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The Human Factor

Tech services firm Allyis treats workers like real people,

and - surprise! - they stick around


A Q&A with Jennifer Sizemore

Jennifer Sizemore is vice president and editor-in-chief of Redmondbased MSNBC.com and an executive...


How the Best Was Won

A roundup of the 2008 Best Companies to Work For in Washington and what makes them great places to...


Learning From the Greats

Leaders come in many forms, but great leaders all have something in common


Lessons Learned in Merging Well

How to maintain your culture when you get bought out


Let the Staff Into the Boardroom

Strong leadership propels Approach Management Services to the top


Auto Biography

We love our cars and showing them off. Do you drive something cool? Classic? Out of this world?...


Out of the Shadow

No longer just a Portland suburb, Vancouver begins to shine


Time Bandits

It's time to rein in e-mail use and reclaim our real lives


You're fired... Not!

Thinking you can put a fire under your employees by threatening to can 'em? Can layoffs create a leaner, meaner organization that reacts faster to change? A new Washington State University study suggests that while Donald Trump's approach to apprentices -- "You're fired" -- may make good TV, in the real world, it will probably backfire. In experiments and field studies, psychologists at WSU, the University of Puget Sound and Wright State University in Ohio found that employees who fear losing their jobs have a hard time thinking creatively and are less able to see connections between concepts. Layoffs may spur a shortterm boost in activity, says WSU-Vancouver researcher Tahira Probst, but in the long run, "safety gets worse, creativity gets worse, and ultimately, product quality gets worse," she says. "How could this possibly be good for an organization?"

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