Posted on 07/17/2017 11:49:07 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The 2016 election laid bare multiple divisions in American society, but one of the biggest is geographical. In major cities like New York, Chicago, and San Francisco, people are generally doing well (if not equally so), while many places situated far from urban business centers arent.
Remarkably, faith in the American dream runs highest in locales where social mobility is lowest. U.S. companies, which for the past eight months have been struggling to navigate choppy political waters, should see that as an opportunityeven a call to action.
Add Geography To Your Diversity Goals
Many business leaders Ive spoken to have been thinking harder lately about how to reverse political, cultural, and socioeconomic polarization. Some say more urban professionals from the coasts should move out to the middle of the country. Others might wish for corporations to relocate to suburbs and rural areas in need of opportunity, rather than continue the opposite trend.
But if businesses really want to create jobs in struggling parts of Americathe places unfairly dismissed by some on the coasts as flyover countryand bridge political divisions in the process, the solution is simpler: Hire more people outside of big coastal cities. Just dont ask them to move.
The most innovative companies have already committed to building more diverse workforces, knowing that thats both an ethical and competitive imperative. Some have set clear hiring targets for demographic representation, occasionally even publishing them in order to keep themselves accountable. Why not take the same approach to geography?
As virtually every politician across the political spectrum will eagerly remind you, residents of places like Youngstown, Ohio, or McDowell County, Virginia, are pissed offand they have every right to be, because their local economies have been shattered in recent decades while jobs funneled out to big cities or overseas. In one analysis a couple of years ago, 20 metropolitan areas were generating more than half the countrys GDP output, and theres little to indicate much has changed since.
In fact, the low national unemployment rate of 4.9% masks a deeper problem: Many people who would otherwise be available for work have completely opted out of the labor market. The official unemployment rate is higher in some places and lower in others, but in all cases it excludes those who havent actively sought work in the past four weeks. Whats more, people are dropping out of the labor force or retiring despite a spike in health care jobs, many of which can be done from anywhere by just about anyone.
One explanation, as PBS contributor Paul Solman points out, is that those roles are typically quite demanding, both emotionally and physically and often constitute low-end, low-pay work. The same is true for many who do manage to stay put in the employed column by picking up part-time, low-pay jobs with few or no significant benefits.
Its not that good work doesnt exist: Just ask any hiring manager how hard it is to fill an open role. There are lots of jobs to be had, just not where many people actually live, particularly outside a handful of major metro areas. For years, even the best-intentioned tech companies have cited a bogus pipeline problem, claiming that there just arent enough qualified female engineers or African-American developers out there for them to hire. Thats never been the caseits just that businesses havent always known where to look, or looked hard enough.
Much the same goes for geography. If theyre willing to actually look, companies can locate top talent well outside the same crowded cities where they keep desperately hunting within limited, competitive local pools. Some top knowledge workers actually want to leave major hubs for smaller towns and rural areas where their dollars will go furtherthey just havent found employers that will let them. Maybe that means a Seattle company recruiting new, remote hires in small cities undergoing surprising tech booms, like tiny Bozeman, Montana. Or maybe it just means letting a top performer leave headquarters to keep doing her job remotely from someplace else.
When companies make even small shifts toward more distributed workforces, the outsize impact can be surprising. Thanks to the well-known multiplier effect, for every job you fill in (lets say) Detroit, you can actually create up to 4.3 jobs altogether: The person you hire will spend the money she earns locally, creating work for lawyers, schoolteachers, dentists, retail staff, and restaurant workers. Its the reverse for every designer and developer you ask to move from someplace else to work with you in your New York office; youve just taken her talent and spending out of another city thats now that much less likely to flourish in the future.
Yes, It Requires Going Remote
None of this can be accomplished without embracing remote work. While major employers, like IBM most recently, have ended long-standing remote-work policies, employees already see flexible arrangements as the inevitable future of their working lives. Whats more, offering more remote positions can help companies meet their diversity goals; women are especially likely to cite flexibility as a top employment priority.
Requiring people to come to a set location at fixed hours is a remnant of the Industrial Age, and its time to let it go. The COO of one growing company explained in Fast Company last month how hes helped assemble a workforce from 19 employees back in 2006 to over 400 todayall of whom are remote. It can be done. After all, outside of big cities, the talent you seek isnt concentrated enough to fill an office tower. Theres no single magic town filled with talented web developers you can hire in one lightning recruiting session.
Instead, companies need to leverage all the technological advances of recent years to erase what researcher Steve King has called the paradox of place, whereby even though the internet and connective technologies have made working remotely easier than ever, people and companies are increasingly clustering together in fewer locations, mostly in cities. At my company, Upwork, our own team is distributed. Over the last year, weve had 250 remote team members in the U.S. spread across 209 cities in 38 states, and by 2020, we plan to increase that number by at least 40%.
I call on business leaders to join me in setting targets of their own. Commit to hiring your next team member in a smaller city, small town, or rural area. Then commit to doing this as often as possible for the next few years until it becomes second nature.
Youll find theres a lot of talent out there, including in places you havent thought to look. There are many people whod welcome the higher rates a tech company could pay. Dont be cheap, either: Offer San Francisco or New York rates, which wont just feel generous to someone living in a less-expensive part of the country but can actually help jump-start those areas economies. Youll be rewarded with great loyalty. Youll gain access to new talent, new insights, and the increased creativity that greater diversity brings.
Whats more, youll be helping to distribute opportunity andmaybea small, badly needed measure of understanding.
Oh, God, please no!
And not everyone, especially us in rural areas, do not have high speed internet. My PC is connected to my Verizon phone tether to get to the internet right now. AT&T is the only broadband ISP here, and they're "out of bandwidth" ('course it's the same 6 Mb they've offered for the last 15 years!).
How about thinking and working harder for their business bottom line instead of being social workers?
You can, but the problems with offshoring don’t only stem from remote communications. You also have to deal with cultural differences, language differences, and timezone differences. Offshore employees are also typically contractors, with no particular long-stake in the survival or profitability of their contract employer.
We need at least cable EVERYWHERE.
The Right Wing did that? No, the Left Wing chased a good deal of manufacturing out of this country through the plethora of regulations and taxes that all but choked manufacturing out of this country. From the EPA to OSHA to EEOC, to the rest of the alphabet soup agencies, dot gov has continually destroyed our ability to compete on the world market.
Absent government intrusion, we would easily compete in a world market, and it wouldn't take any subsidies to do so.
We taxpayers are sick of paying for other peoples' stuff. You want fiber, buy fiber.
Get off your your royal butt and help Trump by getting Congress to do what they are constitutionally responsible to do.
It’s not on Trump, at this point.
Sorry but I think it is on Trump at the moment.
There are two (big) issues, which both are the reasons I supported the guy for President.
One is global trade. The other is the border and the wall.
I like Trump, and I have supported the guy for a long time. But he needs to move on these two major issues.
I think he will. I’m just saying, thus far, I haven’t seen that yet.
The regulation tax complaint is a ruse and fig leaf.
Maybe because US Unions priced themselves out of work by trying to monopolize the workforce? The closed shop union all but destroyed the US Automakers through the late 60s, 70s, and 80s as they craved higher and higher wages, while doing less and less work. I was in a Union for 11 years - I know exactly what goes on.
Union workers are no longer a factor in manufacturing. <10% are unionized so 90% of US durable goods are made by non union workers. Get a new meme.
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