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Posts Tagged ‘Recruiters’

Can the automotive industry in Mexico grow by 20% this year?

February 15th, 2010

The manufacturing sector in Mexico is slowly getting stronger. Industrial production increased by 1.6% in December for the first time since 2008 fueled in great part by an increase in demand led by the U.S. which accounts for approximately 80% of manufacturing exports.

It is no surprise that the increase coincides with an improvement in the automotive industry that accounts for approximately 21% of Mexico’s total exports. In an interview with Bloomberg Ana Ruth Solano, the Economy Ministry official who oversees the automotive industry is predicting a 20% rise this year as local and U.S. demand rebounds after the great recession.

A big part of that increase might be coming from small cars. There is an increased appetite for smaller cars in the U.S and many of the car manufacturers are banking on the segment to help them through the next few years.  Mexico has been strong in the segment for many years and is well positioned to bank on the trend.  A large part of existing capacity is already focused on small cars and auto companies such as Fiat continue to invest.  Fiat Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne recently announced a 550M investment to produce up to 130,000 Fiat 500’s a year out of the Chrysler’s Toluca plant.

Solano also mentioned that Nissan is planning an investment to produce small cars, and may choose Mexico, but no announcement on the location has been made.


Jose Ruiz is Principal and Executive Search Consultant in Heidrick & Struggles. You can share your views of this article or aything related to the manufacturing, maquiladora operations or executive search at: jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.

The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com

Economy , , , , ,

BUSINESS WEEK: What You Should Know About Headhunters

February 11th, 2010

Executive recruiters can usher you into the corner office or leave you stranded after the fourth interview. Here’s what to expect.

by Joseph Daniel McCool

Executive recruiters—or headhunters as most businesspeople know them—are especially influential agents of executive mobility and management-career opportunity.

They are powerful ambassadors of hiring organizations’ brands and cultures, and their work lubricates the wheels of corporate growth, change management, and leadership like no other external business advisers. Their actions can shape corporate performance, because they hold the keys to most of the world’s highest-paying management jobs by virtue of controlling access to them.

Collectively, executive recruiters network their way to millions of experienced managers around the world each year to identify the most promising candidates. Their judgment determines who deserves to be introduced to client hiring organizations.

The truth is, whether you’re building a company or your own senior management career, you can’t get anywhere in business without the headhunters.

| Read full article at Businessweek.com



Jose Ruiz is Principal and Executive Search Consultant in Heidrick & Struggles. You can share your views of this article or aything related to the manufacturing, maquiladora operations or executive search at: jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.

The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com

 

Career Development, Mexico Executive Search , , , , , ,

The new loyalty and the freelance employee

December 17th, 2009

114-505800

 

 

Loyalty is not what it used to be… and it shouldn’t be.

By Jose Ruiz
Translated from articule published in CNNExpansion.com on Dec. 6, 2009

A few weeks ago my grandfather, who was a top ranking executive in the banking industry back in the 80′s, asked me what I thought about the perceived lack of loyalty in today’s employees. He was surprised to see that now, the average time an employee spends working for a company is around 5 years. An uncle, an entrepreneur, quickly responded loaded with sarcasm: “And what do you think about the perceived lack of loyalty in companies? They think short term and fire people when they don’t need them anymore -this month.” Touche. Hey, in the end, it isn’t personal, it’s just business. It may sound cold and ruthless but it’s not. We just need to sit back and analyze some paradigms that have been redefined over the past decades.

To many, especially amid these hard economic times, loyalty has been discarded in the work place. But the truth is, loyalty has only evolved. I’m sure you will agree with me when I say it is crazy to assume that an organization can commit to an employee for life, just as crazy as an employee committing to an organization for life. It could happen under the right conditions, but one cannot assume or guarantee that it will. Things change and they change fast. Organizations and employees need to achieve independence. Now, this may evoke thoughts of selfishness, but it is quite the opposite. Business relationships exist for a mutual benefit. Employment is not an exception. Loyalty is assuming that the relationship can end. Loyalty is taking into consideration what may happen to the other party when it does and loyalty is taking action every step of the way to guarantee that neither party in the relationship becomes dependant. A dependant relationship in business is not a healthy relationship.

