR tasks onto supervisors in recent years, including greater responsibilities for handing out pink slips. “We’ve just gone too far,” he says.


But organizations would err if they removed talent management duties from managers altogether, says Tim Ringo, global leader of IBM’s human capital management division. The traditional manager, who merely allocated work and judged performance, is “dead,” says Ringo, whose unit sells HR software and services. He says firms need leaders who can hold on to high-potential employees by paying attention to their career development.


To this end, talent management software systems serve a critical function, Ringo says. In an era in which managers may change quickly, tools like performance management systems can help new supervisors quickly grasp the strengths, history and future plans of team members. Without such a system, “it’s just chaos all the time,” Ringo says.


While cutting-edge software may be part of the solution, so is old-fashioned empathy. Brad Federman, president of consulting firm Performancepoint, says that supervisors need to take a genuine interest in others. “The more self-interested we are, the more our relationships will suffer or be superficial,” Federman says. “Firms must help managers learn ways to reduce their self-orientation to build a culture of trust.”


A demanding role
It all adds up to a tall order for managers these days. Accenture’s Mirshokrai says supervising people is tougher now than it was when she first became a manager at the company about 15 years ago. That’s partly because of the rise of virtual teams and the communication challenges posed by managing at a distance.


Mirshokrai has 11 direct reports scattered across North America, Asia and Europe. Back in 1994, she ran a group of about a dozen employees located at a single client site. “We all sat together in one room,” she recalls. “You could tell by people’s facial expressions or moods how they were doing.”


Strong generational differences in the workforce today also are tricky. Mirshokrai has found that younger employees tend to want more frequent assessments. “Some people only want feedback twice a year. Some people want feedback two times a month. Some people want feedback on every interaction,” she says.


Given the demands put on managers, companies would do well to help them do their jobs well. At the same time, organizations should not home in on managers too exclusively, experts say. McGill University professor Henry Mintzberg says companies should fix corporate cultures that hinder managers as they try to lead teams.


For one thing, he calls for an end to incentive plans that single out individuals. He also says firms should stop axing employees casually every time quarterly numbers are missed. “A lot of the coldbloodedness of stock market pressure has driven a wedge between managers and employees,” Mintzberg says.


Kenexa’s Wiley agrees that firms seeking to engage and retain employees have to look at the bigger picture. The most important driver of engagement, Wiley says, is leadership that inspires confidence in the future. Focusing too much on managers, Wiley says, “takes the organization off the hook.”


If companies don’t do a better job putting the importance of managers in perspective, they might suffer more than just the disengagement and defections of individual contributors. They might find effective managers heading out the door as well—and taking teams of people with them who might help rival firms.


Rueff says he knows of cases in which leaders broke off from their companies with a group of employees and became a kind of business-unit-for-hire. “In the free-agent market, you’re already starting to see it,” he says.


Workforce Management, April 2010, p. 18-24 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on April 1, 2010June 29, 2023

The Upside of Engagement

(To enlarge the view, click on the image below. Adobe Acrobat Reader is required.)


Workforce Management, March 2010, p. 23 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on April 1, 2010August 28, 2018

Gencorp Restores 401(k) Match; Report Cites Growing Trend

Defense and aerospace company GenCorp Inc. said it was reinstating its 401(k) plan matching contribution, the latest in a growing number of employers that have done so or will be doing the same.


In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing Tuesday, March 30, Rancho Cordova, California-based GenCorp said it would restore its 401(k) plan match for nonunion employees at the same rate prior to its January 15, 2009, suspension. The match will be restored in July.


Prior to the suspension, GenCorp matched 100 percent of employees’ salary deferrals up to the first 3 percent of pay and 50 percent of deferrals on the next 3 percent of pay.


However, GenCorp now will make matching contributions in cash. Previously, it matched contributions with company stock, which a GenCorp spokeswoman previously said was diluting the stock’s value.


