Outrageous employee benefits: a strategy to keep your people happy is sound business.EXECUTIVE SUMMARY * THE PARTNERS AT VITALE CATURANO & CO. (VCC An electronics designation that refers to voltage from a power supply connected to the "collector" terminal of a bipolar transistor. In an NPN bipolar (BJT) transistor, it would be +Vcc, while in a PNP transistor, it would be -Vcc. ) have listened carefully to what employees and potential hires say matters to them in the workplace--growth, intellectually stimulating and diverse projects, and a sense of being appreciated. * VCC ATTRACTS STAFF AND ENCOURAGES LOYALTY by offering a generous work/life incentives program it calls "outrageous employee benefits." The firm credits the program with low staff turnover and steady growth. For example, VCC's education program, which costs the firm about $400,000 a year, helps generate approximately $625,000 in additional revenue. * BENEFITS INCLUDE ON-SITE CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) Communications equipment that resides on the customer's premises. CPE - Customer Premises Equipment AND OTHER COURSES, free on-site gourmet meals, child care, concierge services, health classes, flowers in the office, busy-season chair massages and other amenities. VCC sees those perks perk 1 v. perked, perk·ing, perks v.intr. 1. To stick up or jut out: dogs' ears that perk. 2. To carry oneself in a lively and jaunty manner. as an intelligent way to keep the training and time invested in employees from leaving the firm. * A BIG MOTIVATOR FOR HIRES JUST OUT OF SCHOOL is cutting-edge technology that frees them to focus on their work while making them feel they work for a progressive firm. E-pace audit software, paperless office Long predicted, the paperless office is still a myth. Although paper usage has been reduced in some organizations, it has increased in others. Today's PCs make it easy to churn out documents. As one technology eliminates paper, another comes along to increase usage. technology, CRM (Customer Relationship Management) An integrated information system that is used to plan, schedule and control the presales and postsales activities in an organization. software and document management are big hits, the partners say. * VCC OFFERS CONCIERGE SERVICES AND ENCOURAGES professional staff to delegate nontechnical tasks to less-skilled employees, freeing technical people to focus on the billable work that is most profitable for the firm. Staff perks ultimately are about offering clients the best-possible service. ********** "The right employees are your firm's best asset" is easy to say, but it takes wisdom and imagination to put your firm's money and future where your mouth is. That was the commitment Boston firm Vitale Caturano & Co. (VCC) made when it developed its program of 'outrageous employee benefits." The full-service firm, founded in 1978, offers tax, auditing, business valuation, personal financial planning Financial planning Evaluating the investing and financing options available to a firm. Planning includes attempting to make optimal decisions, projecting the consequences of these decisions for the firm in the form of a financial plan, and then comparing future performance against , management consulting Noun 1. management consulting - a service industry that provides advice to those in charge of running a business service industry - an industry that provides services rather than tangible objects , human resources The fancy word for "people." The human resources department within an organization, years ago known as the "personnel department," manages the administrative aspects of the employees. and technology consulting. It formalized for·mal·ize tr.v. for·mal·ized, for·mal·iz·ing, for·mal·iz·es 1. To give a definite form or shape to. 2. a. To make formal. b. its policy of generous work/life incentives in 1996 as a way to lure qualified staff. Since then it has grown from a 55-person, 10-partner enterprise to a top-100 firm with 280 people and 29 partners. "Intellectual capital and client service are the two mainstays of our business," says President Richard Caturano, CPA (Computer Press Association, Landing, NJ) An earlier membership organization founded in 1983 that promoted excellence in computer journalism. Its annual awards honored outstanding examples in print, broadcast and electronic media. The CPA disbanded in 2000. , "and we pride ourselves on attracting and keeping talented people." The program has more than paid for itself, he says, and "we can produce the numbers to prove it." This case study will show small and midsize firms ideas they can borrow from VCC's program to attract--and keep--the experienced professionals they need. WHY GIVE TO GET Over the years VCC's partners have noted that employees and potential hires say that what matter most to them in the workplace are growth, intellectually stimulating and diverse projects and a sense of being appreciated. The firm shows its appreciation tangibly with an extensive education program, gourmet meals from an on-site kitchen, child care, concierge services, health classes, flowers in the office, flexible work hours, chair massages in busy season and other large and small amenities. The work/life perks may seem extreme to some employers, but retention--mind-ed VCC sees them as an intelligent adaptation to motivating employees to do their best. The benefits also help keep the training and time invested in an employee from reentering re·en·ter also re-en·ter v. re·en·tered, re·en·ter·ing, re·en·ters v.tr. 1. To enter or come in to again. 