The current economic environment has exposed many of these unhealthy relationships. Let’s delve deeper into the concept of dependence using an example: Bill, an employee at ACME, Inc. is a close friend of his manager. He has helped him when unforeseen events have required him to do a little extra of everything. Bill is a go-to guy at ACME and has been rewarded over the years with generous pay increases. The economy has hit ACME hard and has forced the company to close down. Bill is out of work and now struggles to make ends meet. He was presumably loyal and did everything that was asked of him, including jumping from one position to another. Now Bill is in the open market. His post switching did not allow him to define his own niche or career within a discipline -he has no brand- his resume is a mess and his salary expectations are well above what the market will pay for his skill set. Bill was dependant on ACME and ACME never considered what would happen to Bill in an open job market. By not helping him define a career path, (both internally and externally) and overpaying him, Bill was put in a very bad situation. ACME made him dependant and Bill never realized that he was.

Now, let’s assume a scenario where an investor stepped in, ACME re-opened its doors and re-hired Bill. Bill knows that his life style depends on his current job with ACME. The relationship is at a high risk of turning toxic because Bill’s dependence would most likely have an impact on the decisions he makes at ACME. He knows he needs to protect his job. At best, he will make decisions with a higher degree of fear.

A healthy business relationship and true respect comes with the independence of both parties and the trust resulting from it.

 True loyalty in an employment relationship takes into consideration what will happen to the other party when the business relationship ends. A.J. Smith, General Manager for the San Diego Chargers preaches “We are all Chargers one season at a time, one game at a time”.

As an employee, one must consider all the possibilities, including that your job may end at any given moment. Are you ready for it? Do you know what your market value is? Do you know who may demand your services? Ask yourself these questions constantly. If you are taking on a new assignment, inquire how this will impact your personal brand and your resume. No matter what you do, or what your job may be, consider yourself a freelancer and your job as an assignment. Perform as if every assignment was an trial for the next. Above all, never forget that healthy relationships are based on mutual benefit. Push the other party’s benefit to the edge and you may break the relationship. If you guarantee your independence you will become a better employee. Guarantee the independence of those that work for you and you will have more loyal employees and a healthy relationship.

Be independent and be loyal. The new kind of loyal.

 


Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets.

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com 

Leadership, Mexico Executive Search , , , ,

US Visas for Venture-Backed Immigrant Entrepreneurs

December 13th, 2009
Scott Shane supports a startup visa program. But he urges fellow proponents to rethink the arguments they’re using to justify it
By Scott Shane – Businessweek.com
Myth: Immigrants need to be better entrepreneurs than native-born entrepreneurs to justify a startup visa program.
Reality: Recently several influential people advocated a program to grant visas to foreign-born entrepreneurs interested in starting high potential businesses in the U.S. Last week Paul Kedrosky of the Kauffman Foundation and Brad Feld of the Foundry Group wrote an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal, and entrepreneur turned academic Vivek Wadhwa also wrote a Bloomberg BusinessWeek opinion column to support such a program…
| Read full article

scott_shaneScott Shane supports a startup visa program. But he urges fellow proponents to rethink the arguments they’re using to justify it

By Scott Shane – Businessweek.com

Myth: Immigrants need to be better entrepreneurs than native-born entrepreneurs to justify a startup visa program.

Reality: Recently several influential people advocated a program to grant visas to foreign-born entrepreneurs interested in starting high potential businesses in the U.S. Last week Paul Kedrosky of the Kauffman Foundation and Brad Feld of the Foundry Group wrote an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal, and entrepreneur turned academic Vivek Wadhwa also wrote a Bloomberg BusinessWeek opinion column to support such a program…

| Read full article

Economy, Mexico Executive Search , , , ,

Latin America poised for economic rebound

December 11th, 2009

51006675By Chris Kraul – LATimes.com
December 11, 2009

Led by resource-rich Brazil, the region is forecast to enjoy 4.1% growth next year, far outpacing the U.S.

Reporting from Bogota, Colombia – From appliance stores in Brazil to auto assembly lines in Mexico, signs are evident that Latin America has seen the worst of the global economic crisis and is poised for solid expansion.

