Talent drawn to local firms

Chinese companies are increasingly attractive to professionals: Study

China’s workforce is maturing and giving priority to different aspects of corporate culture, a new survey shows.

The 2013 MRIC Talent Report by recruitment firm MRIC/MRI China Group surveyed more than 5,000 Chinese professionals and managers on the Chinese mainland, and in Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan.

It found that Chinese professionals were “increasingly being lured” by local corporations, as State-owned enterprises and domestic private-sector companies expand within the nation and abroad.

Chinese companies are “increasingly attractive when compared with Western (multinational corporations) in terms of career growth and development,” wrote Christine Raynaud, chief executive officer of MRIC, and Angie Eagan, managing director of MRIC in China.

Chinese companies may be able to “draw on strong nationalistic sentiment” with workers because there is “pride associated with working for a Chinese company – especially one that is seen as progressive and technologically sophisticated with good career opportunities,” the authors wrote.

China’s economy is no longer expanding at a double-digit pace, and MRIC found that foreign companies are not investing as aggressively as previously.

Therefore, Chinese workers are realizing that “foreign companies do not necessarily offer broader roles or great job security”, according to the report.

Respondents in the survey said they valued companies with clear visions for the future, which helps clarify workers’ career paths.

During times of fast economic growth, companies developed “fast-track promotion” programs, but “people now realize that a title change does not necessarily mean a broader role or greater job security”.

Chinese professionals are now looking for companies with effective business strategies in China that allow for long-term growth.

As businesses in China mature, MRIC noted that leadership needs have also evolved.

“When we look at the most important aspects of culture to employees (and see) the belief in fairness and promotion on merit, we begin to build a picture of the expectations that are placed on leaders in China today,” MRIC said.

Asked how their company culture rates in terms of fairness and promotion on merit, 18.9 percent of workers at Chinese companies rated their companies as “poor,” compared with 15.4 percent of foreign firms.

In the area of work-life balance, professionals are facing more travel and time spent working away from home, as Chinese businesses expand.

Female respondents (42 percent) said that flexibility in work is the most important aspect of work-life balance, compared with 36.3 percent of male respondents.

Among women, 25.8 percent said it is important to have regular working hours with little or no overtime, compared with 17.4 percent of male workers.

Baoshan, Shanghai set to build Asia Pacific’s largest professional cruise terminal

As Shanghai builds out the Shanghai International Shipping Center and the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone, the city’s Baoshan district is pushing ahead with the construction of its own two development zones, the Chinese Cruise Tourism Development Pilot Area and the Shanghai International Cruise Industry Development Comprehensive Reform Pilot Area.

Baoshan, the heart of which is the Wusongkou International Cruise Terminal, is developing its own cruise industry, in a move to pour new vitality into the transformation and development of Binjiang New Area.

In September of this year, the Ministry of Transport of China and the Municipal Government of Shanghai jointly published their opinions concerning the implementation of the Overall Scheme for the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone as a means to accelerate the establishment of the Shanghai International Shipping Center. In the document the two authorities mentioned for the first time that they encourage the development of the cruise industry and support the establishment of a port of call for cruise ships in Shanghai.

Baoshan is presently considering the proposed ways to connect the Chinese Cruise Tourism Development Pilot Area to the Free Trade Zone, including setting up cruise service firms in the Free Trade Zone jointly with foreign cruise companies; partnering in ventures such as cruise travel agencies, cruise staff training, cruise staff recruitment agencies and cruise ship materials supplies; using the experience of foreign cruise service firms in market operation; and actively extending the cruise industry chain to enhance the growth and development of Shanghai’s cruise industry.

Policies such as “allowing the establishment of bonded exhibition and trade platforms in certain areas” clearly specified in the Overall Scheme for the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone can be applied to Binjiang New Area in Baoshan, allowing the area to set up duty-free showrooms and trade centers specially for cruise ship passengers.

Baoshan aims to become the flagship cruise terminal in China and even in Asia, by proactively connecting to the Free Trade Zone, by furnishing all the services necessary for a cruise ship’s port of call as well as by building out the infrastructure needed to encourage cruise companies to choose Baoshan for their headquarters. The district plans to actively develop ancillary markets related to the cruise industry and attract cruise liner, yacht and pleasure-boat firms whose main businesses are the offering of cruise-related services.

