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Trying times or hiring time?
by Robert C. Powell
III
Virginia Business
July 2005
Some corporate leaders used
to think that “What’s good for General Motors
is good for the USA.” That logic would suggest
that, when things are bad for GM, they are also bad
for everyone else. But at a time when the giant automaker
is talking about shutting down plants and cutting 25,000
jobs, many Virginia companies are rapidly expanding.
Their problem is not figuring out how to get rid of
workers but how to find and keep the best ones.
Richmond-based contributing
writer Lisa Antonelli Bacon examines this issue in this
month’s cover story and finds that many companies
have come up with innovative ways to nurture employees.
But, she cautions, employees should not expect a return
to the coddling some enjoyed in the tech boom of the
late 1990s.
Another story focuses on work
force development from a different angle. Contributing
writer Heather Hays discovers that many companies are
developing customized executive education programs for
their top managers.
Revitalization of places rather
than people is the subject of two other articles. Contributing
writer Dena Sloan looks at state historic tax credits
and the influence they are having on the rehabilitation
of old buildings in Virginia’s cities. Meanwhile,
one of Virginia’s most historic cities, Williamsburg,
is finding ways to rejuvenate its tourism industry while
diversifying its economy.
The economics lesson that may
be drawn from these stories is that a business environment
that is bad for some companies is good for others. All
companies have to adapt to their times, or else they
are history.
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