Meanwhile, a survey released Wednesday by Boston-based mutual fund provider and 401(k) plan administrator Fidelity Investments found that 44 percent of employers that suspended their matching contributions last year either have reinstated or intend to reinstate the match during the next 12 months.


“As the economy begins to improve, employers large and small are bringing back their 401(k) matching programs,” James M. MacDonald, president of Fidelity unit Workplace Investing, said in a statement.


The likelihood of employers reinstating matching contributions, though, varies significantly by company size. For example, among employers with at least 5,000 employees, 70 percent either have restored or intend to restore the match within the next 12 months, nearly double the 36 percent of employers with 500 or fewer employees that either have restored matching contributions or plan to do so.


The results are based on a survey this month of 293 Fidelity clients that suspended or reduced their 401(k) matching contributions last year.


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


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on April 1, 2010August 28, 2018

Communicating for Engagement During Tough Times

Layoffs added to the challenge of keeping employees engaged during the downturn at the recruitment outsourcing division of Manpower Business Solutions.


Manpower Business Solutions, a unit of the staffing company Manpower, cut some jobs in the U.S. during the recession.


The number of workers affected was “minimal,” says Tracy Qamou, director of recruiting operations for Manpower Business Solutions, which also provides services such as training and workforce planning. Nonetheless, Qamou and her team worked to make sure the 80 or so employees in the recruitment outsourcing division were kept informed of the company’s direction, goals and business prospects. That communication helped bolster morale, Qamou says.


“It created a sense of security,” Qamou says, stopping the panic before it started.


A heavy focus on communication at the company is standard in both good times and bad, Qamou says. That’s important partly because her operation is so dispersed. The bulk of Qamou’s recruiters work from home offices. Given that recruiters may immerse themselves in a client’s operations, keeping them connected to Manpower can be difficult, Qamou says.


“It’s very easy for them to feel they are more associated on a daily basis with that client rather than an employee of Manpower,” she says.


For Qamou, the challenge is to make sure these virtual employees see that what they do contributes to the firm’s overall mission.


“To keep an outsourced, remote workforce engaged, communication is critical,” she says. “In Manpower Business Solutions, management reinforces how the daily, sometimes small actions of the team contribute to the Manpower vision. It facilitates a team-oriented feeling.”


Workforce Management Online, April 2010 — Register Now!

Posted on March 24, 2010June 29, 2023

What to Do About Body Art at Work

The increasing popularity of body art is providing challenges for employers in every industry and profession.


     Many employers have responded by implementing dress and grooming policies seeking to limit or prohibit employees’ open display of tattoos and piercings while at work. In 2006, for example, San Bernardino County in California began requiring its employees to cover any tattoos and remove visible facial piercings while at work. Since 2008, Los Angeles city firefighters have been required to cover all tattoos while on the job, and for the past five years, the Los Angeles Police Department has had a requirement that all officers cover any visible tattoos.


Protecting employers’ legitimate interests
Although some employers, particularly in traditionally creative fields, may encourage employee displays of body art as a form of self-expression, many others worry that their employees’ visible body piercings and tattoos may be off-putting or even offensive to customers, investors and the public at large.


What is an employer to do? Those with too-stringent grooming and dress code requirements risk driving off talented employees and hurting employee morale. At the same time, an employer, such as a hospital, may have legitimate concerns that an employee’s mode of self-expression will alienate or offend patients or patients’ families. And, as explained below, the body-art issue also raises some potential legal considerations.


Employers have wide latitude under the law to establish dress and grooming policies, but it also makes sense to consider the underlying reasons for appearance requirements before implementing a strict policy. Obviously, not all positions require traditional business dress and not all positions involve interactions with customers or the public. This means that strict grooming and dress policies prohibiting all displays of tattoos and piercings may be unnecessary, and perhaps demoralizing, to a growing segment of employees.


Developing an effective policy
Even employers that permit piercings or tattoos may find it necessary to set some limits. A detailed dress code and grooming policy should clearly spell out what is permitted. For example, if you permit the display of tattoos, you may prohibit the display of sexually graphic, violent or otherwise offensive tattoos, or may require that employees limit the number of visible tattoos.