Ultimately Baoshan intends to expand the definition of what is meant by “cruise industry”, by making Binjiang the pioneer in the development of the industry in China, so that the area can rightfully become known as the “Long Beach of Shanghai” and serve as the beachhead for the development of the sector across China and even Asia. The district will also explore the best ways to set up convenient customs clearance facilities in the demonstration area, including 48-hour visa-free transit and the set-up of duty-free shops and refund offices within the area. In addition to existing routes to Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong and to Southeast Asia, long-haul routes –including some to Europe and the United States- should be launched in the future from Wusongkou terminal. Wang Hong, secretary of the CPC Shanghai Baoshan District Committee, said Baoshan is actively seeking to become a core part of Greater Shanghai in line with Shanghai’s urban development planning.

The Wusongkou Interational Cruise Terminal was approved for trial operation on March 1, 2012. The design of the terminal includes 1,500 meters of frontage facing the water, two large cruise ship berths which have already been completed as part of the 774 meters of frontage that were part of the first phase of the project. The two berths can simultaneously accommodate two 200,000 tonnage cruise ships. A 514-meter approach bridge connects the terminal with its rear clearance platform. The 23,000-square meter terminal with an annual passenger throughput of 608,000 people provides comprehensive entry and exit facilities for tourists, including the passenger terminal, boarding corridor and boarding equipment and other supporting passenger service facilities.

A second phase will add two more berths and extends the terminal by 736 meters to address the berthing demands of two large cruise ships. The Wusongkou International Cruise Terminal is the largest specialized cruise terminal in terms of capabilities, the size of cruise ships served and passenger traffic. By 2014, the terminal is expected to serve 239 cruise ships and 1.15 million passengers. Wusongkou International Cruise Terminal chairman Chen Xiqi advocates the development of marine tourism, cultural and leisure activities as well as high-end hotels to create a true cruise terminal “portal” in China and a global cruise hub port.

Skype announces new partnership in China

Microsoft Corp’s online chatting arm, Skype, announced a new joint venture in China after ending its six-year partnership with Li Kashing-controlled media conglomerate Tom Group.

Skype’s new partner will be GMF, an Internet communications company co-created by Founder Group and State-owned newspaper Guangming Daily.

Details of the partnership deal were not disclosed.

The lesser-known GMF will help Skype build a good relationship with the Chinese government because of its parent companies’ backgrounds, said Judd Harcombe, head of Skype’s global market development.

He added that Skype, which specializes in online instant messaging and video call services, will launch more localized services for Chinese users in order to boost its user base.

Chen Jiandong, vice-president of Guangming Daily’s flagship website, said the joint venture will help GMF to better engage the mobile Internet market and develop new-media business.

Established in 2003, Skype has more than 300 million active users globally. It entered the China market in 2004 and achieved a sizeable user population among high-end customers.

Microsoft acquired Skype in 2010 for $8.5 billion to replace its Windows Live Messenger instant-messaging service.

Local services such as WeChat and QQ have been mounting a strong threat to the United States company since 2010. QQ is said to be the most-used online chatting service in China based on customer count. The company declined to provide a figure.

Toronto is world’s most youthful city; Shanghai ranks 20th: survey

Toronto has been named the “most youthful city” in the world, while Shanghai ranked No 20, according to a new survey released on Monday.

The Canadian city was followed by Berlin and New York in the first YouthfulCities Index, a ranking of 25 global cities based on 80 indicators within 16 categories of urban life, including youth employment, financial access, economic status, civic participation, food, sports, music and art.

Toronto scored among the top five in more than half of the 16 categories and ranked No 1 for diversity.

Shanghai, which was the only Chinese city on the index, ranked fifth overall in the category of public space, sports and gaming and had the lowest youth unemployment rate among all surveyed cities.

Other youth-friendly Asian cities included Tokyo, which ranked ninth but came in first for economic status.

Seoul, the 10th most youth-friendly city, ranked first for environmental sustainability.

Some 1,600 young people aged 15 to 29 were surveyed for the index.

The aim of the survey was to “measure cities from a youth perspective”, said Youthful Cities, an organisation that helps youth and civic leaders to build better cities.

“We want to transform the insights that we gather through the Index to inspire a programme of action that allows young people to make their cities more attractive places to live, work and play,” it said.