The region is expected to post economic growth of 4.1% next year, according to a forecast released Thursday by the United Nations’ Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. That’s a stronger rebound than previously anticipated.

| Read full article

Economy, Mexico Executive Search, Mexico Indexes, Mexico Industry , , , , ,

CEO viewpoint – Time to make up for lost ground in talent

December 2nd, 2009

Talentby Kelly O Kay, Global Managing Partner of the Software Practice at Heidrick & Struggles

During the worst of the recession, the approaches companies took to talent fell into three broad categories. Some simply froze hiring or made across-the-board cuts. Others, assuming a buyer’s market for talent, failed to attract or retain genuinely top talent. Still others continued to make strategic hires – no matter what it took and despite economic turbulence – putting themselves in the best position to ride out the rough waters and to meet the rising tide of recovery.

The first two groups of companies now need to make up lost ground. The good news is that there is still time. The bad news is that as the recovery gets under way, all three groups will be fiercely competing for the same limited pool of top talent – even those farseeing companies that continued to make strategic hires will need to work to hold the ground they’ve gained in strategic hiring and to advance as growth returns.

Learning the lessons of the previous downturn
The recent market downturn was steep, but it’s hardly the first of its kind. Just eight years ago, the U.S. economy experienced a sharp contraction, one that particularly affected the technology sector. The executives who led companies through that downturn learned the hard way how to refocus organizations on the fly and they applied those lessons to their recruitment activities during the more recent recession – lessons from which other companies could profit while the present window of opportunity remains open. “Unless an organization is going out of business, it should always be thinking about recruiting,” says Mark Tapling, now CEO of Language Weaver, who successfully steered a high-tech company through that sector’s 2001 free fall. “Many companies I know have had to hire in new talent to re-position themselves for success in this turbulent economy. And hiring the right people is never easy.”

The right staff with the right stuff
As companies adjust to economic uncertainty, they likely need a set of skills that they didn’t previously require or have in-house. Hiring in these new skills is pivotal for the ability to adapt to the changing economic conditions and seize new opportunities. Unfortunately, some companies, as a result of the uncertainty in the market and their own uncertain futures, have been reluctant to invest in recruiting the top-level talent they need in order to successfully reposition themselves. Typically, they have tried to delay hiring or make do with what they have, promoting someone internally into a stretch position or using their internal networks to try to locate the person they need.

It’s certainly understandable that companies have taken that cautious approach. During the initial trauma of the downturn, boards and stakeholders were demanding swift, decisive action. In the face of frozen credit markets and plummeting stock prices, most organizations had to put aside grand strategic plans and focus on immediate operating plans. But they should have also started seriously evaluating their future staffing needs.

Though the emotional and logistical turmoil of downsizing leaves most organizations feeling like they don’t have enough staff, the truth is more subtle: companies typically don’t have the right staff to achieve their objectives. For example, in a growing market, companies typically focus resources on branding, voice, and demand generation. But in a shrinking market, they’re more likely to need tight segmentation and skill in packaging products to meet the needs of specific communities. An executive who’s strong in demand generation may not have the segmentation skills to double down on segments where the business has been successful to drive maximum profitability.

“All change is disruptive,” says Dave Habiger, CEO of Sonic Solutions. “But ultimately, it can either advance your business or undermine it. Any winning strategy is partly a talent strategy. You can have the perfect business plan, but it’s the people who make it work.”

The illusion of a buyer’s market for talent
Some companies recognized early on the need for new skills called for by the uncertain economy. However, some of them also bought into a widely held – and largely unexamined – belief about the effect of the recession on the talent pool. “People think that even the very best people, the ‘A-players,’ are a dime a dozen,” says Tapling. “That belief is dangerous.”

While there are certainly more people out of work, it is usually the best people that smart companies do their utmost to retain. So, while the talent pool was larger in absolute numbers, top talent remained in relatively short supply. As Mark Tapling suggests, the notion of a talent market that overwhelmingly favors buyers is an illusion. Companies that have been laboring under that illusion have typically made two mistakes.