To ensure employee support and compliance, employers should consider involving workers in the development of dress and grooming policies. Employers should also be prepared to make a business case for any restrictive policy decisions. At minimum, this will help employees understand the business need for the policies. Having had the opportunity to provide input, employees are more likely to support a dress and grooming policy, even one they do not entirely agree with.


Dealing with religious issues
Employers must also consider how to respond if an employee asserts a right to a particular tattoo, jewelry or hairstyle on religious grounds. You cannot treat employees or applicants more or less favorably because of religious beliefs or practices. In fact, you must accommodate employees’ sincerely held religious practices, unless doing so would impose an undue hardship. According to the EEOC, modification of grooming requirements is an accommodation that may be required. But you are not required to accommodate religious beliefs or practices if doing so would impose an undue hardship on legitimate business interests.


The standard for demonstrating an undue hardship is not high, but employers must be prepared to show that they, indeed, considered the request for accommodation, as opposed to simply dismissing it out of hand.


As is so often the case, the most important factor may be proving that you have acted consistently. Employers may not place more restrictions on religious expression than on other forms of expression that have comparable effect on the workplace. Some employers have already learned the hard way that if a ball cap or flamboyant hairstyle does not pose an undue hardship, neither does the wearing of a turban or a headscarf that is based upon sincerely held religious convictions. The key, as always, is consistent and evenhanded treatment of all such requests. This is another situation where supervisory training is critical. Supervisors and managers must be trained to consult with human resources when facing these situations.


Fear that other employees may be upset by or “uncomfortable” with a religious expression is very unlikely to constitute an undue hardship. On the other hand, you can establish an undue hardship by showing that the accommodation diminishes efficiency in other jobs, impairs safety or requires more than ordinary administrative costs.


Finally, no matter how employers deal with these issues, applicable policies should be clearly stated in writing and readily available to all employees.


Like it or not, traditional dress code and appearance standards are being challenged today more than ever. Employers still retain wide latitude, but practical, social and legal factors are requiring more careful consideration of requests that might have been readily (and safely) dismissed several years ago. It is advisable to seek employee input before making major changes to employee appearance standards. Failure to do so could result in unpleasant surprises.


Workforce Management Online, March 2010 — Register Now!


The information contained in this article is intended to provide useful information on the topic covered, but should not be construed as legal advice or a legal opinion. Also remember that state laws may differ from the federal law.

Posted on March 19, 2010June 29, 2023

Ads Educate C-Suite About Disability Diversity

With the unemployment rate hovering in double-digit territory, it’s difficult for many people to find a job. It’s an even bigger challenge for Mark Karner, a polio survivor who uses a wheelchair and ventilator.


His disability limits the kinds of jobs he can perform. Wheelchair access is often the first stumbling block when he inquires about an opening.


“Half of them don’t even know what that means,” says Karner, who has been job hunting since September. “That’s really held me back. There’s still a lot of discrimination out there.”


Karner knows the situation better than most people because he previously was disability advocacy director at the Progress Center for Independent Living in Forest Park, Illinois.


Health & Disability Advocates, a Chicago-based group, is trying to change the perception of hiring people with disabilities through an advertising campaign that launched February 1.


The national effort will total $4 million initially for television, radio, print and Internet ads.


It is designed to change the perception of hiring disabled employees. Print ads poke fun at the foibles of typical employees. For instance, “Tina” is portrayed as being “pattern deficient” because her clothes don’t match.


“Just because someone looks a little different doesn’t mean they can’t make your organization look great,” the ad says. “The same goes for people with disabilities.”


Barbara Otto, executive director of Health & Disability Advocates, says that the campaign, a collaborative effort between states and human services agencies, strives to be edgy and creative rather than staid government public service announcements.


“What we’re trying to do is turn the notion of labels on its ear and get decision-makers to go beyond their own bias and look at what a person can contribute to their business instead of looking at their disability,” Otto says.


