| Actual for You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Industrial Mechanical > Editorial: IRMCO Event Showcases a Winning Workplace |
|
Actual for You - Editorial: IRMCO Event Showcases a Winning Workplace
Tap Into The Power of Saavy Address Labels /life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens.There are few clerical products as time saving as address labels. For any project, these little marvels add professionalism without sacrificing efficiency. Address labels are by far one of the most effective supplies when it comes to the office.When you arrive at the office supply store you may become overwhelmed at the options available when it comes to address labels. While it would seem there would only be one or two choices, the fact is typically at least one aisle, if not two, are full of various styles and design. Likewise, if before you go to the office supply store you look through the label op In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losin Get Focused, Get Results You feel a different ethos when you step into a good workplace. There is an energy in the facility that is palpable and is shared by everyone who works there. Because we’ve become aware that the concepts that we espouse are sometimes easier to understand through experience, on October 19, 2006, Winning Workplaces took our mission of helping small and midsize businesses create better work environments to a workplace tucked into an industrial area within our hometown of Evanston, IL, one of the last remaining manufacturing businesses in the community.Last night my wife was helping my 12 year old learn some new things when my daughter and I walked in playing and giggling. Once we stopped in respect for them, I noticed he was having trouble concentrating because the television was on. After I suggested he turn it off, they made great progress very quickly.We all have done it, whether we are parents or not. We’ve encouraged someone to remove a distraction so they could focus on the task, conversation or subject at hand.If you wear corrective lenses of any kind and go for your annual vision check, you know what it is like when your new prescription IRMCO, a 92-year-old manufacturer of water-based, environmentally friendly lubricant technologies for the metal-forming industry, graciously hosted an open house and shared the secrets that have helped sustain the business against formidable odds. After the business day ended, several IRMCO associates stayed into the evening, keeping their doors open so that the 50 attendees of the open house, including staff and clients of First Bank & Trust, which sponsored the event, could see what a winning workplace looks like up close. Why did we choose IRMCO as a successful small business example? Because the fourth generation family-owned business is not only surviving but thriving in an industry that’s facing tough times with plant closures, downsizing and fierce foreign competition, among other problems. As IRMCO CEO William “Jeff” Jeffery said, “One problem we’ve seen is that because there have been so many layoffs in the auto industry – our largest customer base – there are fewer trained engineers to make some of the decisions. The engineers who are left are doing the jobs of two or three people. So going green and choosing our products, even if we show them how that will save them money, is usually not high on their priorities list.” Yet, IRMCO has succeeded in demonstrating the cost-savings of its products to many car manufacturers, including BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Toyota and Nissan. The company’s advanced forming film technologies also help consumer products come together by brands including Lennox, John Deere and Speed Queen. As Jeffery explained, although the organization’s headquarters is almost a century old, it is conducive to the modernized work that’s done every day by only 13 full-time employees. Water-based lubricants are prepared on the facility’s second-floor blending department and then gravity fed to the first floor for packing and just-in-time shipment. The open house allowed attendees to see four areas critical to IRMCO’s work: the laboratory, detailed by Research Director Frank Kenny; the finance area, detailed by CFO Jennifer Kalas; the blending floor, detailed by Jeff Jeffery; and the warehouse area and garden, detailed by Jeff’s brother, Brad Jeffery, the company’s executive VP. These four IRMCO staff members packed a large amount of information in each tour stop. Some of this information focused on best practices that have helped IRMCO grow its profits and staff commitment simultaneously. For instance, Brad Jeffery showed attendees the beach volleyball court-turned-garden that could be seen through the windows of the warehouse’s back door. Jeffery explained that this visual symbolizes the evolution of the company’s work culture. “At the time that our father passed away and Jeff and I started running the business, there was a lot of talk about giving employees more liberal freedom to make choices,” he said. This resulted in new lab equipment purchases and, on the recreational side, staff retreats and