First, they have underestimated the difficulty of finding the talent with the demanding mix of skills needed to see the company through the recession and prepare it for recovery. As a result, they have failed to fully understand how difficult it is to get top external talent – believing that they could get “A” players at “B” prices and with a “B” recruiting effort.
Second, the notion of a buyer’s market may have made them complacent about retaining the top talent they already have. “There’s a belief out in the market – just as there was in the previous downturn – that absolutely nobody is hiring,” says Tapling. That has also proved to be a dangerous belief for those companies that have seen some of their top talent seek greater appreciation elsewhere.

The drive for efficient recruiting
Companies that do understand the real dynamics of the talent market have not only been hiring strategically but have also been doing it in a systematic way, with a full commitment of resources and an understanding of what it takes to define, find, and attract top talent.
SumTotal Systems took that approach. “First, we fleshed out our new strategy and operating plan, including reductions,” says Arun Chandra, the company’s CEO. “Next, we defined the roles and skills that we required to succeed in this new environment. Then we started discussing execution: what skills we would need to achieve our new goals, and what skills we already had in-house. From there, we moved on to discussing specific positions that we would need to create and recruit for.”

Once companies have developed their plans to create new roles, they face the biggest hurdle: the difficulty of finding top talent. Not only is the idea that there are great people just waiting for a call a myth but also the existence of many more candidates, most of whom are unsuitable, makes the market noisy and complicates the process of finding candidates who really fit.

Even more challenging is the fact that when organizations try to bring in new skill sets, they’re often venturing into unfamiliar territory, where it’s all too easy to make mistakes. Hiring new talent also carries other risks, especially when new hires are high-priced corporate change-makers. Such executives are expensive and inherently disruptive, and in today’s rapidly changing environment they’ve got to be successful quickly.

Minimizing the hiring risk
Companies can meet the challenges of strategic hiring and minimize the risks by working closely with an experienced executive recruiter. The recruiter can help the company thoroughly explore corporate strategy and requirements, conduct a systematic search to identify the best candidates, implement a skillful recruitment and integration process – and make all the difference in the company’s ability to compete successfully for talent that will only get harder to find.

“Some of the roles I had defined in the plan were not just new to me, but also new to the culture of the company,” says Christopher Franey, President of Kensington, a wholly owned subsidiary of ACCO Brands. “We didn’t have experience in evaluating candidates with those skill sets – and we couldn’t afford to learn through trial and error.”

Sonic Solutions’ Dave Habiger had a similar experience. “We needed help in identifying who the key candidates would be, and how to qualify them through interviews and reference checks,” he says. “Finding and recruiting the best and brightest is a time-consuming process that requires precise expertise not typically found in-house. Plus, we couldn’t afford to have our executives spending time and energy on dozens of interviews. Now more than ever, we need them to be focused on operations.”
Efficiently choosing the right person is especially important because, with the pressures on businesses today, companies can’t afford hiring mistakes or slow starts – especially in a crucial rain-maker position. “If you’re going to the board and asking for a strategic hire, you’ve got to make your case strongly, and it’s your credibility on the line,” warns Tapling. “Whoever you bring in won’t have time to learn on the job. They’ll have to perform as expected, right out of the box. And you’re going to be accountable for their performance.”

Overcoming ‘organizational freeze’
Savvy companies are also looking for ways to reduce or eliminate “organizational freeze,” the operational paralysis that tends to occur between identifying a critical new position and filling that role. One such solution is “talent mapping.” At Heidrick & Struggles, we find companies coming to us and saying that although they’re not ready to launch a full search, they want to get started so they can move quickly once they get the authorization they need. We draw up a profile of what they’re looking for and identify specific individuals who fit that profile. When they get sign-off to hire for a position they can move swiftly to interviews and offers, often saving a month or two in the process.”

Some of the best-run companies have also been looking past the most pressing needs on their talent maps and asking recruitment firms to introduce top talent on an ongoing basis. With a full commitment of resources and an understanding of the real dynamics of the current talent market, they are taking advantage of the opportunities created by market uncertainty to secure A-players before the recovery dramatically heats up the competition for top talent.

It’s not just who you know
The A-players who could make all the difference to an organization’s success are usually still employed. Further, economic uncertainty has made many people reluctant to leave positions they regard as safe. But even if they’re not employed, they typically have had the financial success or foresight to allow themselves to be choosy about their next position. Finding them isn’t easy, and persuading them to join a new company and stay for the long term is even harder. Just knowing the people isn’t enough. You also have to know how to pry them out of their current positions or lure them out of wait-and-see hiatuses in employment.

