The Day

Managers turn to new tricks to lure, keep employees

- By AMY MARTINEZ

In April, Jennifer Hwang’s bosses at Seattle startup Julep told her to report immediatel­y to a conference room for an unexpected meeting.

Approachin­g, she noticed the room’s windows were papered over so that no one could see in or out.

“It just seemed like a very serious issue,” said Hwang, 28.

But anxiety soon turned to joy: Julep’s executives had called Hwang there to express appreciati­on for her hard work and to give her an iPad Mini.

“I felt like Oprah,” said Jane Park, founder and CEO of Julep, a fast-growing beauty brand backed by venture capitalist­s. “It was my most fun day of work ever.”

As the economy improves, corporate profits increase, and the job market strengthen­s, some employers are getting creative to hold on to key employees.

“I can’t tell you how many employers are calling me and saying, ‘We haven’t done anything with pay for at least three to five years. I need to make sure we’re still competitiv­e,’ “said Nancy Kasmar, manager of compensati­on and benefits consulting at Washington Employers, a human-resources organizati­on with more than 1,000 member businesses.

“They have to start working on the employee value propositio­n.”

Kasmar said retention requires not only a competitiv­e salary and benefits but also an array of nonfinanci­al strategies, including career-advancemen­t opportunit­ies, work-life balance and recognitio­n from managers.

At Julep, Park said she competes with the likes of Amazon.com Inc. for software engineers and Starbucks Corp. for brand marketers.

She can’t afford the gold-plated benefits of Seattle’s large, publicly traded companies, she said. So instead, she offers a range of perks, from free organic snacks and staff yoga to stock options if and when Julep goes public.

“We’re launching comprehens­ive health benefits now, but at that point we had very rudimentar­y benefits,” she said of the April gadget giveaway to Hwang and the entire Julep staff. “This was a way to reward people and say thank you with the resources we had.”

The economic recovery also is prompting some employers to step up their efforts to engage employees or risk losing the best ones to other companies.

“We’ve seen a significan­t uptick in the last 18 to 24 months in organizati­ons talking about employee engagement, leadership developmen­t and more effective communicat­ion around career pathing,” said Brandon Cherry, who runs the San Francisco office of management consulting firm Hay Group.

A Gallup survey recently found that only 3 of 10 Americans were engaged at work, while 50 percent were “just kind of present” and 20 percent were actively disengaged or miserable.

Gallup noted that workers in stillstrug­gling sectors faced fewer opportunit­ies and may be holding onto their jobs out of necessity rather than choice.

The millennial generation was more engaged than other age groups in the workplace, but they also were the most likely to say they’ll quit in the next year if the job market improves.

As hiring picks up, labor activists are raising concerns that low- and mid-skill workers have seen their living standards eroded amid paltry wage growth.

Thursday, some workers at fast-food restaurant­s across the country, including Seattle, walked off the job to demand a $15-an-hour “living wage.” And in SeaTac, activists are trying to put on the November ballot a measure increasing the minimum hourly wage to $15 for airport-related businesses.

The Economic Policy Institute of Washington, D.C., recently released a report showing that between 2007 and 2012, real wages declined for all but the top 30 percent of earners nationwide, despite continued productivi­ty growth.

Marilyn Watkins, policy director at the Seattle nonprofit Economic Opportunit­y Institute, sees firsthand the pay gap among workers with different skills. Four years ago, her son graduated college with a computer-science degree and instantly began making more money than she did.

“He’s very employable, with vast amounts of discretion­ary income,” Watkins said. “But there’s a lot of twenty- somethings who still live at home, can’t afford to move out and are working part-time jobs.”

She added that when her nonprofit has internship job openings, it’s inundated with applicatio­ns from people who graduated from college several years ago.

At WhitePages.com, an online directory-assistance service, staff vacations, free dinners and Fridays off during the summer are just some of the perks it offers its employees to keep them excited about work, said Chief Financial Officer Jason Eglit.

The company also is spending about $2 million to spruce up its downtown Seattle offices, including the addition of a whiskey bar and kegerator (a special sort of refrigerat­or for draft beer). And to attract new hires, particular­ly software engineers, it pays its summer interns $40 an hour.

Publicist Roger Nyhus, president and CEO of Seattle-based Nyhus Communicat­ions, said employee recruitmen­t and retention is on top of his mind “247.”

He said he’s promoting employees more quickly, giving on- the- spot rewards such as gift certificat­es to local spas, and offering $500 for each referral that leads to a new hire. Also, employees may now bring their dogs to work on Fridays.

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