

Count Me In®
IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants)
IMA® (Institute of Management Accountants) brings you the latest perspectives and learnings on all things affecting the accounting and finance world, as told by the experts working in the field and the thought leaders shaping the profession. Listen in to gain valuable insight and be included in the future of accounting and finance!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 5, 2022 • 23min
Ep. 210: Ane Ohm – Simplifying FASB’s New Lease Accounting Standards
Connect with Ane: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aneohm/ LeaseCrunch Website: www.leasecrunch.comWhat is ASC 824? The ultimate guide: https://www.leasecrunch.com/blog/asc-8425 FAQs about embedded leases: https://www.leasecrunch.com/blog/embedded-leasesRequest a demo: www.leasecrunch.com/request-a-demoFull Episode Transcript:[00:00:00] < Intro > Adam: Welcome back to Count Me In. The podcast for accounting and finance professionals working in business. I'm Adam Larson. Today we'll be discussing a perennial hot topic lease accounting, specifically, FASB's new standards for private companies and nonprofits under ASC 842. And just in case you're unaware, the deadline to transition to the new standards is December 31st, 2022. Thankfully, I'm joined, today, by a true expert in this, infamously, thorny topic. Ane Ohm, is a CPA as well as co-founder and CEO of LeaseCrunch, a software company that helps companies simplify their lease accounting. If you're looking for practical tips and best practices to make lease accounting a little less stressful, this is the conversation for you. Let's get started. [00:00:51] < Music > Well, Ane, I want to thank you so much for coming on the podcast, today. We are going to be talking about lease accounting. And as all of us know that the standard, the new Lease Accounting Standard deadline is approaching very quickly, and people should get started. We've been talking about this since what? 2018. And if you haven't gotten started the time now is to get started. What do you think? What is your advice to people as we start talking about this? Ane: I think the big thing with any accounting standard is that, and when I was running a different company. A new accounting standard would come up and I would ask my accountant, "What is the last moment I have to do anything about this?" And that's when I would do it. And the challenge with the lease accounting standard, if you wait there's a couple of things, first of all, leases can be complicated. And, so, that analysis of your lease, spending the time understanding it in the context of the new lease standard can take some time. And, secondly, if you need help and you wait the experts are going to be busy. So you're going to have a really difficult time getting a hold of someone who can really guide you through the right steps. So we're actually hearing CPA firms state that if their clients wait, they're going to have to charge them more in order to be able to offer that assistance. Because they're going to be so busy with other things. If you wait until January, February, this is going to be rough. So start now, get on top of it, it's just going to make things, life, better for you. Adam: Yes, for sure, because you don't want to wait till the last possible second because it's going to fall back in your face. Do you think that maybe we could start, in this podcast, to maybe go over some practical expectations and how to make your adoption easier? Especially if you are just getting started now, or even if you've been aware, you've been preparing. But to the actual practical application, it's still going to be a difficult process. Ane: Yes, so there's something to it when you think about the new Lease Standard, you have basically two types of leases. Leases that existed before the standards needed to be implemented, and then leases that start after the standard need to be implemented. So talking about those leases that started before your initial application date of the new standard. The FASB, Financial Accounting Standard Board really wanted to make sure that this was as easy as possible. It sounds like that might not be true, but it is, they have said that repeatedly. And, so, what they've done is they've actually provided some practical expedience and those practical expedience, the whole purpose of them is to simplify the new standard. So for those transition leases, those leases that existed before, if you have a nice software available to you, there's really only six pieces of information that you need to do. If you apply those practical expedience, make sure you're doing the things that make this as easy as possible. And then collect those six basic pieces of information. And those are; start date, well, guess what, that start date is going to be the initial application date of the standard. So if you know that already, huh! If your end is December 31st, that's going to be January 1st, of 2022. All right, so we got one. Second one is, "When does the lease end?" It can be a little more complicated because you have to not just say, "When do I stop paying? When is the initial end of the lease?" I have to, also, look at it and see, "What might I be reasonably certain to renew a term or might I be reasonably certain to terminate early?" So you really have to look at what is the total lease term, including renewals, if you're reasonably certain. It's a high bar but you do have to look at it. The third thing is discount rate. So, and I don't think we know this but those first two seem, they are pretty easy. And the discount rate is the FASB offers the ability to just use the risk-free rate. So that's great because that's publicly available. You don't have to really think about it too hard. Or the challenge with the risk-free rate is that it will tend to be lower, which means your lease liability will be higher. If you don't want that for larger leases, the FASB, also, more recently, allows us to decide your discount rate based on asset class. So you can say, "All right, for my office lease, which is a big lease, it's going to be big dollars, I'll spend the time to figure out the higher discount rate. And if I have vehicles or photocopiers, I'm just going to use the risk-free rate." So that's a nice thing, so that's the third piece of information. Fourth one, is, hey, is this an operating lease or a finance lease? Well, once again, FASB says, "You know what, if you had an operating lease before it's an operating lease now. If you had a capital lease...