“Top talent always has options,” says Lori Goler, Head of Human Relations at Facebook. “We’re thoughtful, creative and aggressive about targeting the right candidates, yet nearly every situation is a competitive one. If nothing else, we’re competing against a candidate’s incumbent company, which can represent a comfort zone. And, good companies are doubling down on their best talent, which makes them even harder to lure away. In these cases, knowing your company’s value proposition and being able to convey it compellingly is the key to success in getting top talent to make a move.”

A company that is aiming high must position the role as exciting and the company as superior to other companies, with far more upside potential. Organizations often need to adjust their recruiting strategy to the needs of the individual being recruited, considering such factors as money, security, and career potential.

Retention as recruiting
Persuading a desirable candidate to say yes is just the beginning. Before the new executive begins work, a comprehensive onboarding process should be firmly in place. The onboarding process should set expectations with the new hire and current employees in order to smooth the path and address any of the cultural differences or anxieties that people may have about the new star on the horizon. Organizations can’t afford to create the kind of disruption that might make the new hire less effective or lead other talented staff to consider other offers.

Organizations also cannot afford to neglect retention of these A-players, especially as recovery approaches. These talented executives will have far more opportunities, both as a result of economic expansion generally and as companies that have been sitting things out or haven’t fully understood the recent talent market commit to making up lost ground.

Talented staff must be carefully nurtured and managed, with ongoing development, training, and professional opportunities that keep them fully engaged and committed to the future and the success of the company. Think of it as a kind of ongoing recruiting that can pre-empt the need for at least some actual recruiting – with its uncertainty and time lag – when the recovery takes off. Companies that do not do a good job of retention are likely to find themselves with a talent gap at precisely the time of greatest opportunity.

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About Kelly O Kay
Kelly is the Global Managing Partner of the Software Practice for Heidrick & Struggles, conducts searches on a worldwide basis for a wide range of technology companies.

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Economy, Job Market, Mexico Executive Search , , , , ,

2010 | Say hello to my little friends: Inflation and loss of purchasing power

September 6th, 2009

connieandpeteWhat can we expect in 2010 as we continue to see signs the economy is beginning to recover and expand?  Uncertainty is gone. We’re certain it’s going to be a tough year but challenges will be different from those we encountered in 2009.
By Jose Ruiz

When 2009 began uncertainty filled the air and the economy paralyzed. It was like driving in dense fog. Trying to sort out what was around us, while we attempted to move forward with caution, hoping nothing would come out of nowhere and hit us. Swine flu did just that and it was not until June that the fog began to lift. We hit bottom, and it became evident that the recovery was going to take time and it was going to be tough.

Let’s take a broad look back at what happened from the perspective of Connie Consumer and Pete Producer. Back in 2006 Connie Consumer was flying high with a steady job, a house, retirement and investment accounts with values that were growing well beyond inflation. The Consumer family’s net worth was growing at a steady pace and they felt comfortable making major purchases. Pete Producer was doing very well struggling to keep up with demand. Pete and Producer Inc. hired more employees and made investments with an eye to the future. He needed to expand to not lose market share.

In 2008 Connie Consumer began to see her net worth slip as house prices began to drop. The foreclosure of her neighbor’s house put downward pressure on the price of her home and her investments were not performing well. The Consumer family is a responsible consumer so they began to hold back on some spending. Pete producer began to notice the Consumers where not spending as much as before and began to see his demand fizzle. Producer Inc. was already set for higher output. Pete producer made small adjustments but his inventory began to accumulate. Pete felt he had increased capacity too aggressively betting on the come and allowed his costs to get out of control. Towards the end of 2008 he had no choice and began to make cost adjustments and had to let some employees go.