The target audience, Otto says, is executives at small and medium-size companies that may not have an HR department. The ads will direct them to a Web site (www.thinkbeyondthelabel.com) that outlines state-level resources to help them identify disabled job candidates and modify their workplaces for them.


Small and large employers alike will have to pay closer attention to the needs of disabled employees in the wake of legislation approved by Congress in 2008 that expands the Americans with Disabilities Act.


Regulations are being drafted that would implement the law, which went into effect in January 2009. It broadens the definition of disability in response to Supreme Court rulings that limited the ADA’s scope.


Instead of looking at case history to determine whether an employee qualifies as being disabled, companies must now be more inclined to accommodate him or her.


“Dealing with sick, injured, disabled employees is much more of a high-stakes process,” says Gerald Maatman Jr., a partner at Seyfarth Shaw in Chicago. “The law puts a much higher premium on decision-making. It’s a very employee-friendly set of amendments.”


Despite the ADA, hiring obstacles remain—even in a good economy.


“It’s the last frontier for employers looking to build a diverse workplace,” Otto says.


Workforce Management, February 2010, p. 5 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on March 10, 2010August 10, 2018

HR Information InsecuritySteal Our Data, Please

As a consultant, Accretive Solutions’ Mike Saylor has what might appear to be an unseemly, if not outright criminal, expertise. He’s a self-taught expert at slipping past security perimeters and checkpoints at business facilities and stealing sensitive data.


But it’s all good, because it’s the corporate victims themselves who enlist Saylor and Accretive, a New York-based firm that helps companies to identify and fix holes in their information defenses. Often, Saylor says, the vulnerability that he discovers and exploits isn’t a porous firewall or inadequate vetting procedures, but something even more insidious: basic human nature.


In one recent assignment, for example, Saylor was given the address of a Detroit debt collection agency, and instructions to obtain an assortment of personal credit reports stacked in a printer tray somewhere in the building. Saylor’s preliminary surveillance revealed that the business had elaborate defenses against intruders, including an entrance checkpoint where a receptionist screened visitors and verified they had appointments and interior ones that could be opened only with security badges.


So Saylor chose to exploit what he says usually is the weak link in corporate security: the human factor. He walked into the lobby playing the part of a typical preoccupied executive, talking on a cell phone, with a bunch of paperwork in one hand and a Big Gulp in the other.


“I got past the receptionist without even talking to her, and people just opened the doors for me, because they didn’t want to be rude,” Saylor recalls. “I made it past two secured areas, found the printer, and made it out of the building with 39 confidential credit histories. It took 12 minutes.”


Before becoming Accretive’s national security services director, Saylor worked as a personal bodyguard, a college computer science professor, and as chief security officer for a telecommunications firm, where he says he frequently worked with the FBI and other federal agencies on cybercrime investigations.


Saylor is adept at “pretext calling,” in which he utilizes bits of information gleaned from corporate Web sites and LinkedIn and Facebook profiles to trick employees into giving up restricted data or revealing procedures for obtaining it.


While corporate leaders may be most worried about Eastern European or Chinese hackers stealing their secrets via the Internet, Saylor says that they seldom realize how easy it is for an unauthorized person to walk off with a laptop full of sensitive data, or a stack of confidential papers. And given the current economic turmoil, the thief is increasingly likely to be someone on the inside.


“Employees who got laid off or who didn’t get a raise, malicious executives who didn’t get bonuses—all of these people know company processes and how to take advantage of them,” Saylor warns.


That’s why Saylor preaches to companies the importance of teaching all levels of the workforce what he calls “security awareness”—that is, not only to follow the procedures in the corporate rule book, but to continually, proactively be on the lookout for attempts to steal information, whether it’s by an outsider or a co-worker.


“If you see an unfamiliar person walking around, be sure to ask them who they are and whether they need any help,” Saylor says. “And know that that the IT department will never send you an e-mail asking for your password, or ask for it over the phone. If you get a request like that, alarms should go off.”