Nov 28, 2022 • 29min
Ep. 209: Michael Teape – From disrupted to disruptors: How leaders win in challenging times
Contact Michael Teape: https://www.linkedin.com/in/teapetraining/Teape Training International (TTI): https://www.teapetraininginternational.comGet my FREE eGuide 7 Best Facilitation Tips to Ensure Engagement & Learning to ensure your Online Training Success: https://tti-signup.ck.page/eguideFull Episode Transcript:[00:00:00] < Intro > Adam: Welcome back to Count Me In. I'm Adam Larson from IMA, or the Institute of Management Accountants. For those of us joining us for the first time. I'm excited to welcome back Michael Teape to the podcast. Michael is a seasoned management coach and the co-founder and president of Teape Training International. Today, we discuss the tips for leaders in the face of constant disruption to business as usual. With Covid, inflation, supply chain issues, technology changes, leaders need to stop bracing for the next curve ball, and instead look for ways they can adapt to find new paths to success. It was great to get Michael's insight and optimism on this important topic. Let's get the conversation started. [00:00:45] < Music > Michael, thank you so much for coming back to Count Me In. We've talked about being more productive at work and maximizing our human capital management, in the past with you. But today we're going to focus in on the disrupted leader. And I figured we can start off by what do we mean by the disrupted leader, and how are leaders being disrupted? Michael: I think it's easier to say, "How are they not being disrupted? " Adam: Yes. Michael: Because, I think, when you're a leader in your organization and everyone thinks about what's going on? What are the challenges right now? There's some common themes that are only getting quicker, faster, more challenging. So you can think of climate change. Climate change has a huge impact on how we work? Where we work? All of those, and safety elements of that as well. Social change; the diversity of the people we work with now, that's been being disrupted. We're not all in the office in one place, that's another part of social change as well. Covid-19, I mean, hello? Last three years, it's been a real challenge. And that's one of the biggest ones because it was an unknown challenge. The others climate, social, and the last one, technology. The technology revolution, what they call the fourth industrial revolution, are the four key areas I see right now, and there'll be more. There'll be more things that come along, let alone the small challenges of running a business. Issues with clients, lack of clients, too many clients, things not going well with clients, disruption on so many levels. So now we've cheered your audience up. And, so, it is not an easy place. It's more about how we react to it, and technology is one of the biggest ones. That fourth industrial revolution talking about the technology revolution. It's that people are coming up with intuitive ways of breaking our systems and doing things differently. If you have an organization that's run on mainframe systems, spreadsheets, there are so much things available to skip all of that.Fintech, the financial technologies that really don't have any of those and are just very simply making connections, using the technology in front of them quicker, faster, cheaper, that's a huge part that's going on as well. So, yes, where are they not being disrupted, Adam? Adam: Exactly, I think, you hit it on the nose, there's so much disruption happening all over. But when you're thinking about, as a leader yourself, if I'm thinking about my team and how I act with my team. Yes, there's so many outside disruptions. What does it look like, for me, if I want to look upon myself and how am I being disrupted? And what does a disrupted one look like? Because you don't want to stay there, obviously. Michael: No, it's a stressful place to be, being disrupted, you're playing defense. You're frustrated that things aren't working, which causes stress. Which also limits our vision and our focus. A lot of being creative and getting ourselves out of these issues, by thinking of new things that we could do to face a challenge and move forward. So, yes, that looks like, and I'll say this, Adam, a lot of the time we don't realize we're in this space. Call it the disruptive leader, we don't know that we're acting in a certain way because we're under stress. We've got our blinkers on, like, "My business is not making money. How are we going to make some money?" And being stressful, following up on one particular client who's never going to give you the money is a blinkered approach. You need to be looking at, "Well, what could I do to create another million dollars?" Depending on the size of your organization; 50, 100, million. "What could I be doing?" So they're disrupted, they're blind to the problem, really. And what I mean by that is that they're focused on the minute, the tactical, trying to get the number of accounts, trying to charge more per client. When really the problem is maybe what I'm offering the client is not what they're looking for. Have you ever thought about that? And that would be a curious mindset. So being blind to the problem is all about losing your focus overall and focusing on the minutiae and doing… Have you ever heard that adage, "If you're ever doing the same thing and expecting a different result, that's a definition of insanity." I love that term, that phrase. So that's where someone would be stuck, that would be one of them. And that links into the other one is having no direction, no purpose, and what I mean is that; where are we going? Where do I want to go? And I think I shared on our last podcast, a little bit, I'll have to go back and have a little look at it, maybe your listeners would do as well. Is that I was working with a client who was totally disrupted by Covid. They were a Fintech. They were 30% growth they were aiming at and it just disappeared overnight. Because people didn't need to manage cash flow because they weren't out spending cash. And, so, the flow was very different and it wasn't where their market was. But instead of panicking this person found the purpose. Well, her purpose was to take over the world and help the cash management globally, however, that's not possible right now. So I believe it's coming back but let's focus on rebuilding what we have. The mergers, the acquisitions, being more efficient. Let's focus on fixing what we have, and we have a dream time right now. Let's not think of it as, "Oh, my goodn...

Nov 17, 2022 • 36min
Bonus | CMA 50th Anniversary: Continuing to Attract the Best and the Brightest
In this special podcast celebrating 50 years of the CMA® (Certified Management Accountant) program, Margaret Michaels, IMA’s Brand Content and Storytelling Manager will be talking with two CMAs, one who earned his CMA in 1975 soon after the CMA program had just begun, and another who earned her CMA quite recently in April 2022. Connect with our Speakers:John Macaulay: https://www.linkedin.com/in/johncmacaulay/ Colleen Lucero: https://www.linkedin.com/in/colleen-lucero/Full Episode Transcript:[00:00:00] < Intro > Margaret: So in this special podcast, Celebrating 50 Years of the CMA, or the Certified Management Accountant program. Margaret Michaels, myself, IMA's Brand Content and Storytelling Manager, will be talking with two CMAs. One who earned his CMA in 1975, soon after the CMA program had just begun. And another who earned her CMA quite recently, in April of 2022. John Macaulay is a former IMA chair, who was among the first CMA program completers. He held a number of distinguished roles in the industry. Including serving as CFO of the telecom company, Royal Street Communications. Colleen Lucero is a Manager of Client Analytics at Graebel, a relocation services company. Colleen earned her CMA in April of 2022. I am so pleased we could chat, today, with both John and Colleen about their CMA experiences and career journeys. [00:01:15] < Music > Margaret: So, John, I'll start with you. I noticed in your bio that you did not study accounting as undergraduate major. Rather you pursued a biology and chemistry degree. What made you decide to shift into accounting, and how did you hear about the CMA program? John: Thank you, Margaret. It's good to be here today and chat with everyone. That's a rather complicated story, but I will try to shorten it up as best I can. I graduated from college in 1965, with a degree in biology and chemistry. I was studying pre-med. I had pretty much decided, by the end of my junior year, that I probably didn't want to spend another six years in school. And, so, I decided I wasn't going to medical school. 1965 was the middle of Vietnam. And, so, I signed up for Navy Officer Candidate School and I went and became a Navy officer. A guided-missile officer on a couple of different destroyers. And it was a great experience and exposure, for me, to not only international travel and different cultures, but also to leadership and the military. When I got out of the military, I knew I wanted to go to graduate school and get an MBA. I hadn't settled on accounting at that point, clearly, but I knew I was headed in the direction of business. I had worked at a bank, in Cambridge, and I actually became the head of personnel. I was there for only a year and a half, actually, and after about six months, I became the head of personnel, we had 650 employees and 12 branches. So it was a rather challenging decision to go back to graduate school. But I was accepted by Northwestern, the Kellogg School, and we moved from Boston, by that time I was married, from Boston to Chicago, and spent two years at Kellogg getting an MBA. And there I specialized in accounting and finance, Accounting, and Information Systems. The second year, I became the assistant to the chair of the Accounting and Information Systems Department. And did some tutoring and wrote a couple of cases for him. From there, I went to work for General Mills in Minneapolis, and this was 1972, I started working in May. And in about September, my boss, two levels up, whose name was Jerry Ford, came around and said, "John, would you be interested in taking the CMA?" Well, I had actually refused, at Kellogg, to take the CPA exam, and I'd interviewed with some of the big, I guess it was the Big Six at that point, it may have been Big Eight still. And I told