2. To record again on a list or ledger. v.intr. a tight labor market labor market A place where labor is exchanged for wages; an LM is defined by geography, education and technical expertise, occupation, licensure or certification requirements, and job experience just exacerbated by Sarbanes-Oxley. They not only boost morale, loyalty and productivity but also disarm issues a competitor might use to woo away top talent. EFFICIENT, CONVENIENT CPE Dave Clarkson, CPA, vice-president of human resources, spends a lot of time on campuses talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to" lecture, speech rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to students and often hears them express concerns about continuing education continuing education: see adult education. continuing education or adult education Any form of learning provided for adults. In the U.S. the University of Wisconsin was the first academic institution to offer such programs (1904). and training opportunities. Accordingly, the partners met with a professional trainer to develop guidelines for an in-house educational system. The result is VCC University, a year-round operation serving all staff members. The training is a major attraction for new hires. "The teach--me generation wants to see what we're going to do for them," Caturano says. A learning and development director serves as "dean" and manager of the program. Working with the partner responsible, she develops the curriculum, selects instructors and ensures courses are the right type and quality. The organization uses the program to provide career counseling Noun 1. career counseling - counseling on career opportunities counseling, counselling, guidance, counsel, direction - something that provides direction or advice as to a decision or course of action and map the courses people will take to develop skills to meet personal and CPE goals. Besides CPE, the program also offers tuition reimbursement Reimbursement Payment made to someone for out-of-pocket expenses has incurred. for accredited accredited recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria. accredited herds cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g. degree programs and elective courses Noun 1. elective course - a course that the student can select from among alternatives elective course, course of instruction, course of study, class - education imparted in a series of lessons or meetings; "he took a course in basket weaving"; "flirting is tailored to staff preferences at several area colleges. About half of training occurs during office hours office hours, n.pl See business hours. ; the rest is on employees' time. If you're going to have staff in on a Saturday, at night or for an early morning session, "it has to produce good results," Caturano says. Staff members love the idea. "Getting educated at work is the ultimate convenience," says Greg Natalucci, CPA and staff accountant. "I usually can apply what I learn right away and retain more. And I've become better friends with co-workers." Operating costs operating costs npl → gastos mpl operacionales include the director of development, outside instructors and courses and meeting space. While the program costs about $400,000 a year, the firm would spend at least $100,000 a year on CPE courses, Caturano says. "So we're looking at an incremental cost Incremental Cost The encompassing change that a company experiences within its balance sheet due to one additional unit of production. Notes: Incremental cost is the overall change that a company experiences by producing one additional unit of good. of about $300,000. If we sell about 140,000 hours of time at $5 an hour more, charging a premium rate because our people are more efficient, that's about $625,000 in additional revenue. We don't look at VCC University as a $400,000 cost--we look at it as a $325,000 benefit." Smaller firms can't really afford to do this, but they could develop scaled-down programs as well as connect with other CPA firms to offer more, Caturano says (see "What Small Firms Can Do," page 36). Small firms with documented training programs may be able to get workforce training grants in many states. Another big motivator for hires just out of school is the training that's a byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct n. 1. Something produced in the making of something else. 2. A secondary result; a side effect. Noun 1. of working with cutting-edge technology. E-pace audit software, paperless office technology, CRM software and document management are big hits, the partners say. New technology lets hires better focus on their tasks while making them feel they work for a progressive firm. FOOD FOR THOUGHT Because a nutritious meal can increase stamina, brain power and well-being, the partners offer a complete