Management Diary The Quintessential Survival Guide in the Corporate Quagmire!

Sharing the Reins: 10 Reasons To Sell Your Company To Your Employees


In 1987 I sold my business, South Mountain Company, to my employees (and myself). My sole proprietorship became an employee-owned cooperative corporation. It was a hinge point in the history of the company. Ownership has become available to all employees, enabling people to own and guide their workplace. The responsibility, the power, and the profits all belong to the group of owners.

Shared ownership and control is our method at South Mountain. "Every employee, an owner" is our intention. More than half of our thirty employees are full owners. Each time another comes in, and each time a new management invention encourages more voices to be heard, we move steadily toward the goals of democracy, fairness, and transparency. This is not about a sense of ownership or a sense of control. Corey Rosen of the National Center for Employee Ownership once said that giving employees a "sense" of ownership is like giving them a "sense" of dinner. This is the whole meal.

I first contemplated the conversion to find a way to retain long-time valued employees, who wanted to stay in the company but felt they needed more stake than working for an hourly wage. At the time it was both frightening and exciting. I had the power, and the greatest financial and emotional investment; therefore, I had the most to lose. Under my ownership the company had become a viable, profitable entity with a strong reputation. Sometimes, during the early discussions, it felt like control was slipping away, like I was tugging on the reins of a runaway horse. But it occurred to me that perhaps I had the most to gain. Aside from the lure of clearing this new path and seeing where it led, the possibility of shared responsibility and ownership promised new freedoms for me and new achievements for the company. But the full implications of what I was doing were not yet clear to me.

Our ownership system has indeed turned out to be an important aspect of the stability of the company. People do tend to stay. But there are other reasons why we are lucky to have made this change. Nearly 20 years later, I am fully convinced that the conversion to employee ownership has been a critical factor in the long-term success of our company and an important reason why I think I have the best job in the world. Here are ten reasons why you may wish to consider, sometime soon, sharing the ownership of your business with your employees:

1. Maturity. Once the entrepreneurial leap of starting a new business has been achieved without constraints, and a viable company has been established, restructuring to employee ownership can be a natural part of the maturation process.

2. Commitment. Employee ownership encourages a sense of empowerment and promises deeper connections and greater commitment (and length of employment) among the employee owners.

3. Freedom. The potential loss of control for the founder is more than balanced by the new-found freedom that comes with shared responsibility.

4. Participation. If you keep the entry fee low enough (we keep ours to "the price of a good used car") full participation will be encouraged.

5. Equity. By using a system of internal capital accounts through which the profit is shared and equity is measured, employee owners can track their stake in the company and accumulate a nest egg that they take with them when they depart.

6. Effectiveness. Over 11,000 companies nationally, with 8.5 million employees (and $400 billion in assets held by these employees) have some form of employee ownership. Maybe these companies know something.

7. Legacy. Employee ownership is the ticket to good legacy and smooth transitions. By sharing ownership early on, the difficult question that comes when founders are ready to retire - what to do with this business - is avoided.

8. Justice. The inherent injustice of our current economic system (all wealth goes to the shareholders) can be tackled, through employee ownership, by shifting wealth to the real stakeholders, those who actually create it.

9. Productivity. A democratic workplace gives meaning to our work lives and encourages good performance. A happy workforce is a productive one.

10. Accountability. If the people who make the decisions are the people who will also bear the consequences of those decisions, better decisions are likely to result.

In thinking about the dynamics of employee ownership, I am reminded of the way the Roman army handled daily rations. Rations were in the form of large loaves of bread, each sufficient to feed two soldiers. This presented a problem, since when the soldiers had little to do, they tended to fight among themselves, particularly over who got the bigger half of the loaf. The Romans developed a nifty solution. They passed a regulation that one soldier had to divide the loaf and the other chose which half to take. Employee ownership is a similarly self-enforcing system. Each owner's actions on behalf of the others, and the company, are actions on his or her own behalf at the same time.

I understand that employee ownership is not the only way to encourage more responsible and more democratic business practices. But it's clear to me that at South Mountain, due to employee ownership, we've become, at once, better problem solvers and better dreamers. There's a lot to be said for ownership and the responsibility it encourages. As someone once observed, "In the history of mankind, nobody has ever washed a rented car."

John Abrams is the president of South Mountain Company, an employee-owned build/design firm on Martha's Vineyard. This article has been adapted with permission from his new book, The Company We Keep: Reinventing Small Business for People, Community, and Place (Chelsea Green Publishing) in which he explores the role of small business in promoting community, creating social equity, and maintaining ecological balance.