Real estate developers hit back at claims of unpaid tax

Chinese real estate developers owed at least 3.8 trillion yuan (US$623 billion) in land appreciation tax between 2005 and 2012, according to a China Central Television report.

However, property companies hit back, with one saying the report was based on a “misunderstanding.”

Another threatened to sue.

In a weekly consumer program on Sunday, CCTV said the firms should have paid more than 4.6 trillion yuan in land taxes, but authorities collected just 800 billion yuan.

The CCTV report cited Li Jinsong, a Beijing-based lawyer and also certified public accountant and tax agent. Li had tracked data released by the National Bureau of Statistics, Ministry of Finance and State Administration of Taxation.

The CCTV report did not say how many firms were alleged to have failed to pay taxes, but said they included 45 listed Chinese property developers, trading both domestically and overseas.

In China, developers must pay tax on the increase in the value of their land when they sell properties on the land or transfer the lease.

Developers which failed to pay the tax included China Vanke Co, SOHO China Ltd, Agile Property Holdings Ltd and Guangzhou R&F Properties Co, CCTV said.

Its report said the Beijing Huayuan Group owed around 540 million yuan, SOHO China 6.4 billion yuan, and China Vanke, the country’s largest homebuilder by sales, 5.8 billion yuan.

Huayuan President Ren Zhiqiang threatened to sue CCTV.

“I only know the stupidity and ignorance of CCTV after seeing this report,” said Ren on his widely followed microblog. “It wrongly assumed company’s provision for the tax as an immediate obligation for payment of the tax. The LAT will be due after developers complete the project.”

He added: “I’m studying how to publicly prosecute CCTV.”

Li, the lawyer cited in the report, defended his claims on his microblog.

“I only know your stupidity and ignorance in the field of taxation after reading your posts,” he shot back at Ren.
“Please consult your chief financial officer before posting.”

China Vanke said yesterday that it obeyed all laws and regulations in its business operations and remained an honest taxpayer.

“The CCTV report was probably based on a misunderstanding,” Vanke told netease.com. “It mistook ‘provision’ for ‘obligation.’”

Gemdale Corp, which was said to owe 2.6 billion yuan, told the website it was “inappropriate” to use the word “owe.”
It also questioned the accuracy of data used in the CCTV report.

Last night, more than 10 real estate developers named in the CCTV report, including Gemdale, Huayuan and COFCO Property, filed statements with the country’s two stock exchanges saying that they did not owe tax.

Huawei Hires Foreign Executives in Global Push

Huawei Technologies Co., which is struggling to break out of the mold of a Chinese company, is recruiting more Western executives and rolling out a long-term incentive program to attract foreign workers.

The moves come as the Shenzhen-based company expands aggressively overseas and tries to remake itself into a global brand. Huawei, which generates two-thirds of its revenue outside China, is now the world’s second-largest supplier of telecommunications-network equipment after industry leader Ericsson. ERIC-B.SK -0.30%

Yet Huawei’s senior executives are predominantly Chinese, and only about one-quarter of its 150,000 employees are non-Chinese nationals.

Huawei’s fast growth in the telecom-equipment market has drawn criticism in the West.

A U.S. congressional report last year labeled the company a security threat and questioned whether it has close ties to the Chinese government. Similar concerns have been raised in Australia and the U.K. Huawei has denied the allegations.

To attract workers in India, where Huawei hires many engineers for its local research-and-development facility, the company earlier this year introduced an employee-benefit program modeled after its China share-ownership program. That program lets Chinese workers buy a stake in the company and profit when Huawei does well.

Huawei plans to roll out this benefit to other countries, said spokesman Roland Sladek. He declined to elaborate.

The move is significant because Huawei has called its Chinese share-ownership program a driver of the company’s success. About 74,000 of the 110,000 Chinese nationals employed at Huawei are shareholders.

In India, Huawei employees become eligible after two years. But unlike its China program, overseas employees can’t actually own a stake in the company.

Still, the program is likely to allow the company to “create a strong loyalty among the best talent” as it expands overseas, said Mr. Sladek, who joined Huawei last year from ST-Ericsson, a European joint venture of Ericsson and semiconductor-manufacturer STMicroelectronics STM +0.89% NV.

If Huawei is seen as an international firm, this could ease security concerns and give it greater access to local markets, said Sandy Shen, a Gartner Inc. research director based in Shanghai. “It’s very important that they put on the face of a global company when they go into international markets.”