them I was willing to go into consulting, but I didn't want to be an auditor. I had no interest in the CPA. And, so, they didn't accept me, but I had plenty of opportunities. And, so, I said to Jerry, "Sure I would. I'd absolutely love it." But I said I wanted a certification and I didn't want to be a CPA. I wanted to be a management accountant in business. So Jerry said, "Well, this organization, called NAA, is going to have this exam." And Susan's grandfather was actually a member of NAA and had been the president of the Boston Chapter many years ago. And I said, "Well, that's perfect." And, so, we began to try to get ready for this exam, which we knew nothing about. And we held one or two, "Study sessions" in our headquarters, in Minneapolis. But we didn't have any real success because it was just a reading list. Some of the books I'd had in graduate school. So, anyway, we went, it was a two-and-a-half-day exam at the University of Minnesota. And I listened to part of the previous podcast and Denny Beresford talked about the ice storm in Pittsburgh. Well, the second day we had a blizzard in Minneapolis, we actually lost the power. It was in the library at the University of Minnesota. We actually lost the power, but there were plenty of windows. So we had a lot of light, and we just continued writing the exam, so it wasn't really an issue. I was fortunate, I did pass all five parts of the first exam. So I say I got it in 1972, but IMA decided I didn't have, "Enough management experience" at that point, and, so, they wouldn't give me the certificate. So I actually got my certificate later in the second batch of certificates. But that's fine, I didn't have a problem because I actually wrote them a letter and said, "Well, I think I have the experience and this and that." And next thing I knew they wanted me to be on an exam review committee. And, so, that's actually how I got involved with leadership in IMA, which I'll talk about a little bit later. Margaret: That's a great story. It seems everyone, in the first class of CMA takers, had unfavorable weather conditions. To add to the challenge in taking the test for the first time. And Colleen, like John, your undergraduate degree is not in accounting, but in Spanish Language and Literature. So what prompted you to embark on an accounting career, and how did you hear about the CMA program? Colleen: Yes, so I got my undergrad in Spanish and I thought I was going to do interpreting and translating. So after I graduated from my undergrad, I started down that road and then realized that it ended up not being quite the fit that I was hoping it was going to be. But I was getting other certifications for interpreting and translating for large conferences, and even in the courts, and some medical stuff. And while I'm doing all this, on the side I got this, what I thought was a transitory side job with a small business. And I ende...

Nov 14, 2022 • 26min
Ep. 208: Simone Cimiluca-Radzins – Adventures in Cannabis Country
Few industries have a more interesting or infamous background than cannabis. And from a management accountant’s perspective, it’s a story straight out of the wild west of business. Simone Cimiluca-Radzins, joins us to discuss her journey from Big 4 CPA to bringing accounting and finance order to untamed business territory through the CBM Network.Connect with Simone: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bizwithsimone/Simone's Podcast: https://cannabisradio.com/podcasts/cannabis-business-minds/ CBM Network: https://www.cbmnetwork.com/courses/startupFull Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In the podcast that brings you inside the fascinating world of management accounting. Few industries have more interesting or infamous background than cannabis. From a management accountant's perspective, it's the story straight out of the wild west of business. Joining me today is Simone Cimiluca-Radzins, a leading consultant in the cannabis industry. We discuss our unique journey from a big four CPA to bringing accounting and finance order to attain businesses in cannabis country. Let's start the conversation.Adam:Simone, thank you so much for coming on the podcast today. I'm really excited to be talking about cannabis and cannabis and accounting and accounting in the cannabis industry. But to start off, I wanna find out how did you get into this industry and what's your story?Simone:I'm so excited to also be on. Thank you so much for the opportunity. You know, I am an accountant by nature. I grew up in a family where my dad is an accountant, a controller, you know, did the whole kind of accounting route and it just was the thing that just made sense going up in college. I was like, oh, accounting's easy. Let me go do this. And then got recruited pretty young in university to be part of PWC. And then it almost felt like my career path was kind of just set, maybe luck, maybe opportunity, you know, the combination of all of that. And I did, I did a few different corporate accounting type of jobs. Got to travel the entire world, which was amazing. Doing internal audit for one of the large studios down in Los Angeles and then moving to Paris for a few years and being able to do international consulting.Simone:I've always focused on accounting, right? So internal control development, processes, you know, process improvement. But it was nice because at that point, at the very end of my corporate tenure, I guess we could say it was an opportunity to really see how I could truly be an advisor and truly implement things instead of just telling people, Hey, you know what, you've got all of these control problems and see you later. Here's your audit report. And so that was a really nice kind of end towards my corporate tenure. And yeah, I think you probably hear it often that some people just get burned out and doing international consulting. That's how I felt like it was, you know, and it's funny saying it cuz it was such a dream when it was there, but then at the very end, it was like two weeks in Paris, two weeks somewhere else in the world.Simone:And you're battling jet lag. You're, you know, I'm in my mid twenties at this point, almost like late twenties I guess. And you're kinda like, well, hold on, I wanna hang out with people. I wanna have friends. Like, this is so fun. But at the same time, I feel like there's something more. And, you know, I decided to quit my job and I lost my visa living in Europe. I lost my visa and I went back to the US and started freelancing from one of my, you know, previous jobs. So it was a really great freelance gig and that started to get me into freelance and understanding, well, okay, this is really cool. Like, I have to do my deliverables and I can kind of just maybe build something on my own.Simone:And that's when I think the entrepreneurial bug started where I was like, Hmm, you know, I think that there's something more, but I didn't know what that more is. And in the end, I think I'm just getting there, right? And so that's like, oh, this is a while. So I guess to any listener who's feeling that it's okay to feel like you might not really know exactly what you want, but that there is something more. And freelancing, it was just a great opportunity. I can make great better money than I was making in my corporate gig. And I had just moved to LA and so I got a subscription to magazines. I don't know if if if people still get that, but when you move into a new place, you can get all these, these magazines. And I got this one.Simone:There was on the front cover, women in the marijuana industry. And I was like, what? Now I'd been in Europe, I'd been in finance I hadn't thought about, and it was marijuana then I call it cannabis now. It's, you know, the real term that you wanna use. I hadn't thought about weed, cannabis, marijuana since I was in high school. And I was like, Hmm, this is interesting. And I started really diving in into what is this industry? And at that time it's 2015. And so if we just roll back, there's not even two states that have legalized adult use and some obviously have, have legalized medical use. But, so it's all brand new. I'm in California, which is the Wild West, which is the biggest market in the entire world. And I just started doing this research about like, what is, I'm an auditor.Simone:I was like, okay, let me understand the ecosystem just like I would a business. I was like, okay, let me understand the players, what is happening? Like what is the supply chain and all of that. And I just thought to myself, okay, I think this is the industry that I wanna be in. And before I even got on my own, I thought, okay, but how do you really learn it? You learn it through the numbers. Just like I learned every other business, right? Like, you can understand numbers, you can understand how everything works. So I approached a CPA firm that was very cannabis, like, it was very clear they were working in the cannabis industry, which is not, you know, was not at that time something that you would promote. And I said, Hey, I can help you. I can help you with your sales, I can help you, you know, build, you know, a better process. And I had a year, a little bit less than a year working with them until I felt really confident that I could just go out on my own and start kind of building my own business and start kind of working on different projects in the cannabis space. So that's how I got in.Adam:Wow, that's amazing. So when you got in, it was still largely a cash industry, right? So I can only imagine how crazy that was because everything is digital currencies and all that stuff and the world of business today, even in 2015, it still was. And now, and in that time, how did you manage that?Simone:Well, so the interesting thing is, so there's twofold. There's, I got 80% of businesses still lack banking today in 2022. So you really have to have a good set of internal controls. And working with those businesses even in 2015, you know, you could just spoil it back to the basics. But what's fascinating is that they're, you know, there's almost something that you could call legacy industry, meaning operators that had been in the business before it was quote, unquote "legal" in that state. Right. So had probably got involved in, you know, if you think about California, there was an ability to truly build a business, even though it was a cooperative model starting in 1996 when there was the fi...