restaurant-grade kitchen for employees too busy to go to lunch. Staffed by a full-time chef, it's used for daily lunches, dinners during busy season, meetings and occasional special events. The kitchen has become an important part of the firm culture. Year-round, employees can obtain made-to-order lunchtime sandwiches, burgers and salads. The chef circulates an electronic menu through e-mail and posts a daily menu to the intranet. Staffers order electronically, and their meals are waiting by the time they're ready to eat. Like many employees, Jenna Alten, staff software developer and a key member of the technology consulting team, says socializing with colleagues this way "makes me feel taken care of." When the stress goes up during busy season so do the perks: dinners and Saturday lunches are free. "Three or four gourmet chefs from the Boston area come in to cook for our people," says Caturano. Dinners are served family-style Monday through Thursday at 6:30 p.m. On a tax-season Saturday, Caturano estimates almost a hundred people will be at work, in part because of this perk perk 1 v. perked, perk·ing, perks v.intr. 1. To stick up or jut out: dogs' ears that perk. 2. To carry oneself in a lively and jaunty manner. . After employee contributions the annual unreimbursed costs of the kitchen--including chef(s), cleaning services, equipment and food--come to $100,000 a year, which VCC says is completely recovered through improved staff productivity. Perhaps half or a third of the staff uses the lunch service year-round, saving one hour a week because they're back to work so quickly, Caturano estimates. "If the firm picks up an hour a week for a third of its people at $100 an hour, that's $520,000 a year in savings," he says. Between meals, the firm offers up bagels, biscotti Biscotti (plural of Italian biscotto, roughly meaning "twice baked") are crisp Italian cookies often containing nuts or flavored with anise. Traditionally, biscotti are made by baking cookie dough in two long slabs, cutting these into slices, and reheating them to dry , gourmet coffee, soda, juice and seasonal fruits every day. That costs $45,000 a year, "but if we pick up four billable hours Billable Hours is a Canadian comedy series, which airs on Showcase. Set in the fictional Toronto law firm of Fagen & Harrison, the series focuses on three young lawyers struggling to balance their expectations in life with the difficult realities of building a career a year for 200 people, that's $80,000," Caturano says. The partners ask staff members to make a contribution to the firm's charitable foundation for the value of what they eat and drink. RELIEF FROM DAY-CARE WORRIES The end-of-busy-season annual employee survey about 10 years ago showed that one major employee concern was finding good day care for their children on the Saturdays they worked. The partners' solution was to provide free Saturday day care during the busy season. Licensed, insured day-care providers take care of from 20 to 30 children in a 1,200-square-foot area. The day-care workers entertain the children with structured amusements such as fort building, Halloween or beach day, for example. "It's simple for staff: You drop your child off in the morning, work for the day, and when you're ready to leave, you pick your child up," says Caturano, whose daughter was the firm's first day-care provider. As the program grew, the firm hired more professionals. Staff response has been very positive. Lisa Catapano, vice-president of operations, feels child care is "the firm's way of saying, 'We'll go the extra mile for you.'" The firm's cost is about $30,000, including space, help and supplies; the firm estimates that 25 staff members work an average of 20 extra hours a year because of it. DELEGATE FOR EFFICIENCY A fundamental philosophy of VCC's founding partners is that the firm is more productive, clients are better served and staff is more proficient if each employee performs the work most related to his or her expertise. "We encourage professional staff to delegate nontechnical tasks so they can do what we hired them to do, which is billable accounting, auditing and tax work," Caturano says. To support this policy, the firm's facilities department provides extensive concierge and office services. Two corporate vehicles are available for running errands and transporting employees to and from appointments--or even taking professional employees' cars to be repaired while they keep their focus on client service. Through an intranet help desk, the facilities staff performs file retrieval, mail routing, office necessities and conference room preparation, among other things. "We let them make us more efficient," Caturano says. As the firm got bigger the facilities staff evolved from one concierge who fulfilled the needs of a 50-person firm to six full-time employees. The annual billings generated in the saved time of professional staff, along with savings on cab fares and other transportation services, make the department an economic benefit to the firm. In addition, the partners estimate that for every hour the firm gains, the employees' families and personal lives gain two. ENVIRONMENTAL "WOW" FACTOR When