The Case for Good Jobs — and Why They’re Good for Business Too | Zeynep Ton | TED

47,397 views ・ 2024-09-02

TED


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I am so excited to be here
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to talk to you about work that is not glamorous,
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like cleaning bathrooms,
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shelving tomatoes, picking up trash
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or bathing the elderly.
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During the pandemic,
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we called the workers who do this work “essential”
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because our world literally stops without them.
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Remember how we used to clap for them?
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You know, we've been talking a lot about AI robots,
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but this work is also unlikely to be automated.
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So these jobs are here to stay.
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But a lot of people can do this work.
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So the wages that are set by the market are low.
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In fact, market pay is often unlivable pay.
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And tens of millions of essential workers live in a vicious cycle of poverty
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and lack dignity,
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which also hurts their companies.
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Take Janet,
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a full-time hourly manager at a retail chain.
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Even as a manager,
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her low income didn't pay the bills for her and her son,
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so she had to have a second job.
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But she couldn't hold on to her second job
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because her work schedule changed all the time.
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One day she might work from 5 pm to 9 pm.
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The next morning, her shift might start at 5 am.
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Just imagine her life and imagine how little time she had with her son.
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"My life is always in a turmoil," Janet told me.
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She couldn't sleep.
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Amazingly, though, she still cared so much about doing a good job at work.
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But even there, she failed in front of her customers all the time.
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One day she said to me customers were yelling at her
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because the checkout line was too long.
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Some walked off, leaving their full baskets.
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The line was too long
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because there weren't enough workers at the store.
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And so many of the workers who were there were new,
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so they were slow and made a lot of mistakes.
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They put the wrong product on the wrong shelf
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or left expired milk in the fridge.
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When customers caught mistakes at the checkout,
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cashiers had to call Janet for help every time
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because they weren't trusted to adjust prices
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or even solve the smallest problems.
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Controls like that drove people crazy
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and wasted everyone's time.
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Janet begged for more staff,
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but her store's poor performance meant even a lower labor budget,
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which meant more mistakes and higher turnover.
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So she was always starting from square one
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rehiring, retraining,
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more firefighting.
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You know, these dynamics are so common in labor-intensive services
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like retail stores, restaurants, call centers, nursing homes, hotels,
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that it seems like it's the only way for companies to keep their costs down.
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But it's not.
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You know, it's true,
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Janet’s company isn’t spending the money on labor,
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but they are spending the money --
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on rehiring,
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retraining,
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on lost sales from long lines,
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empty shelves and poor service.
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On all the wasted products and wasted time.
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Now I'm an operations management professor at MIT.
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We can't stand waste or inefficiency in operations.
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So that's the reason that I began researching service operations
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25 years ago.
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But then when I met hardworking people like Janet
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who weren't making it,
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their struggles got to my heart.
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Especially as an immigrant who believes in the American Dream.
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So figuring out how to improve company performance and jobs
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became my work mission.
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Now luckily, some companies have already figured this out.
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So Jim Sinegal, Costco’s cofounder and my business hero,
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visits my class.
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My MBA students are always so curious.
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They say, how can Costco, the world's third-largest retailer,
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afford to pay its workers so much more than other retailers
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and provide its customers the lowest prices?
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Here is how much Costco pays compared to other retailers.
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Huge difference.
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And Jim's answer is always the same.
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He says, "Paying your fellow workers well isn't altruism.
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It's good business."
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Costco's employee turnover is a fraction of the retail average...
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eight percent versus 60 percent.
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And its 20-year stock performance is so much higher than other retailers
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or S and P 500.
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You might say, yeah, but Costco is an exception,
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Jim Sinegal is brave and brilliant,
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and that's the only reason they can keep their costs low and wages high.
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But it's not just Costco.
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Others, like Mercadona,
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Spain's largest supermarket chain;
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QuikTrip, a convenience store chain with gas stations,
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have also turned what's typically considered low-wage,
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high-turnover jobs
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into good jobs.
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Now these companies all pay their workers more
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because absence of sufficient pay guarantees high employee turnover.
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But pay alone is not going to make Janet's job a good one.
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And if all Janet's company did was to pay workers more
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without raising their productivity,
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then that would mean either higher prices or lower profits.
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Higher pay requires higher productivity.
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And higher productivity requires better work.
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Here is how work at Janet's store would be different
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if her store operated more like Costco or QuikTrip or Mercadona.
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Everyone's priority would be the customer.
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So when there's a long line at the checkout,
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someone shelving merchandise would rush over to open a cash register
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because they would be cross-trained.
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When there are problems,
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experienced cashiers would be trusted to solve them quickly.
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No need to call Janet for help.