Nov 7, 2022 • 34min
Ep. 207: David R. Edwards – Drive Your Values, Not Your People
Connect with David: https://www.davidredwards.com/contact-usCheck out David's book: https://www.davidredwards.com/about-newyouwhoknewFull Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In the podcast that explores business and leadership topics from the management accountants perspective. I'm Adam Larson. I'm joined today by David Edwards to discuss how organizations and leaders can overlook the human when dealing with human capital. In other words, businesses can often see their people as assets before they see them as, well, people. David explains how this mindset often backfires on organizations and why focusing on values that motivate human beings provides a more balanced and effective approach to collaboration and productivity. And just a reminder, David,has a new book out entitled "New You! Who Knew: Surprising foundations to get more done, feel more connected, and stay balanced in a rapidly changing world." There's a link in the show notes, so make sure to check it out. Let's start the conversation.Adam:So David, thank you so much for coming on the podcast today. We're really excited to have you on. And today we're gonna be talking about people and the value they bring to organizations. And traditionally, as we all know people have always been looked on as assets. And through your book and through conversations that you and I have been having, you don't agree with that. So let's start there. Why don't you comment on that?David:Yeah. So if we go back into history, right, we haven't actually literally had people on our balance sheet for since 1860 roughly. But we treat people still very much like their assets. And you might recall, I mean, we go back into, just in my career for example, Jack Welch he made famous this kind of policy where they took the bottom 5% of their performers and then summarily fired them. And you know, and you don't wanna be in the 5% obvious, the bottom 5%, you don't want to be anyway. But you know, if we look at math, there's always gonna be a bottom 5%. You know, by default there's gonna be the top 5% and the bottom. And so, you know, this is a way of looking at human beings that says you're an asset. We look at how corporations over the years have, you know, you just move people around or we used the word drive.David:To me, this is non-human. So for example, I was looking at a job description the other day, and it, and it said, you know, drive, I think three times, we are gonna drive innovation. You're gonna drive change, you're gonna drive performance. So since a corporation is little more than a collection of human beings who have come together to accomplish some common purpose, right? So as a group of human beings moving towards some goal, trying to accomplish some purpose, if we think about working with human beings or as human beings working together, let's think about you, Adam. Are you married?Adam:Yes.David:If you go to your wife and say, Sweetheart I hurt my knee and I need you to drive me to Home Depot so I can get a new ladder. And if you drive me there and get me there, hmm, let me see in the next 15 minutes, you're a good wife, I want you to drive me there. So how is she gonna respond to that?Adam:Not very well.David:Not very well because you're treating her as if she was the car, right? You can treat your car that way and if your car doesn't get you there in 15 minutes, you can say bad car, you suck. And might have some other more colorful language, but you would never do that to a human being, at least I hope not, right? Because we're not machines, we're not assets. We are in fact human beings. And if we want to be successful in business or in life or in any relationship, right? We would want to say, Well, what are the principles not of a machine, or not really even business principles, right? You can't ignore business principles, but how do we want to engage with fellow human beings? And that should by definition make us more successful.Adam:So if we wanna be more successful, you mentioned something about principles, maybe we can dig into that. What are some of these principles that we should be implementing till we can be better human beings.David:So I think one of them that works very nicely as a human being as well as in business, and I'll kind of go on the business side at first. How many businesses do you know, have a statement that says, these are our values.Adam:A lot of them do.David:Right! Maybe even a majority of businesses have gone to that effort, right? So let me ask you, in your experience or talking to people or just in your life and career, how many of those businesses, I'm getting a little distracted here, but how many of them have a statement? But you know, that company well enough to know that they're not really living those values?Adam:You know, I can't say that I've taken the time to look at value statements to to, to pay attention well enough to know whether they are or not.David:Yeah. Or maybe another way to look at it is, is you've ever gone into a business and been a customer of a business. And if you ever have anybody, you know, listening or watching has had this experience where they go, you know, I don't know what their values are, but they're not, at least not today. Yeah. I mean we've all done that, right? We've all had that experience.Adam:We've all seen that, of course.David:So values as a company, I believe are extremely important because they set boundaries, right? Businesses by definition have some goal that they're trying to accomplish. And inevitably they wanna make a profit, right? This is kind of, it's part and parcel of every business. And so what values do is they set some boundary within which that company has said, we're gonna set some boundaries or limits around how we pursue these goals, right? Our business goals. And that's good, right? Because you really don't want to be operating and like anarchy basically, right? Anything goes, you know, whatever it takes. I mean, we've seen that it's happened in business probably not infrequently. People like Enron and you know, some of these kinds of, you know, famous examples, but where they go, hey, there's no boundaries. We don't have any values. We're just gonna go make a dollar.David:And you know, that's all that matters. However we do it, you know, that's, we don't care, right? The means justify the ends, that kind of a thing. So values are important in that regard. And it also is one way that we start to engender trust, right? If we have values and we're actually living those values, there's greater trust in between individuals and trust, right? As I think Steven Covey's son wrote the book, "The Speed of Trust", right? And if we don't have trust, you know, we pay a tax. None of us likes taxes, right? So I mean, we pay a tax for that. The same with human beings. And that's why I think values in a business as a collection of human beings makes perfect sense because values as human beings make perfect sense. And so we think of them as a constraint sometimes or as barriers, but it's much like the freeway.David:We've decided a long time ago that if I'm gonna be going 70 this way and you're gonna be going 70 in the opposite way, that having a big concrete barrier in between those lanes is a really good idea, right? Because it makes us safer, because it makes us more confident,...

