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April 08, 2008

Salaries for College Graduates: Economics Near the Top

The Wall Street Journal published a list of starting salaries for college graduates by major (subscription required).

At the top of the list is engineering ($49,707), followed by computer programming ($46,775), mathematics ($46,405) and economics ($43,419).

What's critical here is that we're talking first job, not lifetime earnings.  Now it's probably true that over a lifetime, engineers make more than philosophy majors (the major at the bottom of the list) on average.  But there are plenty of philosophy majors who have done very well for themselves--just not in theie first jobs.

My experience in economics is that the highest paid starting jobs went to those with the best quantitative skills.  But the best second or third jobs or positions went to those with the best communication skills and understanding of "big picture" issues.  Some of those folks with majors farther down the list may look stronger ten years out.

However, one factor that could be at work is how challenging the course work is.  There are harder courses and easier courses.  No one with a chemical engineering degree is ever accused of taking only easy courses.  The job market may be rewarding not specific skills, but proof that the student went into the very hardest courses and came out alive.  That's a valuable trait even if the subject matter is not terribly important.

February 08, 2008

Employee Retention of New Hires: Best Practices

Even with the economy turning down, employee retention is important.  The cost of hiring, training, and supervising new employees is substantial.  If a person leaves before the company recoups all of these costs, then turnover is a significant cost.  It's only going to get worse in the coming decade, when baby boomer retirements match new entrants to the labor force.

The Aberdeen Group has just released a new survey of best practices (free, but registration required) for retention of new hires.  Their key points:

Aberdeen

The report was based on a very broad survey, covering different industries and different size companies, including large corporations and small businesses.  Every senior executive should address employee retention, and browsing this report is a good way to get started.

February 07, 2008

Shrinking Middle Class? Drew Carey Says No

I wouldn't normally look to a comedian for economic commentary, but Drew Carey combines an interview with economist Michael Cox with some eye-opening interviews with . . . maybe they were fat cats or maybe the middle class. 

Watch the video (from Reason.tv) and see for yourself. (Hat tip to Russ Roberts.)

January 14, 2008

Hiring Retirees to Cope with Tight Labor Markets

The Wall Street Journal has a good article (subscription required) about companies re-hiring their retirees to cope with tight labor markets.  These companies often use the retirees for part-time or temporary positions.  The article featured Schneider the "transportation and logistics" company (which I would have called a trucking company), but the Immigration and Naturalization Service recently announced plans to bring back retirees to help clear the agency's backlog (reported by the AP).

I've posted before on the importance of bringing older workers into the workforce, (such as here).  I think it will take some experimentation to get work the bugs out of a retire hiring program.  Your retirees are likely to want more flexibility than when they were regular employees.  A big part of why they will return to work is to feel that they are doing something useful, so make sure to express your appreciation.  It will probably help if you facilitate social networking among your retirees.  Some retirees find that they are cut off from their old social connections; work can help them.

We're still a few years away from the real labor crunch, but it's coming.  The businesses that thrive in the next decade will be those that are experimenting now.

November 16, 2007

Professionals Working from Home

The Wall Street Journal recently ran a column by Sue Shellenbarger (subscription required) about professionals working from home.

This subject should be on the strategic planning radar screen of all companies with employees.  Here's why:  in the decade from 2010 to 2020, there will be no net growth of the working age population.  That's because the baby boomers will be leaving their working years, and their children (the "echo boom") will have already entered their working years.

If your long-run business plan has growth of the number of employees next decade, you will have to steal those employees from some other employer.  How do you do that?

I'm not sure how best to do that.  I'm pretty sure that you don't know, either.  But I know the way to learn is to experiment.  Try some folks working from home.  Try hiring some retirees who get more flexible hours.  Try tapping into non-traditional labor sources, such as immigrant  communities.  Try using some high school grads where you previously used college grads.  Try different things, because there may not be one best strategy.  Even if one strategy proves best, you'll have to work out some bugs.  You may find that if you hire work-at-homes, you need different hiring criteria, different monitoring systems, different compensation systems.  The time to work out the bugs is now.

I've talked about this in my speeches to corporate executives, and I don't seem to get much traction.  I fear that many business leaders are thinking, "Yes, that's a problem, but I retire in three years, so it's not MY problem."  Actually, if a person is thinking that, he doesn't deserve the label "business leader."  But if a business is to survive, someone at the top needs to sponsor some experiments to figure out how to deal with the labor dearth of the next decade.





