Staff Members

Staff Appreciation Week 2011

A huge thanks to Robert Barron and Tia Kelly for coordinating this year’s Staff appreciation week.  BEC employees enjoyed Fat Sully’s Pizza Slice Truck, The Denver Biscuit Bus, Happy hour at the Archive Room as well as Waffles by Ron Olson.  

Team Orange won the overall points in the games – Patty, Mike Lane, Josh, Tonya, Scott Lasater, Patrick, Ron and Steve. 

Overall Individual winner was Vince. 

Costumer Winner was Sherry as a Pirate along with her bird 

Game Winners:
Movie Dyslexia – Eric
High Cup              – Tonya
Boss Trivia           – Vince
Bottle Ring Toss- Richard
Pop the Balloon-  Alex
How Many?        -Chris
BEC Trivia             – Tonya
Quarter on a Plate Toss – Patrick
Nerf Knock Down – Vince
Word Etymology – Rik

Presidents Club adds Brad Harris

 

BRAD HARRIS
Company: BEC POS
Years with BEC POS: 11 years
What Drives Your Success:
I attribute my success to my background in restaurants which helps me understand our customer’s needs and wants. Of course, meeting with prospects is only part of the equation – you have to have a great team to work with to really be successful in this industry.

Ronald McDonald House and BEC

Recently the BEC staff served a Mexican Fiesta meal to the residents of the Ronald McDonald House.

Thanks to the fantastic participating staff members who helped make this a success:
Brad Harris, Steve Harris, Patty Simmons, Jason Shelden, Jason Skolak, Sarah Behnen, Audrey Borski, Alex  Steenburgh (and husband Mathew), Kim Slavins (and daughter Kendra), and Shaye McCarrell.

Denver Ronald McDonald House

Facebook Page  |  Website  | 303-832-2667

Denver Ronald McDonalds House:32 Years of Helping Families in Crisis:
Being alone in the hospital can be a traumatic experience, especially for children. And more than ever before, children in need of emergency treatment are being brought to Denver from rural Colorado and bordering states for expert medical care.

For the past three decades, Ronald McDonald House® Charities of Denver has offered a loving home-away-from-home to families needing to be near their seriously ill or injured children while they’re being treated at metropolitan area hospitals.

Donate to the Denver Ronald McDonalds House…Click Here

    

How Do You Get Your Employees to Care? Here Are A Few Ideas

By ShaneCultra | Aug 15, 2011

It’s one of the most difficult things a business owner deals with.  How do you get your employees to care about the company as much as you?  First of all they won’t, they aren’t the owner.  Once that is clear it becomes an issue of trying to get them to enjoy their job and have the desire to do a little more than the general job requirements.

Not everyone is driven by money.  There are many different types of employees so what makes one employee fulfilled may not be the same thing as another.  As an owner it takes time and effort to figure out what drives each person and keep that hanging in front of them.  Some it’s money, some it’s flexible schedule, another may be just giddy over you letting them take a late lunch every day to go let their dog out.  I realize there is a job to be done and you can’t appease everyone but putting in a little effort to drive a talented employee is well worth the time.  I also realize a happy employee still doesn’t always mean they care.  There is one commonality in employees.  They all want a purpose and to be needed at their company.  Most like some form of structure and want to stay busy, if only to make the day go quicker.  You can feed on these basic needs to create an employee that cares. Here are a few things I think you can do to help them care a little bit more.

1. Create an “Error” account.   Everyone makes mistakes, it’s human nature.  Put some money in an account that is tied to a measurable action.  An action that if it takes place causes money to be lost.  Figure out how many times you can accept that action to happen and tie a dollar amount to it.  If it happens you take the money out of the account. If all goes well and there are few errors, they get to keep all the money.  If they screw up then they get nothing.  Approach it in a positive way.  “If you are error free you are going to get this amount of money”.

2. Give Out Half Day Off Coupons:   “An action rewarded is an action repeated”  I was in a management session with an owner that handed out half day off coupons to employees that went above and beyond what he expected in a given time period.  Officially it fits into a monetary reward but I find there are just as many people that think time off is as valuable as the money.  Others would love the time off but they can’t afford to take a day.  An employee who feels their company appreciates their extra effort is more likely to care about putting it in.

3. Make One Person Responsible:   Sounds easy but it’s surprising how many companies play the “group effort” game.  The group will allow people to put the blame on someone else for lack of production.  In general, people love responsibility and are empowered by the chance of praise and reward.  This doesn’t mean one person has to do it all.  On the contrary, you can still form groups but divide up the responsibility so individual parts are given to individual people.  It also make it easier to spot the person that isn’t putting in the effort.

4. Switch jobs. Once or twice a year have your employees switch jobs for a day.  Make the job as completely different from their daily tasks as you can. Make the marketing guy the courier.  Put the order puller in tech.  You have to be a little careful for your customer’s sake to make sure you don’t let the company slip too far and of course the order puller isn’t coding. It gives people a chance to see how difficult other jobs can be.

5. If you allow employees to buy stock in the company, match it. Encourage them to invest by giving them double the money.  Again, a simple act but one that many companies are no longer doing.

6.  Keep things in house. You may be surprised what your own employees can create.  Outsourcing is the rule in today’s business but nobody knows your company like your own employees.  I used to have other people do my ads but turns out I have someone here that produces a better print ad.   Have a contest to find out.  You don’t have to use it and it will give the employees a chance to show their hidden talents.

7.  Get rid of those that don’t.  One lousy employee can ruin an entire group.  No matter how valuable, dump them.  It may be hard in the beginning but most of the time the surrounding employees will pick up the slack just because they are so happy that person is gone.

Mike R. Vacation

I had a private tour of multiple Mayan cities with Professor Alfonso Morales. He was the head archeologist of Palenque for fifteen years. The trip started in Cancun with Tulum and went thru multiple countries including Belize, Guatemala, Honduras & Mexico. I also went to Oaxaca to see Monte Alban which is a Zapotec city. The Zapotec traded with the Maya and Aztecs along ancient roadways and by sea. From Oaxaca I ended my trip in Mexico City and the Aztecs. I got to see Temple Mayor (Aztec) and Teotihuacan the inhabitants of this city are under debate but it was used by multiple Mesoamerica cultures. I would recommend this trip to anyone who loves history.
Mike R

BEC’s Ops Manager Donates His Mane-Locks of Love

If you know or have met our Operations Manager, Rob Barron, in person then you are familiar with his long hair spilling into bushy curly-Qs down his back. Rob’s long hair has been a staple at BEC since he started as a Help Desk Technician nearly four years ago. Read the rest of this entry »

June Contest Winner

I’m sure most of you are sitting on pins and needles wondering who is going to be the big winner for our June contest.

First, let me say that it was a close race! June & Chris were within one point of each other! I was also amazed that Scott F had a horse in the race, given that he started half way through the month. Scott L took 8 days off, otherwise he may have been a formidable player in the game.

Ed had the game until I added the big points opportunity for the last week of June. In that one week, only one person kept their call churn under 20% and that got him 40 points per day (20 for being under 20% and 20 for being the lowest churn %). Plus, on three of the five days that person’s in-calls equaled the number of calls they took, which got an additional 50 points for each day, or 150 additional points for a total of 310 points, which put him over the top.

So who won?!?    Jason Olson