Oct 31, 2022 • 30min
Ep. 206: Aparna Iyer – Learning and Leading at Wipro
Connect with Aparna: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aparna-iyer-7a6a135/Full Episode Transcript:Neha:Welcome back to Count Me In, the podcast for management accountants making an impact in the business world. I'm Neha Lagoo Ratnakar from IMA. Today I'm speaking with Aparna Iyer, the treasurer and head of investor relations at vPro. Aparna's career. Got off to quite a promising start when she earned a gold medal for the highest score on the exams by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. She's gone on to hold many roles across the accounting and finance function at vPro, and along the way, she has constantly pushed herself out of a comfort zone to keep learning new skills and developing her empowering approach to leadership. We cover a lot of ground in this fascinating conversation from robotic process automation to the benefits of ambition to how we might be working in the Metaverse sooner than you think. Let's get started.Neha:Welcome to Count Me in, Aparna. It's such a pleasure to finally meet you for this conversation.Aparna:Thank you, Neha. It's an absolute pleasure, and I'm looking forward to this conversation, actually.Neha:Awesome. So let's start with an obvious question that's been on my mind ever since I'm knew about you. You joined vPro more than 19 years ago, and our generation is infamous for job hopping, right? Tell us more about your long and successful journey at vPro.Aparna:You know Neha, I'll just tell you briefly about myself. You know my father worked in a nationalized banking in India, and I in, you know, all the way up to 23 years when I joined vPro. I have not stayed in a city more than two years because we've been always hopping schools, colleges, you know, so for me, also, I'm quite taken by surprise that I actually managed to spend 20 years you know, in one place. And I think the credit actually needs to go to the organization. Because, you know, when I joined vPro, I was very impressionable, you know, rearing to go. I think what vPro really does well is, you know, it paces your career for you, right? I don't spend more than about three years in a role give or take. And every three years there is always something that's in the works for, you know, what next, how can things get better, bigger?Aparna:So in some sense, I've been truly you know, privileged and lucky that you know, I got an opportunity to work through multiple roles, multiple leaders, and the sector itself has evolved so much through these last you know, 20 years. So much more complexity. So much more M & A. You know, we've had you know in the last 10 years, you know, we've had so many new leaders join in. So the organization itself keeps changing. There's so much to learn and there's, it's such a growing sector that I, you know, I didn't even realize that I had spent 20 years. The other thing that we project does well, and, and is perhaps one of the bigger reasons for me staying back is in vPro finance, we really build you know, we hire people from campuses and then we build careers for them.Aparna:So all my peers are pretty much tenured in vPro, and we have like a shared history. So the camaraderie, the collaboration is just you know, off a very different level, which all of us thoroughly enjoy. So I would say that you know, other than what the organization puts in, it's what my peers put in both in terms of the kind of benchmark they set, how you know, enriching it is to work with them, how it is to learn from them and, you know, really contribute in the process, right? Like, work becomes fun when, you know, it's just extended family. So I would say these are, you know, two reasons why you know, it just work. And like they say, why fix something that's not broken?Neha:Wow. And that's been quite a journey. Thanks for sharing it with us, and I hope other companies are taking note of these excellent practices.Aparna:Yeah. Yeah.Neha:So what has been your biggest challenge in your career so far?Aparna:Neha? You know, I think every time you take up a new role, you feel that, oh my God, this is just so much more challenging than you know, what I've ever done. But, you know, truly I was most apprehensive about was coming back to work after I had my daughter. And that I think would have been perhaps the most challenging phase of my career, because I was just coming back from a six month long break at where I was doing something completely different, right? And somehow when I joined back, and I never thought I would feel like that. I felt very low on confidence, and I wasn't sure whether this is what I wanted to do. Is this the purpose? You know, I felt so overwhelmed you know, taking care of a young baby and coming back to something very intensive at you know, in the vPro finance, it was perhaps one of the, you know, phases where I really needed help, right?Aparna:From all my mentors, from the organization, from my peers, from my reports. And thankfully, you know, that that phase, you know, lasted for about nine months to a year where you know, I was just wanted to find my confidence again. And, you know, once that happened, right? And time, with time every quarter, it kept getting better. You know, all us finance professionals live quarter, quarter, say quarter, like they say, right? Three or four quarters under the belt, I was feeling a lot more confident, again. So that I think was one of the most challenging phases because, you know, I needed to find that balance and make sure, you know, I was getting it right. So that was one point where I felt you know, I really needed the support of the ecosystem. The other part was when I, you know, took on something like treasury and IR, you know, invest relations, the current role that I did, that I'm doing I took this on three years back and you know, I'd not done treasury at all in the first, you know 18 years or first 17 years of my career, knew nothing about markets, hedging investments, and, you know, we all are exposed to it as finance professionals, but I've not done it, you know, with a KRI to exceed a certain benchmark.Aparna:Coming in and knowing when you know that you are the person who's perhaps knows the least about that subject in the team, and yet you are the leader, I think it poses very different challenges. So, pushing myself out of the comfort zone, being okay with the fact that, you know, for another six months, I'm going to be the person who's gonna be least informed in a room, and yet I had to lead it, yet I had to bring my perspective to it, yet I had to understand and learn and, and work with people. So I think that was also another challenging phase, right? But it's only a matter of time, you know? You just need to apply yourself. So that's the other myth I busted, right? So a lot of them say they don't wanna try different things because they're just so concerned that, you know, how will they add value?Aparna:What I really understood about adding value is you, your, your vantage point can be so different, and the value that you bring to the team or you bring to a function can be so different. It may not always come from the tried and tested path, You know the vantage point that you'll have is very different, and you bring way different perspectives, and you can always add value no matter what you do. Cause everything else is just adjacent. So, you know, those are very good learnings for me. And it was challenging and I was very unsure and anxious many times, but I think you had to give it some time and, you know, you lace it.