Huawei’s efforts to transform itself into a global company are becoming apparent at its Shenzhen headquarters.

Indians, Pakistanis, Chinese and Westerners are among the 30,000 employees who work on the nearly square-mile campus. The campus offers Western restaurants serving steak, and an Indian and halal canteen with freshly made chapati flat breads.

CT Johnson, a 45-year-old U.S. finance expert, left Ericsson last year to be Huawei’s corporate controller. Mr. Johnson said he had qualms about taking the job, questioning whether “they might be hiring me as a Western guy just for show and without real responsibility.” But, he said, those concerns turned out to be unfounded as he was granted access to Huawei’s financial statements and details of its operations. Mr. Johnson has since changed jobs within the company, leading a division that negotiates sales contracts with customers.Still, all of Huawei’s 13 board directors are Chinese, raising questions about how much impact a handful of foreign executives will have.

Huawei has also hired a number of other high-profile Western executives to diversify its management team, including Colin Giles, a former Nokia Corp. executive from Australia, and John Suffolk, formerly the U.K. government’s chief information officer.

Other Chinese technology companies are taking similar steps. Lenovo Group Ltd. 0992.HK +1.77% , which bought International Business Machines Corp.’s personal-computer business in 2005, has hired more executives and managers from Western competitors in recent years.

Lenovo overtook Hewlett-Packard Co. HPQ +0.24% as the world’s biggest PC maker this year.

Western executives are becoming increasingly receptive to Chinese companies, said Bhavya Sehgal, head of Asian-Pacific research for Frontier Strategy Group, as these companies expand and snap up assets around the world.

Huawei also has more opportunities to recruit executives, in part because some Western rivals have been struggling and cutting jobs, said Canalys analyst Matthew Ball.

In October, Alcatel-Lucent ALU.FR +0.77% of France said it would reduce its workforce by roughly 15%. In July, Huawei said its revenue for the first half of the year rose 11% from a year earlier to 113.8 billion yuan ($18.7 billion).

Mr. Johnson said he is adjusting to an “indirect” manner of communication at a Chinese company. In one of his first projects for Huawei, Mr. Johnson forged ahead with a new method of compiling financial reports, not understanding that colleagues’ questions were really an objection.

“At Western companies, I would expect my subordinates to challenge me, in a direct but respectful way,” Mr. Johnson said. “At Huawei, and I suspect in most Chinese companies, that’s the same as cursing.”

The project was later scrapped.

“Chinese companies are giving control, but the question is whether they give all the independence required for Western executives to be successful,” said Mr. Sehgal.

China to see sharpest rise in salaries during 2014

Salaries across the Asia-Pacific region are set to rise an average 7% in 2014, with China and Vietnam leading the way in East Asia, after allowing for inflation and Japan seeing the smallest raises, according to an American global professional service firm, Towers Watson.

According to the survey, salaries in China are forecast to rise 8.5% and in Vietnam 11.5%, before inflation is taken into account, the global risk management and human resource consulting firm said.

It added that taking inflation into consideration both countries are set for 4.9% increase on an average. Meanwhile, the figure stands at 4.5% for Hong Kong and Singapore, 11% for India and only 2.3% for Japan.

What could be further interpreted from the findings is that many companies in the Asia-Pacific region are finding it harder to find and retain suitably skilled staff, as more than 80% of the companies surveyed say a larger portion of their salary budget increase allocation would go to high performers in 2014. Moreover, less than 1% of the companies anticipate a pay freeze, compared to nearly 4% in 2013.

Sambhav Rakyan, Global Data Services practice leader, Asia-Pacific at Towers Watson said that overall the data for 2013 and 2014 shows great similarity, which is assumable that companies should be budgeting for salary increases much in the same manner as last year.

However, he indicated that it depends on the affordability for the company. If the company is growing at a fast rate and revenue exceeds the cost by a huge margin, it is easier to be aggressive on salary budgets than low growth companies. He also noted that Employee Value Proposition (EVP) is strongly significant.

“People may say ‘it’s not about the money’, but the reality is that base pay is the number one drive for attraction and retention globally based on the Tower Watson 2012 Global Workforce Study. However, we also believe that a well-defined employee value proposition plays a very important part too”, said Rakyan.