they started out, the founding partners decided to invest in art to give their office an upscale contemporary look and distinguish it from old-style CPA offices awash Awash (ä`wäsh), river, E Ethiopia, rising near Addis Ababa and flowing c.500 mi (800 km) to a swampy lake near the Djibouti border. The Awash Valley is important agriculturally and has hydroelectric plants. in work papers Noun 1. work papers - a legal document giving information required for employment of certain people in certain countries work permit, working papers , adding machine tapes and boardroom portraits. The resulting "outrageous art program" has been an important part of building ambience am·bi·ence n. Variant of ambiance. ambience or ambiance Noun the atmosphere of a place Noun 1. and culture. Common areas, hallways, conference rooms and many individual offices are adorned a·dorn tr.v. a·dorned, a·dorn·ing, a·dorns 1. To lend beauty to: "the pale mimosas that adorned the favorite promenade" Ronald Firbank. 2. with at least one piece of contemporary art chosen by staff members and a gallery features quarterly exhibits. The art collection has a positive effect on the general attitude in the office, and clients "are a little bit wowed by it," Caturano says. It has been cost-effective, too. Over the years the firm purchased about 400 pieces of contemporary art costing about $300,000 and sold nine pieces that had appreciated in value for $176,000. The collection is appraised at about $900,000 and has cost a net of about $124,000, Caturano says. He encourages smaller CPA firms that are interested in an art program and feel it would help them distinguish their workplace to get help from an art adviser or to rent art from museums or companies that specialize in leasing art. Maintenance fees are generally low. MONEY WELL SPENT Despite the size of the firm's investment in "outrageous employee benefits," Caturano is satisfied the money is well-spent. In a tight market for accounting hires, VCC has about 8% unforced staff turnover and a great atmosphere in which to work. It has cutting-edge technology; staff have the latest tools they need; and corporate infrastructure growth has been thoughtful and thorough, encouraging new practice areas such as management, human resources and technology consulting. VCC also has doubled its size in the past 2 1/2 years through organic growth and a merger, putting premerger and new staff under one roof in its new office building. As this firm demonstrates, the right people will let you do a great job for your clients--and satisfied clients will do a great job helping a firm grow. Let's Work By 2012 professional and business services will grow by 30.4%. Source: U.S. Department of Labor, www.dol.com. PRACTICAL TIPS * Use an annual employee survey to regularly gather information to improve systems and address staff concerns. * Motivate employees to perform at their best by showing appreciation tangibly. Listen carefully and give them what they say they want in the workplace. * Be progressive. Along with a collegial col·le·gi·al adj. 1. a. Characterized by or having power and authority vested equally among colleagues: "He . . . environment offer cutting-edge technology and educational opportunities. What Small Firms Can Do A small firm doesn't have to spend big money to improve staff morale. Cost-sensitive benefits such as flextime flextime, system of assigning hours for work that permits employees to choose, within specified limits, the hours that they will be at their place of employment. In many companies, there is a "core time" when all employees must be present each workday. , telecommuting telecommuting, an arrangement by which people work at home using a computer and telephone, transmitting work material to a business office by means of a modem and telephone lines; it is also known as telework. and meals during busy season all show appreciation without adding too much to the bottom line. The key is to talk with employees and figure out how to get them to say, "Wow, nobody else would do that for me!" Let professionals control their own time. Many employees want help balancing work and family obligations. Provide a few hours of paid time off to all employees, so those with children attend parent-teacher conferences, performances, athletic events and back-to-school days. If you have an employee who would like to take a two-hour lunch break to exercise, let her. If you can't offer concierge services, give workers more time to do errands themselves. Giving employees more control over when they start and stop work creates a positive culture and doesn't cost much. Generate solidarity. Plan a social event such as a firm picnic or brunch or an in-house wine-and-cheese party after the March 15 due date for corporate income tax returns. Do it again one month--or six months--later. Organize a peer group roundtable that meets to talk about how to make the firm better. Get buying strength from numbers. For substantive items, band together with other firms to negotiate discounted health club memberships, free parking and transportation--or even tickets for ball games or concerts--for employees. Coordinate with other organizations, either by