Oct 24, 2022 • 20min
Ep. 205: Ryan Goral - M&A Strategy for SMBs
Connect with Ryan: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-goral/ https://www.gspiregroup.com/ Full Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In, the podcast focused on management accountants driving business forward. I'm Adam Larson. Coming up I speak with Ryan Goral about unlocking the full potential of small businesses through mergers and acquisitions. Ryan is the founder of G-Spire Group, a consultancy focused on companies often overlooked and underserved when it comes to corporate development services. When it comes to M & A, big companies all get the headlines. The reason is pretty simple. A deal worth billions of dollars will always draw more attention than a deal that's only worth millions. This focus has contributed to the perception among many business owners that they're simply too small or inexperienced to participate in M & A. Ryan explains why M & A is a strategic option relevant to virtually every business and highlights the critical role management accountants play in corporate development success. Let's start the conversation.Adam:So Ryan, I just wanna thank you so much for coming on the podcast today. We are gonna be talking about mergers and acquisitions today, and I was looking at the recent Bain and Company Global Report from 2021, and they were saying that the total transaction value for M & A was an unmatched $5.9 trillion in 2021. So it seems that M & A is on its way back. The last conversation I had about this was back in 2019 and it was much under that number. So maybe to start off you talk a lot about, in your business about the benefits of growing your business through mergers and acquisitions. So maybe you can start by covering what are the benefits?Ryan:Sure. Thanks for having me. Yeah, the, you know, companies can grow through acquisitions for a number of reasons and it's strategic, you know, really what is their strategic reason for growing through acquisitions? Yeah, trillions of dollars. I think the M & A market's been real, really red hot. You know, the market that I serve, I serve privately held companies that are on the, you know, 10 to 50 million in revenue range. So my transactions I'm typically working on is way, does not have a B or a T in the title. But I think that, you know, the last couple years we've seen a couple things that are driving M & A activity. One has been the historically low interest rates. So the cost of capital has been, you know, really, really attractive for a buyer to go out and secure debt and even equity for that matter to engage in transactions.Ryan:That would involve buying a company as part of their growth strategy. You know, and the various strategic reasons or I guess categories if you wanna call it that, that a company would really wanna look at as part of a growth plan that would involve M & A. You know, you see companies you know that I think talent is one, you know, that I've seen companies wanting additional talent and maybe the labor force right now, which it is, it's constrained. So a lot of these companies have all the work that they ever would want, but they'll have people in the labor to satisfy it. So, you know, growing through an acquisition to pick up key talent is kind of one strategic motivation. There's other kinda strategic reasons. One being size and scale from a cash flow perspective allows the company to, you know, invest more into other certain strategic initiatives.Ryan:So size also equates to sometimes more value. So if your company is trying to improve shareholder value, you know, size does impact that value. So you'll see kind of acquisitions as part of, I just want to get bigger and grow. I try in my practice, try to hone in the strategy a little bit more than just let's grow because you wanna make sure the acquisitions are aligned with that strategic importance. But the types of acquisitions typically see are you're buying a competitor. So that's kind of market share strategy. You see acquisitions that are maybe of a supplier, so you call that vertical. You're trying to, you know, own the supplier so you can enhance your own margins. You know, sometimes you'll see a geographic strategy where a company wants to grow into other geographic areas that are strategic for them. And making an acquisition in those kind of geographies is sometimes the right strategy.Ryan:And then, you know, really the last one that there's a number of reasons, but the other one that comes to mind is, you know, expanding your product and services to your customer base. So if you're, you know you've got one product, one service that you're offering, maybe your customer's constantly asking you for, Hey, do you do X, Y, Z? And you're like, no, we don't do that. Go talk to ABC company. Maybe it's a good strategy. Go buy ABC company so you can have another product service to offer your current customer base. So those are some of the strategic reasons that drive M & A. But I think the trend that you mentioned to start off here was you've got cheap capital and you know, as you get into bigger transactions, you see, you know, if a public company has, you know, a stock price that is historically, you know, very high, sometimes they're using that stock as currency, which is another driver of the activity.Ryan:So there's, there's a number of reasons, the amount of M & A activity that we've seen. And the last one that I've seen and more that's more in my market is you've got, you know, kind of an unprecedented amount of baby boomers retiring and their business is typically their biggest asset. So you're seeing kind of a transfer of wealth from one generation to the next that's occurring cuz there's a good amount of baby boomers that actually own privately held companies. So you're starting to see that activity happen and I think that's driving the market too.Adam:Yeah, so there's a lot of great benefits out there as you've just described. And so with somebody looking into, get into that, one term that I've heard is corporate development. So why would that, why would that matter? Maybe you can start by defining corporate development in terms of M & A and then why is that beneficial to develop to, to why does it matter as a small to medium size business in your getting into mergers and acquisitions?Ryan:Yeah, so corporate development is really more of a term that you'll see in larger companies. These are companies that have entire departments, corporate development departments, and they're these departments, sole responsibility is getting the company ready and then sourcing, closing and integrating acquisitions on behalf of the entire organization. So they are the M & A team of these larger companies. They're just called corporate development department. In my work I've seen, you know, that that service doesn't really exist for those smaller privately held businesses for a couple reasons. One, it's, you know, you can't, typically there's not enough resources to hire a full time corporate development executive, you know so, and then the other, the other reason why you don't see it much in the the smaller privately held company spaces, they're usually run by owner/operators. And these are folks that are really good at running their business.Ryan:They're really good at managing their employees and customers, and they tend not to have time or capacity to think about M & A and how other, you know, partnerships and alliances could be beneficial to them growing. So that's just a capacity challenge. And then there's a lot of these privately held businesse...

Oct 20, 2022 • 17min
Bonus: Kelly Richmond Pope - Ethics in the 21st Century
In this special edition of Count Me In, Kelly Richmond Pope returns to help commemorate Global Ethics Day 2022. We discuss her latest IMA report, Ethics in the 21st Century: Management Accounting Practices for Robust Compliance Programs as well as her forthcoming new book, Fool Me Once: Scams, Stories, and Secrets from the Trillion-Dollar Fraud Industry. In addition to her role as IMA Research Fellow for Corporate Governance and Ethics, Kelly is professor of forensic accounting at DePaul University as well as the award-winning documentary film maker behind All the Queen’s Horses, an in-depth look at the largest municipal fraud in U.S. history. Ethics in the 21st Century: Management Accounting Practices for Robust Compliance Programs Fool Me Once: Scams, Stories, and Secrets from the Trillion-Dollar Fraud Industry Connect with KellyFull Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In, the podcast that takes you inside the impactful world of management accounting. This is Adam Larson, and today is a special edition of Count Me In to Celebrate Global Ethics Day 2022. And there's no better guess for such an occasion than Kelly Richmond Pope, IMA's Research Fellow for Corporate Governance and Ethics, professor of forensic accounting at DePaul University, award-winning filmmaker and the author of the forthcoming book, Fool Me Once: Scams Stories and Secrets from the Trillion Dollar Fraud Industry. Kelly and Neha discuss her latest IMA report focus on how management accountants are modernized in compliance in the 21st century. Plus we get a preview of her new book and lots of other updates. It's always interesting when Kelly stops by. So let's start the conversation.Neha:Welcome back to Count Me in. Kelly, it's such a pleasure to have you again on the show.Kelly:Thanks for having me back.Neha:First of all, congratulations on your new report, Ethics in the 21st century that came out recently.Kelly:Thank you.Neha:Our listeners would love to know what the report is all about.Kelly:The report is an overview of how to not only update the compliance function within your organization, but utilizing managerial accountants in those updates. So that's really what the gist of the report is, and we focus on three recommendations on how to update that.Neha:Wow, that sounds like a very helpful report for management accountants and finance and accounting professionals around the world. So I've went through the report and saw that you call designing an Effective Compliance program, both an art and a science. Can you help our listeners understand what you mean by that?Kelly:Well, you know, it's one of those jargon terms you use a lot and it sounds good when you use it, but now you've asked me a question about it. So let me tell you what I mean by that. I think that the science part is the fact that a lot of programs or organizations are siloed into departments, and so that's the scientific understanding of how we believe organizations should work. So you have your legal department, you have your accounting department, You may have your internal audit department, you may have operations, and all of these departments are siloed. And so I think that that's the science of how we organize companies. But the art is how to utilize all of those different departments together and finding the strengths of each of those groups and bringing them together. So they're one cohesive machine that works together, is the art part of