By the start of 2009 Connie Consumer was facing a pay-cut and was uncertain about her own job. She could no longer count on the safety net of her home equity or her investment accounts. If she lost her job she would have a hard time making ends meet. The Consumer family hunkered down and increased their savings trying to spend only on the essentials. Pete Producer felt the pressure as his products stacked up in his warehouse. Producer Inc. had no choice and made deeper cost cuts, letting more people go and shutting down plants. Pete was in trouble. His costs were climbing and his product was not selling. Pete needed cash at a time when his bank reduced his credit line. He knew that increasing his prices would be suicide. In fact he had to provide discounts to empty his shelves. He accepted losses to guarantee cash flow.

At the end of June 2009 Connie felt a bit more secure at her job. Layoffs appeared to be over. The Consumer family was still dealing with lower pay because of the pay-cuts but they felt a bit more comfortable spending. Government programs had helped Pete reduce his inventory and Producer Inc. began to see demand come back.

So this is where we are today. Connie Consumer is cautious but spending. Pete Producer has his production lines working again. His reduced capacity is almost at its limit.

The uncertainty is gone but now comes a tricky recovery.

Pete Producer is seeing demand increase but he is very reluctant to increase capacity. His fear of loosing market share is outweighed by his fear of letting his costs get out of control. He will accept losing some customers to guarantee that he will stay afloat and profitable. Pete will grow at a very slow pace keeping a close eye on the Consumer family betting very little on the come.

Connie Consumer will probably get her full pay back by the end of the year. But her employer will be thinking along the same lines as Pete and will keep pay increases in check. In 2010 Connie will likely earn the same salary she did in 2008.

Now say hello to my little friends: inflation and loss of purchasing power.

2009 was a year characterized by the elimination of excess inventory and capacity (supply). When I talk about capacity it’s not only manufacturing capacity. Restaurants, dealerships and stores were closed, production lines were shut down. Overall, capacity to provide goods and services was reduced in reaction to a dramatic drop in demand. Prices remained mostly in check because supply outweighed demand.

Through the reminder of 2009 and 2010 demand will continue to grow at a slow pace. Supply and demand will even out and we will very likely see inflation levels above those that we saw in 2009. 

Higher inflation levels and a virtual freeze in salaries equals a loss in purchasing power adding another element to the already strong argument of a slow recovery.

2010 will be a year of recovery. But a slow and difficult recovery as Connie Consumer and Pete Producer keep an eye on each other before taking any steps, both protecting their cash and taking nothing for granted.


Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in technology, life sciences, industrial sectors and consumer markets.

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com

Economy, Mexico Industry , , , , , , , , ,

Should those who still have jobs get used to paycuts?

August 27th, 2009

people

Jobs: Lessons from the Great Recession (Business Week)

Those who still have jobs should get used to pay cuts, furloughs, and all-around uncertainty. Welcome to the age of the microentrepreneur

By Chris Farrell (Source: Businessweek.com)

Thanks to the Great Recession, another corporate taboo has been shattered: large-scale pay cuts. As a general practice, companies typically resist slashing worker pay during downturns, especially for their white-collar employees. The preferred response to falling profits has long been layoffs. The main reason both managers and workers prefer layoffs to pay cuts is that pink slips seem to concentrate the pain while pay cuts spread the distress.

“Employers are reluctant to cut the nominal rate of pay,” says Daniel J.B. Mitchell, professor emeritus at the UCLA Anderson School of Management and the School of Public Affairs. “It causes morale problems and antagonizes the workforce.”

| Read full story


Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets.

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com

 

Job Market, Mexico Executive Search, Mexico Industry , , , , , ,

Mexico: The recession is ending

August 25th, 2009

consumer2It’s not done yet.  But signs continue to indicate that we are heading in the right direction.
by Jose Ruiz

Monterrey, Mexico (August, 25, 2009).-There are internal economic elements in Mexico that can be considered serious weaknesses if the global recession continues over a long period of time. As we continue to monitor key economic data it continues to look like Mexico will dodge the bullet.

80% of Mexico’s exports go to the United States.  The economy in Mexico will begin to pick-up steam when the U.S. consumer starts spending again.

This week U.S. consumer confidence proved that the sleeping giant might be waking up. The index climbed more than forecast at the same time that national home prices increased for the first time in three years.

The increase beyond forecast may be a surprise but the correlation should not be. Most of the net worth of the average American lies in two pots: The equity of their homes and their retirement savings. Both of which had been badly battered in the last couple of years leaving the average consumer feeling unprotected wondering what they would get by with  if they became part of the unemployment statistics.