Among the many areas that the survey looked into, the pharmaceutical sector is expected to see the biggest pay rises at 7.3% on average in 2014 for the region. While retail and media sectors are expected to see about 5.4% – 5.7% rise, down a touch from 2013.

Meanwhile, the anticipated salary rises in financial services are considered to be in an area of particular interest, given the sector has just come out of several years in the doldrums. The survey suggested that those working in the financial services sector could look forward to increases region-wide averaging 6.2%, compared to 5.7% in 2013.

The biggest raises are anticipated in China (8.8%), India (10%) and Indonesia (9%). Whereas, the major regional financial centers; Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan will see more modest raises – respectively 4%, 4.5% and 2.3%.

It is also important to note that Asia’s emerging economies, such as Indonesia, Sri Lanka and parts of Indochina, are the standard bearers for high pay increases, as these countries tend to have the highest economic growth rates of around 6%-8.5%. However, they also have the strongest inflationary pressures which take up much of those pay rises.

According to Jeffrey Tang, director of Towers Watson’s Talent and Rewards practice in Hong Kong, there are several factors that drive behind the increase of salaries throughout the region. The major ones are such as the great increase in demand for compliance staff to meet with the increased regulations and also the regional expansions by local players that seek to go beyond their domestic shores.

Hotel group IHG looking to recruit 110,000 new staff in China

Intercontinental Hotels Group (IHG) is looking to double the number of hotels it has in China in the next two years and recruit more than 110,000 employees in the country.

This is according to UK newspaper City AM, reporting comments of chief executive officer Richard Solomons yesterday (19 November) ahead of meeting with investors.

The company has already doubled Chinese hotels to 200 in the last five years.

Earlier this year the firm announced a major recruitment drive in India – albeit quite not on the scale of its Chinese plans – and last year talent manager Claire Guberg spoke of IHG’s plan to “look at internal talent first of all” as expansion continued.

Alcatel pins hopes on China 4G

Alcatel Lucent SA’s CEO says the company’s selection by China Mobile Ltd as a primary supplier for the Chinese telecom operator’s rollout of the world’s largest high-speed wireless technology system “proves we are fulfilling the needs and requirements of Chinese telecommunications companies”.

“We are proud to be part of the development of the telecommunications industry in China,” Michel Combes told China Daily on the sidelines of the company’s 2013 technology symposium.

Under the contract, announced during the conference in Basking Ridge, New Jersey, about 35 miles west of New York, Paris-based Alcatel-Lucent will supply Evolved Packet Core, or EPC, a framework for providing voice and data services in China Mobile’s 4G long term evolution (LTE) network. Terms were not disclosed.

4G LTE is the standard for wireless communication of high-speed data for mobile phones and data terminals. Fourth-generation wireless networks achieve data download speeds of up to 80 megabits per second, four times faster than 3G networks.

The contract announcement – which will give Alcatel-Lucent a dominant 24 percent share of the Chinese telecom operator’s 4G LTE network – came as Combes fleshed out a restructuring plan aimed at ending continuing losses at the company, created by Alcatel’s 2006 acquisition of former AT&T Inc equipment arm Lucent Technologies.

In what he has dubbed the “Shift Plan”, Combes has said he will slash 10,000 jobs globally and sell assets, while reorienting Alcatel-Lucent toward several businesses, such as cloud computing, broadband wireless networks and Internet protocol routing.

“We are all at a turning point in the industry”, Combes told an audience of analysts and media at the symposium, held near Lucent’s former headquarters in New Providence, New Jersey. It was there that the company’s legendary R&D facility, Bell Laboratories, gave the world innovative technologies such as the laser, the transistor, and touch-tone telephone dialing. “What was working five years ago for service providers doesn’t work anymore,” the CEO said.

Through its ventures with China Mobile, the largest telecom operator in China with more than 750 million, or more than 60 percent, of the country’s mobile subscribers, Alcatel-Lucent has played a major role in China’s deployment of 4G wireless networks. As the nation moves closer to starting commercial service based on the technology, the number of applicants for 4G services is expected to surpass 100,000 in major cities, a China Mobile official told China Daily last month.

Combes said in the interview that China’s leadership – which has said it is “preparing for the release of 4G licences” – has shown “a clear willingness to attract broadband services”. Alcatel-Lucent is a major supplier to most of the nation’s service providers, supporting such strategic industries as transportation and energy.