it. And that takes some skill because we don't think about an approach of everyone working together. We think about a very siloed approach of how we work, and I think that when we are trying to update our, our compliance programs, we really need to look at these various silo departments and pull from those so that we can have this one cohesive teamNeha:That is very insightful and it might be a jargon, but thanks for helping us understand it better. Now of course, most companies try to have some sort of compliance program in place, right? What do you think is the biggest inhibitor when it comes to the effectiveness of these compliance programs?Kelly:Well, I think there's two inhibitors. One is compliance. The word compliance triggers people to think, all I need to do is check the box and just get this done. And the second is, most people believe that they don't need it. They believe that they're ethical. They believe that they don't need this type of reinforcement. So you have these two forces that you're battling. And quite honestly, most organizations do have very boring compliance training. And some of it is routine, but there is room for it to be more engaging and more dynamic. So I think the fact that we have conditioned people to think about this as, Oh goodness, here comes compliance again. Just let me get this done. And so we have a level set, a level shift that we need to make within our employee base to even get them excited about what we have around compliance. So you're fighting an uphill battle from the beginning. And so how, what, what can we infuse into compliance to really change that to get more people on board, is the big question.Neha:That's so true. Every time I've had conversations in companies, people think compliance training is going to be a snooze fest. So thanks for bringing that up. And can you help us understand how can companies avoid that kind of mentality or perception about compliance training?Kelly:Well, I think when compliance, there are some routine things about compliance, and that is true, but I think where you have the opportunity to be creative, you should be. And so my passion area, my research area is around fraud and forensic accounting. And I think that there are areas within the compliance training realm that can lend itself to more creative and more engaging types of approaches. And we tend to not do those. If we do that more, I think that we can change the attitude around compliance and make people more excited about it.Neha:Absolutely. Love that, Kelly. Let me pivot from that and ask you another question about whistle blowing. Now, how can companies incentivize internal reporting? So employees feel empowered to speak up when they see any misconduct?Kelly:You know, whistle blowing is an interesting topic because again, you have this same uphill battle that you're fighting. And a couple years back, I did a TED Talk entitled how whistleblowers shape history. And one of my motivations around doing the talk, because the whole idea around TED is do you have an idea worth sharing? And so my motivation around doing the talk was because whistleblowers are so valuable to organizations and to society, but how can we encourage more people to come forward when it has such a negative stigma? So I think one of the things that we need to do within our organizations is first remove the stigma and almost celebrate it. And it's, it's hard because despite the benefits that whistle blowers offer us, we tend to not trust them when they ...

Oct 17, 2022 • 31min
Ep. 204: Joe Cecala - Democratizing capital markets for small businesses
Dream ExchangeConnect with JoeFull Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In, the podcast that explores the ways management accountants drive business forward. I'm Adam Larson and my guest today is Joseph Cecala, CEO and co-founder of Dream Exchange, a company focused on building the next generation stock exchange designed for early stage growth companies. This is yet another podcast where I learned a ton, like how the rise of electronic stock training essentially shut down IPOs and equity stock market access for businesses worth less than $50 million. What's more, I learned how management accountants will play a critical role in making these new venture markets actually work. Whether you work at a small business, are interested in investing in small business, or wants to know more about the relationship between equity markets and innovation, this is the podcast for you. Let's get started with Joe Cecala.Adam:So Joe, I wanna thank you so much for coming on the podcast today. We're really excited to get talking to you about the Dream Exchange, but before we get there, I just wanted to hear a little bit about your story. I was reading your bio and I just think you've got a really great story starting off as a CPA and to where you are now. Let's start with your story and go there.Joe:Sure. And Adam, thanks for having me. I my story I like to say I Forrest Gumped my way through my career, right, I started as a CPA went to law school and became a shingle lawyer doing a lot of small business venture capital transactions. And you know, my accounting career really informed that quite well. I guess the big story of how we're here today is one of my clients, Jerry Putnam, founded a company which became Archipelago, actually the world knows today as New York Stock Exchange, Archipelago in the mid 1990s. It was the first company to actually carry equity security trades using the internet or among the first two. And I got this national market expertise when that was being born. And here we are 26 years later with a lot of legal expertise in capital markets.Joe:So several years ago I just decided that a new exchange model was needed to accommodate smaller companies. And we worked on legislation for that. It's still pending in Congress and we're actually building a national exchange as well. So everything that we're doing is born out of those early years of learning what a stock exchange is and does and how one is born, and the mechanics of that and adding the kind of practical business of how to run one to the legal expertise of how to create one. And really the other, I guess the other major portion of what we're doing that's different is that, you know, we're targeting what we call underserved markets. The entrepreneurial market, very small companies that don't really see interest from a stock exchange in the earlier stages of their business life cycle. And we're also especially concentrating in minority markets.Joe:The capital group that is financing the exchange and is the majority owner, our minorities, it's a black owned exchange, the first one in the history of the United States. So, you know, and we're in the licensing, we're in the process, we'll be hopefully licensed in about a year. So we're in that process right now, but things are going really well. And that's how I got here, was really starting as a financial professional and moving from financial professional to early stage company, venture capital lawyer. And so I really wanna help those small companies. It's more about the companies through my career I haven't helped or can't get access to capital than it is about the unicorn companies that have an easy time. So that's how we got here today. And hopefully the journey will be easier go in the next six years than it has been for the past 10.Adam:I sure hope so.Joe:Yeah, me too. So, and then I guess what I would say is the Dream Exchange today as it exists, as it perhaps might inform you know, the audience for this particular, you know, group. We're really concentrating on what are now gonna be known as early stage growth companies. That's actually a coined expression. It is in the Main Street Growth Act. And what that means is those are companies that are very small. They might have a valuation of, you know, 10 or $20 million, but they're gonna be seeking capital you know, for 10 or $20 million. And we're providing the mechanics of a brand new stock exchange environment for those early stage companies to be traded with customized rules and customized reporting and customized attention that the national exchanges really can't provide because the financial reporting and the cost of the coming public and Sarbanes Oxley and DOD Frank and the regulatory environment for very large companies is much easier to absorb the expense of doing that. But how do we maintain the same quality in investor protection in a small market while simultaneously making the cost less so that those smaller companies could get access to capital in a public market that's really the driver behind the meat and potatoes of the Dream Exchange.Adam:Wow, that's, there's so much there that I think we're gonna have to unpack a little bit of it. And I know that for me and I know a lot of other folks, you know, maybe we can start with, you know, how do you set up an exchange and what exactly is in exchange? Because we all hear about the stock exchange and stocks being there, but maybe there's a way that you can describe it for us that even a seven year old could understand it.Joe:Yeah, that actually, and thank you for asking that because that is, it really is not commonly talked about. Most people talk about the functions of an exchange without actually knowing what it is. So a stock exchange is merely a set of rules by which the buying and the selling of equity securities is conducting. That's all it is. And today those rules are primarily driven by electronics. So trading rules, what type of order, what type of sale, what the rules say about how the market participants have to conduct themselves fairly. Now, most people think stock exchange and what they're actually thinking about is what's called the secondary market, because you, the stock is already a public company and you wanna go and you wanna buy your shares of IBM and you have to go through a stock broker, some very large organization that is carrying trades to a stock exchange.Joe:Stock exchange is matching the trades that the order book and the matching engine of an exchange literally matches trades today in millionths and billionths of a second. And that's what people think. They see the Dow Jones averages and they see the New York Stock Exchange you know, set of listing is up or down. The function of the stock exchange is to match trades in a fair and equitable environment. Now, the other function that most people are, are familiar with is the initial public offering market, the IPO market. And they look at exchanges and go, they went public on NASDAQ, or they went public on NYSE. That's the capital formation part of exchanges. Now that's another kind of misinformed use of stock exchange because stock exchanges don't actually take anybody public. Investment banks do. So the investment bank has to make an arrangement so that when a company files publicly and sends its registration of its shares to the SEC, they can also take a registered share of stock to a stock exchange and apply to be listed on the exchange.Joe:Merely getting registered shares with the SEC does not automat...

