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Casual Articles - Case Study: The Little Staffing Firm That Could
Nine Ways to Build Your Business Without Making Cold Calls terminating those [employees] that are not working out."Method 1: Client base Saturation - When looking for new business, your current clients are always your BEST prospects! The focus of this approach is developing all client relationships to their maximum potential - helping them in every way possible and, in the process, laying a stronger foundation for their ongoing referrals.Method 2: Refined Referral Building - Stronger client relationships should naturally lead to more and better referrals - but you need to know when and how to ask for them! This method focuses on securing high-level introductions into companies with whom your existing clients have relatio St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we h The Secret To Bringing More Cash Into Your Business According to 2005 data by the American Staffing Association, the staffing industry has grown at a rate of about 8 percent per year for the last several years. Keith Jacob's Missouri-based staffing firm, St. Louis Staffing, leads this trend: His 11-year-old firm of 14 full-time employees and several hundred part-time employees has grown about 20 percent each year since 2004. This in an industry that the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts will create more new jobs than any other industry through 2014.Want more cash coming into your business? Well, read this article to find out how!Having a great product or service is only one of the critical success factors for your business. The key to increasing the amount of cash in your organization is having an effective sales operation.The first critical success factor in deploying a winning sales operation is hiring the right sales professionals for your organization. Many organizations look for a candidate who is an expert in the field expecting to make them a great sales professional. Sales, like any other profession requires specific skill sets. The skill s Clearly, Jacob knows a good thing when he sees it. A 2006 Winning Workplaces/FORTUNE Small Business Best Boss, he is one of the youngest entrepreneurs to be honored by our annual workplace recognition program. His efforts to supply talented workers to clients in the light industrial sector in St. Louis as well as the Missouri communities of Columbia, Mexico and O'Fallon – where the company maintains satellite offices – earned him a spot on the St. Louis Business Journal's "40 Under 40" list. In speaking with Jacob, one gets the sense that accolades don't matter that much – certainly not as much as fulfilling his motto of "working hard to keep you working" by matching workers' skills with client employers' needs. These days Jacob, who founded St. Louis Staffing after holding management positions at PepsiCo and Lanter Delivery Systems, is on a mission to diversify workplaces. "We've introduced the notion of a diverse workforce to several of our customers," he says. "They thought that the language barrier would be so prohibitive that they wouldn't even entertain bringing in people who didn't speak English [as a first language]. But just by our cajoling, we've had several customers who now very much enjoy having a more diverse workforce, and who request the opportunity to build a bigger Hispanic workforce within their own operation." While only about 2 percent of St. Louis' population is Hispanic according to the U.S. Census Bureau – representing about 7,000 people – of the staffing firm's 2,500 job placements in 2006, about two-thirds of those involved Hispanic workers, Jacob says. Considering that the firm's geographic range is a 50-mile radius of downtown St. Louis, and that contrary to other staffing firms, many of St. Louis Staffing's placements are longer than one-day assignments, the company is having a measurable impact on local diversity, both inside and outside the workplace. Another hallmark of the firm is an emphasis on cross training – on everything from account management and operations to payroll/billing. After all, many of the employers who engage St. Louis Staffing need to fill multiple roles. "The reason a lot of companies use us is that they don't have full-time HR people," says Dennis Harre, an account manager who has been with the firm for over two years. "So we're heavily involved in disciplinary actions, bring on new staff and terminating those [employees] that are not working out." St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we ha Tips on Creating Your Small Business Yellow Page Ad am. His efforts to supply talented workers to clients in the light industrial sector in St. Louis as well as the Missouri communities of Columbia, Mexico and O'Fallon – where the company maintains satellite offices – earned him a spot on the St. Louis Business Journal's "40 Under 40" list.First, a few words about my qualifications. I was a Yellow Page consultant for nearly 25 years and, prior to that, had my own advertising agency. I also have a degree in marketing. I’ve been designing Yellow Page ads for the past three decades. So I have experience in creating ads and have advised almost 7000 companies on how to put together the most effective ones. If you have a display or in-column ad, regardless of size, color or position, I can tell you it most probably needs improvement in essentials areas like the headline, artwork, body text, placement, book, or heading. So, whether you have an ad or are think In speaking with Jacob, one gets the sense that accolades don't matter that much – certainly not as much as fulfilling his motto of "working hard to keep you working" by matching workers' skills with client employers' needs. These days Jacob, who founded St. Louis Staffing after holding management positions at PepsiCo and Lanter Delivery Systems, is on a mission to diversify workplaces. "We've introduced the notion of a diverse workforce to several of our customers," he says. "They thought that the language barrier would be so prohibitive that they wouldn't even entertain bringing in people who didn't speak English [as a first language]. But just by our cajoling, we've had several customers who now very much enjoy having a more diverse workforce, and who request the opportunity to build a bigger Hispanic workforce within their own operation." While only about 2 percent of St. Louis' population is Hispanic according to the U.S. Census Bureau – representing about 7,000 people – of the staffing firm's 2,500 job placements in 2006, about two-thirds of those involved Hispanic workers, Jacob says. Considering that the firm's geographic range is a 50-mile radius of downtown St. Louis, and that contrary to other staffing firms, many of St. Louis Staffing's placements are longer than one-day assignments, the company is having a measurable impact on local diversity, both inside and outside the workplace. Another hallmark of the firm is an emphasis on cross training – on