While the official unemployment numbers are still of concern reports say the proportion of people who said jobs are hard to get decreased to 45.1 percent from 48.5 percent.

The positive environment in the U.S. is already having an effect in Mexico. The peso’s strength is at levels many thought we were never going to see again. It strengthened 0.1 percent to 12.8152 per U.S. dollar today.  At some point in trading it hit 12.7674, a number not seen since November 11 of last year.

The signs are encouraging and it appears we are on the path to recovery. There are internal concerns, but there is reason to continue to be optimistic as long as the U.S. economy continues to show signs of strength.


Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets.

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit www.heidrick.com

 

 

Mexico Executive Search, Mexico Indexes, Mexico Industry , , , ,

Is Starbucks turning into McDonald’s or McDonald’s into Starbucks? There is irony to this story.

August 22nd, 2009

By Jose Ruiz
Consumer Markets

Monterrey, Nuevo Leon (August 21, 2009).- A few days back I read an article about how Starbucks’ baristas were complaining about the new ‘lean’ initiative that was turning them into robots. The baristas – from Italian etymology referring to a person working behind the bar, in this case an espresso bar – were talking about the efforts to eliminate unnecessary movements and steps to improve efficiencies. Methods long used in manufacturing lines…and fast food restaurants.

A grinder next to an espresso machine

A grinder next to an espresso machine

The article called it the McDonalization of Starbucks. McDonalization? I have to say I’m not sure what the baristas were complaining about. Starbucks has been in the fast food business for a long time. It’s been years since I’ve seen a stand alone espresso grinder or a tamper in a Starbucks coffee house.

When you walk into a neighborhood coffee house the smell is different. You can spot at least two stand alone grinders that are hand calibrated to get the perfect grain size of different types of espresso beans. The barista grinds the beans, places the grind in a porta-filter and compacts the grind with a tamper and then places the porta-filter in the machine to obtain a shot of espresso. The grinder settings, the hand pressure used to compact the grind into the porta-filter, the time used to extract the shot are all variables the barista controls. It’s an art. To prepare espresso drinks, such as the now famous, caramel machiatto or a cinnamon latte, the espresso shot is added to vapor heated milk. Achieving the right temperature and speed in heating the milk to release sweetness is an art itself. Syrups are then used to add more sweetness and flavors. It has been a very long time since Starbucks baristas have controlled those variables.

Coffee Syrups

Coffee Syrups

Starbucks has long used super automatic espresso machines. At the push of a button, an internal grinder, grinds the right amount of espresso and automatically does everything else for an espresso shot to come out of its spout. There are no syrup racks at Starbucks, only pre-prepared concentrate mixes for their drinks. Don’t get me wrong. It’s not a bad thing. It guarantees me that a teenager who just got started will prepare my short latte the same way a seasoned barista can in the same store. It’s a good thing for consistency. But it’s no longer an art at Starbucks. Baristas can complain about the McDonalization of Starbucks but they really have not been true baristas in a long time.

A Tamper

A Tamper

But here is the irony. This morning I walked into a coffee shop. The smell was there. Two grinders stood tall on the bar along side a syrup rack. A tamper and a used grind box was there sitting next to a three group espresso machine. I asked the barista if he could do something special for me…and he did! I took my drink and sat on a real leather sofa to read the newspaper. I wanted to take out my laptop to write this but it just did not feel right.  Ahh, a real coffee shop: A McCafe. Yes, you read right: A McCafe sitting next to a McDonald’s sharing a terrace. McCafe’s are incorporating traditional coffee house techniques and training real baristas.  

Maybe those baristas complaining about the McDonalization of Starbucks should go work for a McCafe.

…Oh, and the price of my short latte was about 20% less compared to Starbucks.  

 

A McCafe: Notice the grinder on the bar and the real cups sitting on top of the espresso machine. It's a coffee house! They're getting it right.

A McCafe: Notice the grinder on the bar and the real cups sitting on top of the espresso machine. It's a coffee house! They're getting it right.


Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. 

 

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Jose J. Ruiz | Executive Recruiter
Heidrick & Struggles | Executive Search in Mexico