profession (firms and firms) or locale (programming) locale - A geopolitical place or area, especially in the context of configuring an operating system or application program with its character sets, date and time formats, currency formats etc. Locales are significant for internationalisation and localisation. (firms and businesses in adjacent offices). Use size to your advantage. Because small firms don't need to conform to Verb 1. conform to - satisfy a condition or restriction; "Does this paper meet the requirements for the degree?" fit, meet coordinate - be co-ordinated; "These activities coordinate well" internal rules that require 20 sign-offs to approve something, make decisions about individual requests on a case-by-case basis. Help staff by building a "career equity" culture. Employees need challenging and engaging work; opportunities to learn and shoulder responsibility; an appealing combination of salary, benefits, bonuses and perquisites Fringe benefits or other incidental profits or benefits accompanying an office or position. The abbreviation perks is used in reference to extraordinary benefits afforded to business executives, such as country club memberships or the free use of automobiles. ; community involvement; and meaningful professional relationships. Think of these factors as "career equity." Make sure the people you want to keep and groom to move up get enough equity in each area. The best predictor of staff productivity and retention is an employee's relationship with managers or supervisors, partners and/or clients. Assign mentors or firm leaders to help key employees assess and enhance their career equity. People are most likely to leave their jobs in their first year of service and again when they have two to four years of experience (for more information see, "How To Keep Them Once You've Got Them," JofA, Dec.04, page 57). Keep track of your people, listing each employee's name, start date, experience with the firm, practice area and mentor on a spreadsheet; leave a column for an end date and total years with the firm. Keep the list up to date and review it monthly (or ask a human resources manager to) to identify turnover patterns. Once you see the risk patterns, get feedback from your staff at those vulnerable points. Do your education programs add value to their career? Do they feel involved in the community? How often do mentors ask about their career goals? Do they have concerns when they're out on an engagement? Help them identify what they value about their work, their team members and their clients. When engagement challenges emerge, such as when a client makes new requests, work with them to develop action plans to clarify roles, expectations and communication with clients, client staff and partners. When employees leave, find out why. Send a survey or contact them by phone about 60 days after they stop working, when they can be more honest and have some emotional distance. Finding out why desirable staff members leave increases your ability to manage gaps in career equity for those still on board. Make frequent honest communication about career goals a norm. Source: Jan Torrisi-Mokwa, Congruence con·gru·ence n. 1. a. Agreement, harmony, conformity, or correspondence. b. An instance of this: "What an extraordinary congruence of genius and era" Inc., www.congruence-inc.com. AICPA AICPA See American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). RESOURCES For more information about AICPA resources or to make a purchase, go to www.epa2biz biz n. Informal Business. biz Noun Informal business Noun 1. .com or call the AICPA at 888-777-7077. Conferences * AICPA National Conference on Employee Benefit Plans May 16-18, 2005 Bellagio Hotel and Casino Las Vegas Las Vegas (läs vā`gəs), city (1990 pop. 258,295), seat of Clark co., S Nev.; inc. 1911. It is the largest city in Nevada and the center of one of the fastest-growing urban areas in the United States. * Practitioners Symposium June 5-8, 2005 Omni Orlando Resort at Champions Gate Orlando, Florida The city of Orlando is a major city in central Florida and is the county seat of Orange County, Florida. According to the 2000 census, the city population was 185,951. A 2006 U.S. Publications * Management of an Accounting Practice Handbook, loose-leaf version (# 090407JA); e-MAP, online version (# MAP-XXJA). * Promoting Your Talent, a guidebook for women in accounting (# 872566JA). * Work/Life: Striking a Balance, a free DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. from the Work/Life and Women's Initiative Executive Committee, educat@aicpa.org. Web sites * For more information on how to help aspiring CPAs learn more about the accounting profession and the career opportunities available, go to the AICPA Web site www.startheregoplaces.com. * For more information about careers and work/life opportunities, go to the AICPA Web site www.aicpa. org/work-life. * AICPA Competency Self-Assessment Tool (CAT) provides guidance for staffing, training-needs analysis and job redesign. The tool is free to individuals who are AICPA members at www.cpa2biz.com/CAT. MICHAEL HAYES Michael Hayes may refer to:
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