everything from account management and operations to payroll/billing. After all, many of the employers who engage St. Louis Staffing need to fill multiple roles. "The reason a lot of companies use us is that they don't have full-time HR people," says Dennis Harre, an account manager who has been with the firm for over two years. "So we're heavily involved in disciplinary actions, bring on new staff and terminating those [employees] that are not working out." St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we h Generate Millions of Advertising Impressions and Drive Your Business Forward! verse workforce to several of our customers," he says. "They thought that the language barrier would be so prohibitive that they wouldn't even entertain bringing in people who didn't speak English [as a first language]. But just by our cajoling, we've had several customers who now very much enjoy having a more diverse workforce, and who request the opportunity to build a bigger Hispanic workforce within their own operation."What does your vehicle say about your business? You drive to work, commute through traffic, stop at the shop for refreshments, park up outside your business, take care of deliveries and run some errands during the day, finally, you drive home in the evening. How many people did you pass or meet today? All potential customers, but did they notice you?Grab a significant advertising advantage over your competitors by covering your vehicle with your business image or message in the form of an eye-catching digitally printed self adhesive vinyl advertisement known as a vehicle wrap and take it for a drive around town While only about 2 percent of St. Louis' population is Hispanic according to the U.S. Census Bureau – representing about 7,000 people – of the staffing firm's 2,500 job placements in 2006, about two-thirds of those involved Hispanic workers, Jacob says. Considering that the firm's geographic range is a 50-mile radius of downtown St. Louis, and that contrary to other staffing firms, many of St. Louis Staffing's placements are longer than one-day assignments, the company is having a measurable impact on local diversity, both inside and outside the workplace. Another hallmark of the firm is an emphasis on cross training – on everything from account management and operations to payroll/billing. After all, many of the employers who engage St. Louis Staffing need to fill multiple roles. "The reason a lot of companies use us is that they don't have full-time HR people," says Dennis Harre, an account manager who has been with the firm for over two years. "So we're heavily involved in disciplinary actions, bring on new staff and terminating those [employees] that are not working out." St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we h Techno Gypsies - Freemasons Of The Third Millennia? 50-mile radius of downtown St. Louis, and that contrary to other staffing firms, many of St. Louis Staffing's placements are longer than one-day assignments, the company is having a measurable impact on local diversity, both inside and outside the workplace.Today skilled programmers, installers and operators in information technology routinely change jobs as skill sets ascend, peak and wane in the face of new capabilities in technology. These Techno Gypsies move from start-up, to existing enterprise to start-up, all as demand for their skills shifts and changes. Like technology, their skills are in a constant state of growth as they master the challenges of increasing processing speed, storage capacity and the demand for ever increasing information.As the builders of the great information edifices of our age, they bear an uncanny resemblance to the freemasons of t Another hallmark of the firm is an emphasis on cross training – on everything from account management and operations to payroll/billing. After all, many of the employers who engage St. Louis Staffing need to fill multiple roles. "The reason a lot of companies use us is that they don't have full-time HR people," says Dennis Harre, an account manager who has been with the firm for over two years. "So we're heavily involved in disciplinary actions, bring on new staff and terminating those [employees] that are not working out." St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we h Business Coaching Resources terminating those [employees] that are not working out."Businesses seek coaching when they need an effective business plan specialized for their needs and their employees forged into a team that can deliver on that plan. Business coaching can be implemented in any field of commerce. All organizations, whether profit oriented or otherwise, require certain resources to conduct their day-to-day activities. A resource means anything that is available to a company for increasing production, work efficiency or profit. These include the money, people, time and equipment that are necessary for any enterprise. Similarly, the process of business coaching requires certain resources t St. Louis Staffing devotes 120 hours of training to new employees in their first year and 20 hours per year subsequently. Julie Giboney, who has managed the firm's Columbia office for close to a year, received four days of training at the St. Louis headquarters and started in her role in Columbia the next week. "Keith was here for a few days my first week to make sure I was comfortable with everything," she says. Jacob's personal attention and focus on training yielded big dividends for the firm a few years ago. In June 2004 their third-largest client went bankrupt, leaving St. Louis Staffing with an "unbelievable uncollectible debt," Jacob says. "Because we had just implemented open book management, where knowledge is so important, I called everybody together and said, 'Here's the bad news – I'm not going to sugarcoat it – we are this far in debt, and we've never earned this much before in profit in a year.'" Jacob spoke frankly with his staff about his plan to get back on track, which included eliminating raises and bonuses in the short term as well as reducing benefits in the firm's health care plan. Like a battlefield commander facing a wave of insurmountable troops, he concluded by pledging to his employees, "I'm not going anywhere. I'm not going to throw in the towel – I still think we've got a great company." Jacob says he looked around the room and no one wanted to leave; they all wanted to be part of the solution. Only a few months later, the firm was on its way doubling in size. By February 2005 it had paid off its debt. It's understandable that being part of the solution would be attractive to the staffing firm's employees. The hallmark of many winning workplaces is a mission that grows the organization as it feeds the souls of its workers. "We have around 500 employees working for us in any given week that more than likely would not have found a job on their own. To be able to help them out is really satisfying," Harre says.
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