Loyalty, Fear, and Laziness

As the economy cools down, resist the urge to retain employees who stay out of fear, and increase your proportion of loyalists.

It’s no secret that modern corporate America owes no allegiance to employees (save executives) but what’s been a bit slower to sink in is that the new worker feels the same way right back at them. In fact, some corporate moves, such as elimination of training, use the results as justification to exasperate the cause. Gamification and other ‘measurable methods’, such as personality testing, etc… are trying to make up for what could be achieved through transparency, leadership, and development of soft skills.

Here’s where China’s otherness can play to your advantage: while China has its own HR rules, you’re likely not bound in the same way as you are domestically at the corporate level. So rather than rely on the fad-derived opinion of some disproportionally powerful director with no hard skills or sense of your business, you can just do what works. Of course if you have an HR superstar, take advantage of it, but my experience is that field is still lagging even at otherwise progressive companies, to say nothing of application in a foreign culture.

A lot has been made of high turnover in China. However at companies doing it right turnover is remarkably low, and was even during the most frenzied growth. I’ve failed more than succeeded at poaching some top performers, despite promises of promotions and massive raises.

Let’s get one thing out of the way: you have to pay competitively. There’s no employee you want who will stay at 30% below market. There’s no trick, no combination of benefits, that can statistically bridge this gap.

Of the three, I’d rather keep the loyal and lazy over the scared. Why? Because workers who are afraid are unpredictable, and here I think I’m in line with modern thinking that can value reliability over even short-term incremental gains. Things scared employees do: take another job on the side (maybe even with a competitor), put up even higher barriers to communications, sabotage morale, steal, lie, disengage.

To clarify, by lazy I mean those who may have a malaise on the job, but don’t feel enough pain to either rock the boat or look for other work. I don’t mean those who can’t show up on time. And by afraid, I mean those who feel their position, status, prestige, or income are in jeopardy.

One advantage of a slowing economy is it gives the ambitious a wider tolerance band to wait for you to get your act together, and it gives the scared more willingness to listen to your overtures. Even the loyalists will appreciate the relationship more as they see the hardships their friends endure. The point is, you have to do what it takes to earn their loyalty. I’ve posted on how before, but this is carried on best by your local champions, supported by corporate.

Because China had a massive skills gap similar to our post-WWII boom, you have a situation a lot of near-retirees (should) appreciate: many hold jobs they’re essentially unqualified for. And like in the US, the good ones rose to the challenge. On both sides of the Pacific these people have something in their hearts you can’t buy: they recognize they were raised up by the grace of their employer.

They, unlike most of the new workforce, will tend to consider the company’s long-term needs ahead of their immediate bonus. They will organically create an environment that attempts to pass on the same ethic. The magic is that in China, these people could be in their 30’s, and you could get another 20-30 years out of them. If you don’t have any, now is also a good time to develop some.

The key is not to turn that loyalty into fear as you strive to apply your modern management theory. Just like they learned whatever hard skills they needed 10 years ago, they need to approach it like a problem to be solved and skill to be learned, not an attack on their position, ability or character. ‘Matrix organization with Chinese characteristics’ may be  order of the day, as they color things for local application, dynamically adding value so they’re not being 100% dictated to.

And in turn, giving them freedom, whether that’s for payroll, training, or team building, will allow them to take advantage of the slowdown to swell your ranks with the people you want, which will inevitably show up in whatever metrics you’d like to apply.

Compliance

Post transition get ready for inspections

As a parting gift, your GM or one his cronies may play informer for non-compliance. Worse, he may inform his pay-off buddy the well is drying up. Here are the big ones:

Labour contracts: If your contracts are not up to date, you can be subject to many penalties. Sometimes after 3 successive contracts, they enter an ‘open’ state, which makes termination and negotiation difficult. Check with your local labour lawyers. Great chinalawblog post here.

Get a handle on everyone on probation immediately and do a proper review before their contracts pass to permanent status. If you let these pass, you’ve just added considerable headache later.

Chinese work contract
Chinese work contract
HR Manual
HR Manual. Know it for options on firing and compliance on your own rules.

There can be all kinds of hoops to jump through with finding alternate positions and GROSS violations before terminating someone. Incompetence is not necessarily strictly valid, especially if they’re off contract. You can assign a manager to janitor, so getting rid of her can be more annoying than long-term (it still can seem interminable to you). But what about the janitor?

On a practical level, many employees are ignorant or misinformed about their rights. They also are practical themselves unless you’ve turned it into a personal fight. It’s about the payout. But compliance is still necessary.

Overtime and pay: Hopefully you have an OT policy and actually pay it. There are however, strict OT caps at 36 hours/month. You may end up paying a penalty, and there’s no good way to avoid it. It’s really about planning to get into compliance in the future.

There’s also other issues such as the hot temperature subsidies that you must comply with. One note, don’t get suckered into paying it if you provide comfortable office conditions–it’s then about making employees happy, and convincing the local authorities of your exemption. (Good post on that here)

Software: Only a sucker or large corporation pays for software in China right? That’s certainly still the prevailing attitude. IT’s function is often not compliance but advanced piracy. Prepare for them to come calling. (article on Microsoft plans here) You probably have a relationship in the US or EU with these vendors. They can be a resource to help clear things up, but they’re also an avenue to come collect.

I advocate for compliance, but some advice for those who insist on doing it the China way: set aside funds and tally a ground-zero license requirement. Factor in a certain degree of back payments/penalties. They may go for as much as 22%/year/license plus penalties. You can usually negotiate, but if they decide to play hardball you can be in a tight spot if their relationships with the local business bureaus happen to be sufficient to lower the boom. Further, you need to demonstrate credible action: if you leave any hint in public that you’re knowingly trying to duck the fees, they can sniff it out and it can turn antagonistic fast.

Environmental & Regulatory compliance: If you emit or dispose of any hazardous waste or are subject to any specific regulations, get a jump on it. Make sure you follow rules stated in your internal manuals, particularly regarding safety. ISO can not be worth the paper it’s printed on, but if it’s valuable to your business, you should do a review. Product quality programs are probably most valuable to your operation and reputation.

Taxes: China can seem fanatical about collecting taxes with as much control and little efficiency as possible. (Article here on 发票 fapiao, or tax receipts.) However, if any money was being hidden, it may come out now, either from ‘anonymous sources’ or your own forensics. Just going to have to pay and fix it. This applies to import/export too.

VAT fapiao
VAT fapiao

These are some of the things that you may have to do by law. Next week I’d like to address what you may want to do because it’s just good leadership and how you right the ship.