MORE RESOURCES:

Oracle to pay $1.9B for Taleo, extends SAP rivalry - FederalNewsRadio.com

FederalNewsRadio.com

Oracle to pay $1.9B for Taleo, extends SAP rivalry
FederalNewsRadio.com
Oracle is paying $1.9 billion for Taleo Corp., a company that helps businesses manage their employees. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File) By ANICK JESDANUN AP Technology Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Oracle Corp. is escalating its rivalry with German ...
Oracle to pay $1.9 billion for personnel software company, extends rivalry ...Washington Post
Oracle buying Taleo for $1.9 billion, cloud war brewsReuters
Oracle Buys Taleo for $1.9 Billion, Adds Human-Resource ToolSan Francisco Chronicle

all 482 news articles »

PetroFrontier announces change in management - Sacramento Bee

PetroFrontier announces change in management
Sacramento Bee
10, 2012 -- /PRNewswire/ - (TSX-V: PFC) - PetroFrontier Corp.("PetroFrontier") announced today that Peter Philipchuk, Vice President, Exploration, has resigned from PetroFrontier. PetroFrontier thanks Mr. Philipchuk for his service and wishes him well ...

and more »

Oracle to pay $1.9B for Taleo, extends SAP rivalry - WTOP

WTOP

Oracle to pay $1.9B for Taleo, extends SAP rivalry
WTOP
Oracle is paying $1.9 billion for Taleo Corp., a company that helps businesses manage their employees. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File) By ANICK JESDANUN AP Technology Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Oracle Corp. is escalating its rivalry with German ...
Oracle's $1.9bn Deal to Buy TaleoZacks.com
Oracle to pay $1.9 billion for Taleo, extends SAP rivalryUSA TODAY
Taleo Corp Shares Downgraded to "Neutral" by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Analysts (TLEO)Web Inquirer

all 105 news articles »

TEXT-S&P revises Apollo Investment Corp outlook to stable - Reuters

TEXT-S&P revises Apollo Investment Corp outlook to stable
Reuters
(The following statement was released by the rating agency) -- Apollo Investment Corp. (AIC) has announced changes in management, a reduction in its dividend, and adjustments to its investment strategy. -- In our view, changes to the firm's investment ...
Apollo Investments Considers Capital Raise; Unveils Management ShiftsWall Street Journal
Company News for February 9, 2012Zacks.com
Apollo Investment's CEO Discusses Q3 2012 Results - Earnings Call TranscriptSeeking Alpha
Economic Times -Tech24
all 30 news articles »

Integrated Asset Management Corp. Announces Results for the First Quarter of ... - MarketWatch (press release)

Integrated Asset Management Corp. Announces Results for the First Quarter of ...
MarketWatch (press release)
TORONTO, ONTARIO, Feb 09, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- Integrated Asset Management Corp. ("IAM") /quotes/zigman/18979 CA:IAM -10.00% today announced unaudited financial results for the quarter ended December 31, 2011. Review of the 3-Month Period ...

and more »

Eaton Vance Closed-end Diversified Equity Income Funds Declare Quarterly ... - Sacramento Bee

Eaton Vance Closed-end Diversified Equity Income Funds Declare Quarterly ...
Sacramento Bee
The Funds are managed by Eaton Vance Management, a subsidiary of Eaton Vance Corp. (NYSE: EV), based in Boston, one of the oldest investment management firms in the United States, with a history dating back to 1924. Eaton Vance and its affiliates ...

and more »

State: Revised map led to levee updates - Peoria Journal Star

State: Revised map led to levee updates
Peoria Journal Star
He did say, however, that the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the US Army Corps of Engineers became more serious about the country's levee system after the hurricane disaster. Osman said the Corps did an Illinois River study in 2002 and 2003, ...

and more »

Contract talks continue at Marathon, Tesoro refineries - Reuters

Contract talks continue at Marathon, Tesoro refineries
Reuters
Workers at the Marathon Petroleum Corp in Catlettsburg, Kentucky, and the Tesoro Corp Mandan, North Dakota, refinery have rejected management proposals on local issues, said USW spokeswoman Lynne Hancock. "They're not preparing for a strike," Hancock ...

and more »

Cabot Corporation - Growth & Income - NASDAQ

Cabot Corporation - Growth & Income
NASDAQ
Cabot Corporation ( CBT ) recently delivered its 5th consecutive positive earnings surprise as earnings per share grew 15% year-over-year. And management provided a positive outlook for 2012, prompting analysts to revise their estimates higher.

and more »

San Francisco Art Institute Under Investigation For Recruitment Practices - Huffington Post

San Francisco Art Institute Under Investigation For Recruitment Practices
Huffington Post
... recruiting practices and job placement reporting at The Art Institute of California in San Francisco and seven other Art Institute campuses across the state, according to a new filing by the for-profit college owner, Education Management Corp.

and more »
home | site map |       Disclaimer |       Privacy Policy
© 2006