Rising demand in China for high-speed mobile services reflects a “clear understanding that there is direct link between investment in telecommunications and GDP growth”, Combes said.

“China is keen to structure its own telecommunications industry as it reorganizes telecom as a ‘sovereign industry'”, he said. That’s “not only because of growth in China, but because it gives it the ability to build an industry which allows it to export on a worldwide basis.”

A growing appetite for services such as instant messaging also is driving demand, the CEO said.

“When you mix in the change in behavior of customers and also the (influence of) youths who run to this type of technology, that unlocks huge growth,” Combes said. “On top of that you have a strong governmental commitment on the speed at which it has to be rolled out. You have all these ingredients to make it work”.

China’s size poses the biggest challenge in bringing high speed digital services to the country, Combes said.

At the end of the day, “China Mobile, like any customer, is looking for the best, the most talented company for them,” Combes said.

Negotiating Employee Contracts in China

Regardless of what business you are in or where you operate, it is great employees that make a great company. While hiring great employees can be a challenge anywhere, the process of recruiting, retaining and terminating employees is especially tricky in China.

First, let’s dispel the common misconception that labor is cheaper in China. That’s arguably still true for factory workers, but skilled staffers draw significant salaries. At first glance, the numbers may seem deceptively low. A skilled office manager, for example, is paid a monthly salary of $1,000 to $2,500 in China, compared to $3,750 to $5,000 for a comparable position in Arizona, where my American business is headquartered. But in China, employers pay additional taxes on these wages in the form of “social insurance.” The rates vary by province, but in Shanghai, where I do business, the cost is 44 percent above the base salary.

So for a worker earning $2,000 per month, the cost to the employer will actually be $2,880. Additionally, it is customary at the Chinese New Year to give employees a 13th month of pay — including social insurance — for 12 months of work. Amortize that over the year and it raises the monthly cost to $3,120, which is creeping up toward the American pay scale.

Some may argue that there’s a qualitative difference in employee abilities between the two countries, but my experience is that the best people in China are equal in skill to their American counterparts.

Another critical thing to note is that job descriptions in China need to be much more detailed than those in the United States. Being as specific as possible in the labor contract about your expectations is imperative to establishing good working relationships with your Chinese employees. Simply including a sentence at the end of a job description that says “other duties as directed by your supervisor” will not suffice.

For example, in the United States, we think nothing of requiring an American office manager to wash his or her own coffee cup at the end of the day, but in China, the expectation is that an “ayi” — literally, it means “auntie,” but we would call her a maid — cleans up after everyone. In addition, a male employee may view typing a report as woman’s work — and thus beneath his position. That’s why it’s critical to be completely clear about a job’s specific tasks during the job interview and contract negotiations.

Arizona is a right-to-work state, so adjusting to China’s employment-contract system has been challenging for me. I have found that the best bet is to keep a close eye on details. Here are two basics that should be checked carefully, because they change often, sometimes several times a year:

• Term length: All employees get contracts, and they are issued in one-, two- or three-year terms.

• Probation: The one-year contract allows a probation of 30 days for an employee, the two-year contract allows 90 days of probation and six months’ of probation on a three-year contract.

In the probationary period you can terminate an employee without penalty; however, changes to this system are coming soon, so it’s smart for you to have a system to check contracts when necessary.

The best resources to keep you on the good side of Chinese labor law are your labor lawyers, who will update you when rules change. You definitely need a lawyer to represent your company. Labor contracts tend to be one-sided, and they really only govern how you will treat your employees with little impact on how your employees will treat you.

For example, if an employee has a three-year contract, he or she is not penalized for leaving before the contract ends. But if you decide to terminate an employee, you will need to pay one month for every year remaining on the contract, plus a prorated annual bonus. If you fire a staff member in the ninth month of a three-year contract, you will pay four months of salary. Failure to do so will land you in labor court. I’ll cover that in my next entry.

It sounds temping to go with a short contract, but I’ve found that it doesn’t really allow enough time to judge whether a new hire has the necessary skills and will fit into the corporate culture. For management positions, we use a three-year contract – with six months of probation – and for other positions we use a two-year term.

Think of the time you and your staff spend writing up detailed job descriptions and combing through the contractual fine print as an investment in peace of mind. Proper planning will spare you sleepless nights.