Workforce Management, February 2010, p. 3 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on March 2, 2010August 31, 2018

Senate Bill to Extend COBRA Subsidy Introduced

Federal COBRA health insurance premium subsidies would be extended and expanded under legislation that two top Senate Democrats introduced Monday, March 1.


The bill proposed by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, and Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, D-Montana, would extend the 65 percent, 15-month subsidy to employees involuntarily terminated from March 1 through December 31.


A previous congressional extension of the subsidy expired Sunday, February 28. Unless Congress acts, employees laid off as of March 1 no longer are eligible for the subsidy.


The Senate is expected to begin debate Tuesday, March 2, on the measure, which was introduced as a substitute amendment to a bill, H.R. 4213, already passed by the House of Representatives.


The Senate measure also would allow employees who first lost group coverage due to a reduction in hours and then were terminated to receive the COBRA premium subsidy so long as certain conditions were met.


Other provisions in the bill would extend expiring sections of the U.S. Tax Code.


The introduction of the Senate bill came in the wake of the House last week approving legislation, H.R. 4681, that would extend the subsidy through March 31.


 


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


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers

Posted on February 26, 2010August 31, 2018

Homeland Security’s Use of Contractors Comes Under Fire

The Department of Homeland Security’s ratio of contractors to government employees was questioned on Wednesday, February 24, by Sens. Joe Lieberman, I-Connecticut, and Susan Collins, R-Maine, in the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

The department estimates it has 200,000 contractors working for it and 188,000 civilian employees—not including uniformed members of the Coast Guard—for a total workforce of almost 400,000, according to information provided by the committee.

“To me, this is just a shocking and unacceptable number,” Lieberman said. “Our committee has long been concerned about DHS’ heavy reliance on contractors because it raises the question of efficient use of taxpayer money but also the question of who is in control of the department’s mission: Is it federal contractors or full-time employees?”

In a statement, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said the department is seeking to reduce its use of contractors in the next fiscal year and plans to convert some contractor positions to federal jobs.

Filed by Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister company of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posted on February 24, 2010August 28, 2018

Staffing Firm Spherion Changes Name to SFN Group

Spherion Corp. has changed its name to SFN Group. The company will continue to trade under the symbol SFN on the New York Stock Exchange.


“The SFN Group name clearly defines each of our businesses under one unified company,” said SFN Group president and CEO Roy Krause. “Our new name also more accurately reflects our evolution to a strategic workforce solutions provider. It reinforces our commitment to provide our customers with specialized services to help them more effectively acquire, deploy and manage the workforce.”


SFN Group’s divisions include Technisource, Tatum, Mergis, Todays Office Professionals, SourceRight Solutions and Spherion Staffing Services.


SFN Group (then Spherion Corp.) ranked as the seventh-largest staffing firm in the U.S. on Staffing Industry Analysts’ 2009 list of largest U.S. staffing firms.


 


Filed by Staffing Industry Analysts, a sister company of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.


Stay informed and connected. Get human resources news and HR features via Workforce Management’s Twitter feed or RSS feeds for mobile devices and news readers.

Posts navigation

Previous page Page 1 … Page 73 Page 74 Page 75 … Page 85 Next page

 

Webinars

 

White Papers

 

 
  • Topics

    • Benefits
    • Compensation
    • HR Administration
    • Legal
    • Recruitment
    • Staffing Management
    • Training
    • Technology
    • Workplace Culture
  • Resources

    • Subscribe
    • Current Issue
    • Email Sign Up
    • Contribute
    • Research
    • Awards
    • White Papers
  • Events

    • Upcoming Events
    • Webinars
    • Spotlight Webinars
    • Speakers Bureau
    • Custom Events
  • Follow Us

    • LinkedIn
    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • RSS
  • Advertise

    • Editorial Calendar
    • Media Kit
    • Contact a Strategy Consultant
    • Vendor Directory
  • About Us

    • Our Company
    • Our Team
    • Press
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms Of Use
Proudly powered by WordPress