The Trader Joe’s Lesson: How to Pay a Living Wage and Still Make Money in Retail

The Trader Joe’s Lesson: How to Pay a Living Wage and Still Make Money in Retail

I have a decently paying job, but that doesn’t mean I don’t see the value of having a strong, fairly paid middle class.  It just makes sense. Plus, I bet these employees actually spend money in their place of employment because they can afford to do so.

via The Trader Joe’s Lesson: How to Pay a Living Wage and Still Make Money in Retail – Sophie Quinton – The Atlantic.

Many employers believe that one of the best ways to raise their profit margin is to cut labor costs. But companies like QuikTrip, the grocery-store chain Trader Joe’s, and Costco Wholesale are proving that the decision to offer low wages is a choice, not an economic necessity. All three are low-cost retailers, a sector that is traditionally known for relying on part-time, low-paid employees. Yet these companies have all found that the act of valuing workers can pay off in the form of increased sales and productivity.

“Retailers start with this philosophy of seeing employees as a cost to be minimized,” says Zeynep Ton of MIT’s Sloan School of Management. That can lead businesses into a vicious cycle. Underinvestment in workers can result in operational problems in stores, which decrease sales. And low sales often lead companies to slash labor costs even further. Middle-income jobs have declined recently as a share of total employment, as many employers have turned full-time jobs into part-time positions with no benefits and unpredictable schedules.

QuikTrip, Trader Joe’s, and Costco operate on a different model, Ton says. “They start with the mentality of seeing employees as assets to be maximized,” she says. As a result, their stores boast better operational efficiency and customer service, and those result in better sales. QuikTrip sales per labor hour are two-thirds higher than the average convenience-store chain, Ton found, and sales per square foot are over 50 percent higher.

 

Build the World You Want to Live In | Phil Windley’s Technometria

Build the World You Want to Live In | Phil Windley’s Technometria

This is worth some thought. Technology marches forward. That is what technology does.

What happens because of that technology, though, is not set in stone. And don’t trust anybody that tells you otherwise.

Everywhere. Everything, even disposable things like razors or pens, will be gathering data…about you.

We probably don’t really have a choice about whether a $0.03 wireless sensor platform will exist. Technology marches on.

But we do have a choice about how it will be employed. If we follow the path we’re on now, all those devices will be controlled by some company somewhere that is providing the service behind them. All that data that all those devices are gathering about you will be streamed back to a walled garden via an encrypted channel to end up as fodder for some big data analytics platform that will be used by someone to sell you more stuff. You will be spied on by everything around you with no rational way to understand where all that data is going and how it’s being used. We’ll create government regulations that will do little to rationalize your world or help you understand it because they will only succeed in further Balkanizing it.

There is another path: in this alternate world all the devices that are related to you will push their data into a place that you control. This will seem rational and natural because the model will follow the structure of the world you’re already used to with clear delineations between public and private spaces and easy-to-understand controls over how data is used and shared. I say “natural” in a literal way. This is the way the physical world works and we’re all used to it. In this alternate world you are in control.

There’s not much question which of these worlds most of us would want to live in, and yet most companies aren’t doing anything that will get us any closer to that better place. The short-term drivers push everyone toward closed, walled gardens fueled by adtech. But blaming companies and short-term pressures is too convenient. People run companies. People work at companies. And people pursue short-term goals all the while hoping this better world will somehow magically emerge. It won’t. Not unless we build it. We have to build it.

If you work in tech, you have an ethical responsibility to build the world you want to live in. Simple as that.

via Build the World You Want to Live In | Phil Windley’s Technometria.

The Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Contest

The Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Contest

This is very interesting. Figment.com is having a Doctor Who fan fiction contest. Details below. I find fan fiction to be really restrictive to my creativity, but this seems like it would be really fun. I love me some Doctor Who.

MARCH 21, 2013

The Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Contest

20  8 Posted by Laura Chamberlain

There are three things we Whovians know to be absolutely true:

1. Bow ties are cool.

2. The TARDIS is bigger on the inside.

3. Doctor Who returns to our televisions and our hearts on Saturday, March 30!

In celebration of The Doctor’s return, we’re hosting a wiblbly-wobbly, timey-wimey contest!

Prompt

In 1,200 words or fewer, write a story inspired by Doctor Who. Tag your story DoctorWhoContest.

Prizes

One grand-prize winner will receive a Doctor Who poster and Fez and Bow Tie Set.

One second-prize winner will receive a Sonic Screwdiver LED Flashlight.

One third-prize winner will receive River Song’s TARDIS Journal.

How to Enter

1. Read the full rules.

2. Create an account on Figment.com.

3. Start a new writing of 1,200 words or fewer.

4. Tag your writing with DoctorWhoContest on the “Details” tab.

5. Press “Publish Now.”

6. You should receive a pop-up confirmation of your entry, and in about two hours or so, your piece should appear among the submissions.

You have until Wednesday, April 3 at 11:59 p.m. ET to enter a story. Voting will run until Wednesday, April 10 at 5:00 p.m. ET. The Figment editors will choose the winners from the top 10 most-hearted entries.

via The Doctor Who Fan-Fiction Contest | The Daily Fig.

On The Theme

On The Theme

So, those of you, my vocal and not so vocal readers, what do you think of the current theme (look and feel) of the blog? Today I tinkered with it a bit and fixed things for those reading from a mobile device, mainly I’m now hiding the sidebar on really small screens and also hiding the ad at the top.

More directly, what do you think of the header image? Is it too large? I like it, but I could see as a reader how it might be a pain to have to scroll past the header.

Overall, I like this theme. I like the large font and white background especially. But I’m more than happy to make some tweaks to make you all happy too.

Mom Heart Pregnant With Baby Heart

Mom Heart Pregnant With Baby Heart

My daughter is home sick with strep throat and everyone else isn’t feeling well, either. And so, I’m home with them. Not much time to mess around here.

Instead, I thought I’d post a drawing my daughter made yesterday in the doctor’s office waiting room. I think it’s pretty adorable. Mom heart is pregnant with baby heart.

On second look, it tells a story. In the top, the heart is pregnant. The bottom right features the happy Mother and Daughter heart.

MomAndBabyHeart