Oct 10, 2022 • 22min
Ep. 203: Mark A Herschberg – The Great Resignation and How to Fix It
Links mentioned in today's Podcast:https://www.thecareertoolkitbook.comhttps://www.cognoscomedia.com/brain-bumphttps://www.thecareertoolkitbook.com/resources Connect with Mark:https://www.linkedin.com/in/hershey/https://twitter.com/CareerToolkitBkhttps://www.facebook.com/TheCareerToolkitBookhttps://www.instagram.com/thecareertoolkit/Full Episode Transcript:Adam:Welcome back to Count Me In, the podcast focused on the issues, challenges, and characters shaping the management accounting profession. I'm Adam Larson. Today I'm joined by Mark Herschberg, serial entrepreneur, business innovator, and the author of the Career Toolkit: Essential Skills for Success that No One Taught You. Now, lots of people cover career and work best practices, but if you ask me, it all can start to sound pretty similar, but that's not the case with Mark. There's a good reason he teaches at MIT, which you're about to find out. In fact, Mark had so much insight and advice to share from his research and years of building companies and teams, we ended up recording two podcasts, the second of which will be coming out soon. But for now, let's get started with Mark Herschberg discussing the fallout from the great resignation and what he's learned about how to fix work.Adam:Mark, I wanted to just thank you so much for coming on the podcast today and today we're gonna really focus on the great resignation and we've all been hearing this term they've been writing about it since it started in 2021, but I wanted to start off by just you talking a little bit about what what it is and what it means for everybody today.Mark:Well, thanks for having me on the show today. The great resignation is really the term that is an umbrella term for what is the largest rewrite of the capital labor contract that we have seen in a century. Now certainly we are seeing people leave jobs quitting, finding better jobs, sometimes going back to their original job, but it's also a larger cultural change about what people are looking for in their jobs. And so we need to recognize this isn't just, well, we have to do a better job hiring or retaining. It is a shift in terms of what people want and companies need to adjust if they wanna stay competitive in the labor market.Adam:Yeah, it sounds like it, and it also sounds like companies really need to focus in on how do we keep employees as well? Because I'm sure during the pandemic employees were seeing, do I really still need to be here? And that they started asking themselves a lot of questions.Mark:Well, that's a really good point. And you get different answers depending on who you ask. When it comes down to any job, it's really about the communication needed. It's about who needs to communicate with whom and when and how best to do that. It's why we have emails, slack, phone calls, meetings, they're all channels of communicating, whether it's project updates or you and I coordinating and coming up with ideas. That's what a lot of work is. What we found is that certain types of work can be done from home. We don't have to be sitting next to each other. And people have speculated about this for years. I work in technology. We've certainly been on the forefront. I've been working with teams all around the world for years. You can do some of that, but there are limitations to that and it seems like we might be overshooting a bit in that people don't understand. At first we said No, you'll have to be in the office five days a week. It's like, well, we know we can work when we're in the office zero days a week. You can work in both modes, but is that optimal? And so there are different facets you need to look at to decide what is the optimal number of days for a particular team at which points.Adam:Yeah, and it also seems like it's more than just money that people are leaving because of a lot of times people leave because of money or because of culture, or all those things. But you can't just throw more money at your employees and say, Okay, you know, stay here.Mark:That's exactly right. Money is a bit of a factor. And as we record this at the start of the summer in 2022, we've been coming off some of the highest inflation rates that we've seen in a generation. And so you do need more money to stay competitive and other companies are throwing money at them. But here's the thing, you are probably not the highest payer in your market. One company is, and it probably isn't you. So if you're just competing on money, that's going to be a problem. What we saw is people are responding to these other dimensions, and this is what I meant when I said it's a rewrite of that capital labor contract. It's no longer I pay you money, you do the work. And so we're seeing employees, particularly younger employees, but we are seeing it across the spectrum. They're looking not just at money I'm using at Compensation General, or there's stock options of salary, but also work life balance, company culture, alignment to mission and support, just to name a few.Mark:We saw companies that back at the start of the pandemic in 2020, some of them said, look, it's tough for everyone. Suck it up and do it. And other companies said, hey, it's tough for everyone, so we're going to give you Fridays off for the next two months because this is crazy. Spend some time with your families. We all need the stress break or what can we do to support you while you are at home? And so the companies that were more supportive of their employees were the ones who basically had more loyalty and had employees say, I know you're looking out for me and are more likely to stay. So it's important that we really sell our employees current and future ones, not just on the compensation, but on all these other facets.Adam:So it what I'm hearing you say, it sounds like company culture is a huge part of avoiding the resignation, but also, you know, when you, when new people are coming on, you wanna make sure that they fit that company culture to make sure that they're gonna stay on.Mark:Culture is very important. Now by culture, I think a lot of companies get this wrong. They think the culture is the seven values. Someone in marketing put on the website that says customer first or whatever the mantra is. And I'm sure there is value to those, but the actual culture of your team might be at your company level. More likely it's at a team or department level is how you interact day to day. For example, I have a colleague who told me at a former company, the rule was whoever yelled loudest got their way in the meeting. I guarantee you marketing did not put that on the website. But when you show up, ...