October 25, 2007

Middle Class Jobs Declining? Maybe Not

Are middle class jobs on the decline?  Stephen Rose has an interesting article in the Wall Street Journal on the subject.  Imagine a day when relatively few women worked, and when they did, they earned less than men earned.  Now change women's attitudes so that they are more eager to enter the work force, or change employers' attitudes so that they are more willing to hire women.  What happens to average wages?  Well, wage per worker may go down, as the new women bring down the average.  That could happen even if the wage gap is narrowing, and even if women are gaining wages, and men are also gaining wages.

Stephen Rose goes into the subject of middle class jobs by looking separately at men and women, and by level of education.  His key finding won't fit the spin from either party's econo-hacks:

"For three-quarters of the workforce (women and the top half of male earners), economic growth translated into earnings gains. But for male workers in the bottom half of the earnings distribution, the decline of unionized manufacturing employment has led to the drying up of some middle-class jobs for those with no post-secondary education."

There was a day when high wage jobs were available to low skilled people.  Those days are over.  Gone.  Done.  Sorry.  It was fun while it lasted, but it is no more.  Technology changed it.  Trade changed it.  But there's no going back.  Both national-level politicians and local chamber of commerce boosters seem ignorant of this fact, as they try to "create jobs" or "bring in an elephant" employer.  Here's the new bottom line: high skilled people will find work at high wages, and low skilled people will find work at low wages.

October 23, 2007

Career Advice: What Smart Young People Need to Know

Got a bright young person in the family?  If so, steer him or her to Marc Andreessen's blog, where he has a series of posts with career advice.  Start here, then go here, and then here.

Looking back on my own career, which I've conducted without the benefit of Marc's advice, I've been at my best when I was (inadvertently) following his guidelines.  One of my sons turned me on to Marc's blog, and I'm forwarding the link to the other son.  Highly recommended.

September 02, 2007

Labor Surplus or Shortage: The Jamaicans of Mackinac Island

Michigan has the highest unemployment rate in the country.  That would typically indicate a surplus of labor.  But on a recent visit to Mackinac Island, the resort community in the straits between Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas, I met some of the 500 Jamaicans working there.  Yes, 500 Jamaicans working in one small community of the state with the highest unemployment rate.  These are not Americans of Jamaican ancestry; these are residents of Jamaica who come up to Mackinac Island for seasonal work.

Now why are Jamaicans working there instead of Michiganders?  (Actually, there are also plenty of native-born Americans at work, but let's focus on the 500 Jamaicans.)  I can understand a laid-off auto worker, used to $27 an hour plus generous benefits, not jumping onto a low-wage service job.  But unemployment rates are always higher for less educated people, and for younger people.  So what are the young men and women of Michigan doing?  Why aren't they taking all of the resort jobs on Mackinac Island?  They could get home to family on long weekends; the Jamaicans are away from home for six months.

I have nothing against the Jamaicans.  From what I saw, they are friendly, hard-working people.  My hat is off to them.  I simply don't understand why there's an opening for them in a high unemployment state.  Perhaps, just maybe, the workers of Michigan aren't willing to work if they cannot get a very generous pay and benefits package.  If so, I am very pessimistic about the outlook for that beautiful state.

August 08, 2007

Wage Growth Steady Despite Tight Labor Market

Wages and benefits are not accelerating despite the tight labor market:
Eci
The benefits change shifts around a bit, but the blue line, which totals wages and benefits, shows great stability.  This despite the low unemployment rate:
Ruc
I think that companies are feeling pressure to keep costs down, and they worry that going out to hire just any warm body may result in costs greater than value of the labor.  In fact, I think the biggest limitation on economic growth right now is availability of labor.

Implications for Federal Reserve policy:  steady labor cost increases reduce the itch to tighten, but the steady unemployment rate reduces the urge to ease.  Forecast for short-term interest rates: steady as Ben goes.

Business Implications: What should a company do if it wants to hire but is having trouble finding the workers they need?  Take a look at my 6 Steps to Hiring in a Tight Labor Market.

July 23, 2007

Employee Performance: Measuring to Reward Success

Labor markets are tight.  It's important to retain your best employees.  But  who are the best employees?

That question is tough.  A recent article in Business 2.0 magazine helps employers get a handle on employee performance.  I liked the article from its opening line:

"Let's be honest:  Most performance reviews are a joke."

Couldn't have said it better myself, but then the article describes some online services that help bosses improve their measurement of employee performance.

Imagine this:  you allocated you bonus pool so that your best employees were very motivated to stay.  You wouldn't even have to get rid of the worst employees to see improved results overall.  Just retention of the top performers and normal attrition of everyone else will give your organization a shot in the arm.

In a tough, competitive economy, you need to measure performance as well as it can possible be measured.

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