Publishers,
I respectfully disagree about question 1. Allow me to give you a little background in my real world situation, which I believe I have shared with enigma. I work for a privately held company. I created the flight department over 13 years ago. This company has been in business since 1956. The founding father passed away. His wife became the Chariman of the Board. His first born son was appointed President. There were six children in all, five of which worked directly for the company until an unfortunate chartered plane crash in Kenya this past summer took the lives of one of the sons, his wife, his eldest child and nine others who were all in-laws.
When we created the flight department the gross sales were !$250M. Today it is ~$1B. Along the way because the company, led by the family continued to acquire other like, but somewhat disimilar companies which allowed them to basically increase their customer base. The family that runs the company could easily walk away after going public for more than $100M each and that is a conservative estimate. They do not. Why? Simply because they are driven to continue to make this company viable, in part due to their dedication and love for the founder. Other motivations are that they want to make this company a meaningful place for their associates. Have their been lean times? Sure. Never to the point of not making a profit, however.
Along the way, since I have been here there have been four reorganizations. It was determined that our corporate overhead was way out of skew. This is due in part to many old timers who continued to get above average increases while their individual productivity and efficiency went down. Some were severed and given generous packages as a result.
How does this relate to question 1? Well the owners of this company made it clear to everyone ahead of time that things had to change and outlined in general terms, the problems. For the most part the ones that were severed understood which was eased by their severance packages.
Blind-siding people who have the impression they are doing an adequate job is not fair. Everyone should be given the opportunity to change their focus and hopefully keep their jobs. The President and his Lieutenants have to make tough decisions which affect everyone who's life will change.
There is no doubt that the owning family wants to make a profit. Included in that profit making is above average scale salaries and benefits, annual and Christmas bonuses, which are above scale, etc, for our associates. Is this extraordinary? Sure! Is it possible to treat people fairly, pay them a decent salary and benefits package and still make a profit? Absolutely! It all depends upon the culture which is driven from the top.
This same family is philanthropic donating their time and money to many needy charities, many times in the background which they gain no publicity from. Are we proud and happy campers in this company? You bet! Many of our associates have "like minds" as you put it.
This company has grown through acquisition, as I mentioned earlier, I believe. Some locations were non-union and some were union. It is about a 50-50 mix. The non-union locations are the most productive from a value added/associate standpoint. They are paid a higher wage than union workers. We have had several locations that have decided upon their own to vote the unions out. I guess the word got around.
So the answer to question two is patterned around how my company would handle such a situation. I realize there are many variables to this so it is difficult to answer without having more data.
Are we fortunate? Of course! Is this the standard? Of course not! But then again who says we need to just rise to the standard?
If the founders of a company have a real purpose besides maximum profits for establishing the company then they might be more motivated to offer some of the things that have been brought up on this thread. I know people are greedy. Some are more greedy than others. Some realize there is something above money that counts...like doing a good job, having peace of mind in their workplace, being a member of a team and if the team wins or loses they have given it their best shot, etc. These are core character issues and the core character in each prospective associate needs to be evaluated.
This is not pie in the sky. It is real world, even if it is rare.
By the way, this company is the technological leader in their industry. After reading back through some of my descriptions, they lead in other ways as well.
After all of the reorganizations why was the flight department spared? It boils down to value added. The relatively small cost to run our operation was outweighed by the time spent relying on airline transportation. We are a time machine...we help save it, for many in our organization.
I know I am very fortunate. I work hard to be worthy of my company's praise and benefits. Can you imagine a better situation? I can't. Does this mean that another endeavor can't be started with the same founding ideas? Absolutely not.
Ok, I am off the box now. I write this only to help people realize that there are several ways to start and run a profitable company. I prefer the method our founders have chosen....and so does everyone else who are associates here.
And no, unfortunately there are no openings in my department. But there might be in the future....when someone retires, dies or we expand our fleet.