Taking on a new employee is a big commitment, particularly for small businesses. A $50,000 per year employee is the equivalent of a $300,000 loan from a bank in terms of the economic cost to the company. But the initial risk of making a new hire can be hedged with strategic planning. Before making the decision to create a new position, small businesses must assess their own individual needs. This means considering any challenges their business is facing and contemplating how a new hire can serve as a remedy. Positions should be created and filled only when absolutely vital to a business' sustainability and growth. Our own business serves as an example of this strategy. By not only hiring smart people, but strategically filling positions, we were able to expand and continue to grow, despite the economic downturn.
One of the most valuable lessons I've learned as a business owner is that you simply can't know or do everything. Every person develops a particular skillset, which they hone throughout their professional careers. It is these skills that drive them towards success, and carve out a specific role within the business community. As a business owner, you are faced with choosing between focusing your time on business development, or the actual day-to-day of the business you run. This is where smart hiring comes into play.
The reality is, there will always be someone smarter than you or someone who can do something better than you can. Understanding- and utilizing the implications of- this is a critical decipher between business owners and smart business owners. Smart business owners hire these people, knowing full well that these people aren't competition, they are assets. In my own entrepreneurial experience, my partner and I found we could only take our business so far. When we started to surround ourselves with smart people with different skill sets and expertise, we were able to transform our idea into the successful business it is today.
As a small business owner, I salute Inc. for honoring those who have laid the pavement for the road to recovery by putting people to work. Every business can make a contribution, by identifying weaknesses in their business and taking on employees who can provide the remedy. Every job counts -- every new person hired is one less person on unemployment, one more person who is making an income that they can then spend and re-invest in the economy. As U.S. based business owners, we owe it to ourselves and to our communities to take the first step towards economic recovery. We can hire more by hiring strategically, hiring smarter.
Source: Huff Post
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