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They would also work fast,
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not just because they have expertise,
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but because corporate would do everything it can to simplify their work.
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Janet's store would also operate with slack,
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meaning having enough staff to take care of the customer,
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minimize mistakes,
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and do improvement.
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But operating with slack wouldn't work if there are slackers.
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Right?
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So the standards would be high,
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and with turnover low,
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Janet would have time to develop her team and improve performance.
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Now if you think about the work at the store,
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it's still not glamorous.
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And Janet would still go home physically exhausted --
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but not defeated.
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She would feel valued,
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and she would take pride in creating a lot of value.
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So what makes a job a good one,
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both for workers and companies
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is not this or that thing, but it's a system.
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It's a system with two interdependent elements.
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One is investment in people:
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pay, schedules, career paths, standards.
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The other is work that's productive and motivating with simplification,
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empowerment, cross-training and operating with slack.
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I want to make this system,
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which I call the good job system,
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the norm, not the exception.
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So to do that,
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I started a nonprofit called the Good Jobs Institute.
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And I've been working with my former MBA students,
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and together we have now worked with more than 30 companies
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whose leaders wanted to adopt this system to win with their customers.
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And we have seen small and large companies in different industries do it.
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A huge part of their success
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was their leaders' ability to imagine the workings of their own good-job system,
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and have the courage to adopt it.
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Let me give you an example.
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In 2017, John Furner became the CEO of Sam’s Club,
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which is Walmart's membership-based model that competes with Costco.
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Now, at the time, Sam’s Club was struggling
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and way behind Costco in terms of labor productivity,
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member satisfaction, sales, employee turnover.
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John was Sam’s Club’s 14th CEO in 34 years.
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Imagine the performance pressure, right,
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to show results in a short amount of time.
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One of the earliest changes that John wanted to make
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was to raise pay five to seven dollars an hour
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from a basis of 15 dollars an hour,
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for workers who cut meat,
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who worked in bakery, who led teams.
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But John got pushback.
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HR said, "Don't do it.
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Last time we raised pay, it didn't reduce turnover."
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Finance said, "Don't do it.
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It's not in the budget."
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There was no way for John to be able to prove with numbers
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that higher pay
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and higher pay alone, without the rest of the system
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would pay off.
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But he was certain
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that Sam’s Club couldn’t be a great company if they didn’t raise pay.
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You see, to be loved by their customers, their members,
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they had to have a motivated, capable team
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that can set up for success.
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That wasn't possible without reducing turnover
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and reducing turnover wasn't possible without raising pay,
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because people were leaving for jobs that paid a couple more dollars an hour.
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So just like Jim Sinegal,
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John could connect the dots between pay, turnover,
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productive work and competitiveness.
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So he and his team took a leap of faith.
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They raised pay,
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and they did the hard, bottom-up work to improve productivity and jobs.
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When they announced the first pay raises,
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some employees cried.
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You know, for workers like Janet,
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a couple more dollars an hour
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is the difference between working one or two jobs.
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It's the difference between getting enough sleep or not.
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Having a stable schedule
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is the difference between spending time with your son or not.
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And for Sam’s Club,
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within the first two years,
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labor productivity, measured as units sold per hour,
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increased 16 percent.
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Employee turnover dropped 25 percent for hourly workers,
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even more for managers.
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Sales increased 25 percent without opening new stores.
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This type of performance improvement fueled more investment in people
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and record membership growth.
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The once-struggling chain is now a growth engine
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for its parent company, Walmart,
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which too is on a good-jobs journey.
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And John Furner got promoted to be the CEO of Walmart USA.
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I'm talking a lot about retail,
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but it's not just retail.
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At Good Jobs Institute,
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we've seen similar results, higher productivity, lower turnover,
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more love from customers and higher sales
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at restaurants, call centers,
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even at a pest control company.
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The success of these courageous early adopters, I hope,
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will make it a lot easier for others to make a bet on their people.
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You know, when we think about high-performance organizations,
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our first instinct is often to fix the people right?
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But it turns out what really needs fixing is their work and their pay.
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The problem was never Janet.
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The problem was the system that Janet was stuck in.
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And if we see jobs like hers not as dead-end jobs,
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but as good jobs that can provide dignity,
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respect and a decent living,
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we would have more engaged and productive workers.
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We would have more competitive companies,
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a stronger economy,
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and a growing, rather than a shrinking, middle class.
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Tens of millions of essential workers would have hope instead of desperation,
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and that will be a blessing for all of us.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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