the installation of the volleyball court. Yet, even though these attempts were aimed at broadening IRMCO’s work/life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens. In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losin Use Strategic Partnerships To Start-Up Faster, And Joint Venture Marketing To Make More Sales! at the 50 attendees of the open house, including staff and clients of First Bank & Trust, which sponsored the event, could see what a winning workplace looks like up close.Learn From Others So You Can Do A Better Job Of Pursuing Your Goal(s)Take a look back at the rapid advancements in development across the world, especially in the area of technology, and one thing becomes obvious. Virtually every breakthrough recorded in order to make the latest advancement has been achieved by BUILDING on previous work done in various fields.In discussing this subject, I often like to start by asking this question: What would be the point of repeating other people’s mistakes when you still have plenty of your own unique ones to make - through which you can contribute u Why did we choose IRMCO as a successful small business example? Because the fourth generation family-owned business is not only surviving but thriving in an industry that’s facing tough times with plant closures, downsizing and fierce foreign competition, among other problems. As IRMCO CEO William “Jeff” Jeffery said, “One problem we’ve seen is that because there have been so many layoffs in the auto industry – our largest customer base – there are fewer trained engineers to make some of the decisions. The engineers who are left are doing the jobs of two or three people. So going green and choosing our products, even if we show them how that will save them money, is usually not high on their priorities list.” Yet, IRMCO has succeeded in demonstrating the cost-savings of its products to many car manufacturers, including BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Toyota and Nissan. The company’s advanced forming film technologies also help consumer products come together by brands including Lennox, John Deere and Speed Queen. As Jeffery explained, although the organization’s headquarters is almost a century old, it is conducive to the modernized work that’s done every day by only 13 full-time employees. Water-based lubricants are prepared on the facility’s second-floor blending department and then gravity fed to the first floor for packing and just-in-time shipment. The open house allowed attendees to see four areas critical to IRMCO’s work: the laboratory, detailed by Research Director Frank Kenny; the finance area, detailed by CFO Jennifer Kalas; the blending floor, detailed by Jeff Jeffery; and the warehouse area and garden, detailed by Jeff’s brother, Brad Jeffery, the company’s executive VP. These four IRMCO staff members packed a large amount of information in each tour stop. Some of this information focused on best practices that have helped IRMCO grow its profits and staff commitment simultaneously. For instance, Brad Jeffery showed attendees the beach volleyball court-turned-garden that could be seen through the windows of the warehouse’s back door. Jeffery explained that this visual symbolizes the evolution of the company’s work culture. “At the time that our father passed away and Jeff and I started running the business, there was a lot of talk about giving employees more liberal freedom to make choices,” he said. This resulted in new lab equipment purchases and, on the recreational side, staff retreats and the installation of the volleyball court. Yet, even though these attempts were aimed at broadening IRMCO’s work/life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens. In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losin What Would You Ask A Billionaire? ucceeded in demonstrating the cost-savings of its products to many car manufacturers, including BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, Toyota and Nissan. The company’s advanced forming film technologies also help consumer products come together by brands including Lennox, John Deere and Speed Queen. As Jeffery explained, although the organization’s headquarters is almost a century old, it is conducive to the modernized work that’s done every day by only 13 full-time employees. Water-based lubricants are prepared on the facility’s second-floor blending department and then gravity fed to the first floor for packing and just-in-time shipment.If you could sit down with someone very successful and pick their brain—what would you ask?As a child, I knew of a man who was born in the latter part of the last century who fit that criterion. He was the youngest child of a woman whose husband died when he was a baby. He and his brothers moved from England as young men and homesteaded land in Alberta. He married a woman he had known in the old country that had traveled to join him in a new country. She was a midwife whose father was a doctor back in England. Anyway, during the Depression, when everyone else was going broke around him, he became a mi The open house allowed attendees to see four areas critical to IRMCO’s work: the laboratory, detailed by Research Director Frank Kenny; the finance area, detailed by CFO Jennifer Kalas; the blending floor, detailed by Jeff Jeffery; and the warehouse area and garden, detailed by Jeff’s brother, Brad Jeffery, the company’s executive VP. These four IRMCO staff members packed a large amount of information in each tour stop. Some of this information focused on best practices that have helped IRMCO grow its profits and staff commitment simultaneously. For instance, Brad Jeffery showed attendees the beach volleyball court-turned-garden that could be seen through the windows of the warehouse’s back door. Jeffery explained that this visual symbolizes the evolution of the company’s work culture. “At the time that our father passed away and Jeff and I started running the business, there was a lot of talk about giving employees more liberal freedom to make choices,” he said. This resulted in new lab equipment purchases and, on the recreational side, staff retreats and the installation of the volleyball court. Yet, even though these attempts were aimed at broadening IRMCO’s work/life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens. In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losin The Sometimes Life Of The Early-Stage, Mid-Stage And Even Late-Stage Entrepreneur Can Be Scattered by Jeff’s brother, Brad Jeffery, the company’s executive VP. These four IRMCO staff members packed a large amount of information in each tour stop.The word entrepreneur has become a catch all title for just about everyone and anyone who starts and or builds a business. I’ve always had a bit of trouble throwing that overused, imported moniker around because I believe it’s not always applied in the correct manner.Is an entrepreneur someone who takes the family business and keeps it going? Is it the person who builds a new division of the company where they’re employed? Or should it be reserved for only those who have put everything on the line in order to build their business? I’ll opt for the latter.I’ll never forget being at an area Chamber of Some of this information focused on best practices that have helped IRMCO grow its profits and staff commitment simultaneously. For instance, Brad Jeffery showed attendees the beach volleyball court-turned-garden that could be seen through the windows of the warehouse’s back door. Jeffery explained that this visual symbolizes the evolution of the company’s work culture. “At the time that our father passed away and Jeff and I started running the business, there was a lot of talk about giving employees more liberal freedom to make choices,” he said. This resulted in new lab equipment purchases and, on the recreational side, staff retreats and the installation of the volleyball court. Yet, even though these attempts were aimed at broadening IRMCO’s work/life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens. In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losin Redefining Empowerment-A Case Study About Effectively Marketing To Teens Without Turning Them Off /life balance, management found that employees were not responding in kind by working harder. “They weren’t focused like an owner,” Jeffery said. “As a business owner, you want your people to be as motivated as you are and concerned about costs and new clients.” For IRMCO, this meant embracing open book management, a change several years in the making that ultimately helped workers see how their contributions affect the bottom line and impact the greater community. Employees, who are now committed to the success of the business, regularly identify solutions that lead to cost-savings and lessening IRMCO’s environmental footprint. Further, employees have chosen to use the open space behind the building to plant a garden rather than play volleyball, and they donate its produce to soup kitchens.Can we inspire teens to choose to do something with the same methodology that convinces them not to do something? For example, does the same decision-making process lead to teens buying $15 Starbury One basketball shoes and to not buying the designer $130 Nike Zoom Kobe I sneakers? Is there a common denominator in how teens choose to start smoking cigarettes and how they choose not to? Can we as marketers reach them at the pivotal decision-making moment to inspire desired behavior? Denver-based Cactus Marketing Communications thinks they have uncovered the simple truth about effectively altering teen behaviors by In tough economic times for small enterprises and in an industry in which it seems that U.S. business are losing ground every day, IRMCO stands as the exception. Through trial and error, over a number of years, Jeff and Brad Jeffery have led IRMCO to implement progressive business practices and, most importantly, develop a team that works together to assure that they are providing leadership to help the metal-forming industry remain competitive in a changing global economy.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Question To Ask At A Job Interview-5 Of The Best Questions! Your Performance Review: Sabotage or Springboard? A Novel Way to Get An Innovative Product to Market
|