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spedtr90

(719 posts)
Sat Nov 24, 2012, 10:32 AM Nov 2012

Costco vs. Walmart - Lessons from investing in employees [View all]

A 6 year study of small and large companies around the world that invest in employees at the bottom of the ladder found that businesses can profit well from raising compensation at the bottom and treating employees well. Investing in employees can be an advantage in good and bad economic times.

http://www.iveybusinessjournal.com/topics/the-organization/how-businesses-can-profit-from-raising-compensation-at-the-bottom

Here is their advice to employers:

1. Understand who performs the majority of the essential work. At professional services firms, this may be lawyers or paralegals; in surgical clinics, this could include surgeons, nurses, technicians, paramedics, and individuals preparing the operating room; and in manufacturing, those working on the factory floor clearly carry out most of the essential work.

2. Realize that the firms’ success depends on the quality of the work performed by the majority of workers. Remarkably, few firms currently design their organizations to optimize the efforts of employees at the bottom of the corporate ladder—even when these employees are central to the firms’ ability to add value. At Costco, the sales staff was instrumental in ensuring the high-quality shopping experience that would draw customers to return. At Great Little Box, the company beat competitors because of its ability to respond rapidly to customized orders.

3. Recognize that the quality and productivity of employees at the bottom of the ladder depend on whether these employees are motivated, healthy, adequately rested, and well-prepared to carry out the tasks they are asked to perform. Employees at Costco were motivated to work harder and perform better by a combination of higher wages and opportunities for promotions. Great Little Box employees had a direct financial stake in the company’s performance.

4. Realize that line workers are often the ones who know best how to increase efficiency. Great Little Box benefited from suggestions from line workers that led to cost savings and greater flexibility in production. Managers at Costco had a better understanding of how to improve production because most had served as hourly workers.


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K&R 99Forever Nov 2012 #1
Very interesting etherealtruth Nov 2012 #2
When treating US workers like slaves doesn't work... primavera Nov 2012 #7
That seems to be the SOP for jobs that can be outsourced etherealtruth Nov 2012 #17
The core problem is captured in a line from the villain in the [i]Superman III[/i] movie. tblue37 Nov 2012 #23
You hit the nail on the head jmondine Nov 2012 #24
Wow... svpadgham Nov 2012 #36
Why wouldn't they. It's a fun movie. nt tblue37 Nov 2012 #42
When we go to Costco, the workers seem genuinely happy AllyCat Nov 2012 #3
i feel the worker despair at wal mart. this whole roguevalley Nov 2012 #6
Its not just walmart though, the majority of the retail industry could do with learning to treat cstanleytech Nov 2012 #29
i never hear them grumbling, either. mopinko Nov 2012 #13
Yes, the hopelessness of Walmart employees is palpable. David__77 Nov 2012 #27
Article compares Costco with Wal-Mart’s Sam’s Club not other Wal-Mart stores. "Lessons for leaders" jody Nov 2012 #4
All work is boring if you do it long enough. Arctic Dave Nov 2012 #5
I understand, I think, where you are coming from. pangaia Nov 2012 #9
Yes, I think you understand my meaning. Arctic Dave Nov 2012 #16
Yes, a great film. pangaia Nov 2012 #22
But isn't it cheaper to buy a Congress who'll pass laws that protect your money? nt valerief Nov 2012 #8
CostCo sees employees as partners, assets, and resources. TahitiNut Nov 2012 #10
+1,000 to what you said. freshwest Nov 2012 #21
I had a terrible experience at the Hellmart near me. SCRUBDASHRUB Nov 2012 #30
I wouldn't shop there if I were paid to. TahitiNut Nov 2012 #32
This nails it. SheilaT Nov 2012 #11
What is value? How is real value shared? nt patrice Nov 2012 #12
What's Costco? DreWId Nov 2012 #14
Costco is a membership warehouse club. nilram Nov 2012 #18
It's such simple common sense. Really! Voice for Peace Nov 2012 #15
Have always heard good things about Costco. xfundy Nov 2012 #19
Costco rocks. SCRUBDASHRUB Nov 2012 #31
Costco also has a cap on CEO and upper management pay.. SomethingFishy Nov 2012 #20
HUGE K & R !!! WillyT Nov 2012 #25
@Voice For Peace luv_mykatz Nov 2012 #26
K&R Heathen57 Nov 2012 #28
lesson: you can be rich, or you can be super-rich. don't just extract profit HiPointDem Nov 2012 #33
Dont be naive. The only way to do that is to tax them much higher. ErikJ Nov 2012 #35
i think you misread. HiPointDem Nov 2012 #37
Trader Joe's too ErikJ Nov 2012 #34
Walmart's policies involve methods of control and manipulation of employees, Fire Walk With Me Nov 2012 #38
I used to work at Amazon.com a few years back Victor_c3 Nov 2012 #39
I Would Gladly Shop At Costco If One Was Available - Closest Store Is 85 Miles Away cantbeserious Nov 2012 #40
Costco treats their employees well davidpdx Nov 2012 #41
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