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A Great Place to Work for All: Better for Business, Better for People, Better for the World Paperback – March 13, 2018
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Greatness Redefined for the 21st Century
Today's business climate is defined by speed, social technologies, and people's expectations of "values" besides value. As a result, leaders have to create an outstanding culture for all, no matter who they are or what they do for the organization. This groundbreaking book, from the creators of the gold-standard Fortune 100 Best Companies to Work For list, shows how it's done. Through inspiring stories and compelling research, the authors demonstrate that great places to work for all benefit the individuals working there and contribute to a better global society--even as they outperform in the stock market and grow revenue three times faster than less-inclusive rivals. This is a call to lead so that organizations develop every ounce of human potential.
- Print length256 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBerrett-Koehler Publishers
- Publication dateMarch 13, 2018
- Dimensions5.63 x 0.56 x 8.56 inches
- ISBN-101523095083
- ISBN-13978-1523095087
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Editorial Reviews
Review
—Brad D. Smith, Chairman and CEO, Intuit
“The most successful companies have a higher purpose and are built on a foundation of trust, growth, innovation, equality, and making the world a better place for all. A Great Place to Work For All shares the essential values that every organization should follow to thrive in the future.”
—Marc Benioff, CEO, Salesforce
“It’s no secret that the world of work has changed drastically, and what defines a great place to work—and a great leader—is the difference between an innovative and mission-driven company and one that remains status quo. A Great Place to Work For All builds on a thirty-year legacy of research on thousands of great workplaces and millions of employees to measure the business value of culture, mission, motivation, and leadership. Cultivating human potential for the future requires being intentional in building a caring workplace where employees know they are supported during good and challenging times, the mission remains the heart of the organization, and leaders bring out the best in everyone. This book reveals the opportunities ahead for today’s leaders to create a future workplace that delivers results.”
—Bernard J. Tyson, Chairman and CEO, Kaiser Permanente
“At Wegmans, we have always believed that we can only achieve our goals by first fulfilling the needs of our people. When we lead with our hearts and live by our values, everything else falls into place, including strong business results. A workplace that fosters caring and respect for one another, at every level of the organization, is key. This is precisely the premise of this book, and by reading it and applying some of the practices, any organization can be transformed.”
—Colleen Wegman, President and CEO, Wegmans Food Markets
“When people find opportunity, trust, and camaraderie in the workplace, they proudly drive the success of their organization. The most profitable companies embrace this and welcome the chance to enhance the well-being of all their employees at every level of the organization. A Great Place to Work For All gives readers an effective, researched-based look at how to build and maintain an inclusive, high-performing culture—today and beyond. It’s sure to become a must-have guide for how to sustain a thriving business that creates value and growth for all stakeholders.”
—Arne M. Sorenson, President and CEO, Marriott International, Inc.
“In a world that is increasingly uncertain and that changes constantly, employers must listen and respond to their employees’ experiences—in and out of the workplace. Employers have the opportunity to lead with purpose and create an environment of stability to respond to this ‘new normal.’ I believe that the companies that do this will enjoy lower attrition rates, higher ROI for recruiting efforts, increased creativity and flexibility, engaged managers, and of course, superior work quality. Business leaders must accept that creating great places to work for all is a new business imperative for success, or they risk falling behind.”
—Tim Ryan, US Chairman and Senior Partner, PwC
“A company’s ability to deliver on its mission is tied directly to the passion, commitment, and resilience of its people. In my experience at Genentech, our capacity to innovate, drive progress, and help people facing serious diseases depended on maintaining a positive and productive environment for all. I believe a critical part of any leader’s role is to cultivate a workplace where each person feels connected to a core purpose, valued as an individual, and able to contribute his or her best.”
—Ian Clark, former CEO, Genentech
“A Great Place to Work For All provides companies a blueprint on how to build a sustainable winning culture. No company can fulfill its potential without attracting and cultivating great people, at all levels of the organization, who know that what they do makes a difference every day. Such a winning culture does not materialize by accident but instead reflects a concerted effort to align values, people programs, and communications in a strategic way.”
—Walter White, President and CEO, Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America
“In an increasingly volatile and uncertain world, it is vitally important for business leaders to build For All workplaces where people can truly be themselves, be inspired by a compelling purpose, and work hard for the benefit of one another and their customers. For All workplaces have the potential to drive change in society, resetting both our personal and collective expectations ever higher for shared success and opportunity for all.”
—Heather J. Brunner, Chairwoman and CEO, WP Engine
“Digital disruption is impacting every business around the world, and in these uncertain times companies need to invest more than ever in their people to ensure that they can adapt and innovate. Core values and culture need to be more than a poster on the wall. They need to drive the behavior of your employees. Companies with a strong culture and highly engaged employees will not only survive but thrive and innovate!”
—Jim P. Kavanaugh, CEO, World Wide Technology
“A Great Place to Work For All skillfully relates how companies that put their people first find the greatest success and that building a culture of trust throughout an organization fuels its growth and performance.”
—Dennis Gilmore, CEO, First American Financial Corporation
“A true north to be followed by leaders in every industry, A Great Place to Work For All compels us to reach for more than financial performance and makes an inspiring argument that only by building an environment of complete trust and a culture of deeper meaning can we create an enduring company with long-lasting growth. We share these beliefs at GoDaddy, and they’ve been an essential part of our transformation.”
—Blake Irving, former CEO, GoDaddy
“Let’s face the facts. Traditional workplace practices, many designed to simply control and cope with employees, are no longer sufficient and are even being rejected by today’s workers who want more. It’s time to adopt new constructs that, instead, empower employees to flourish. What’s really exciting about A Great Place to Work For All is the book’s detailed explanations of the specific behaviors required to maximize human potential. This is a must-read for business leaders, HR professionals, line managers, and executives who want to engage our most precious resources: people.”
—Dr. Amy Schabacker Dufrane, SPHR, CAE, CEO, HR Certification Institute
“Employees—especially the stars—join a company and then quit the manager.” So, what does it take to be a leader in a company in which employees look forward to coming to work? Bush, CEO of Great Place to Work, the organization that compiles Fortune’s 100 Best Companies To Work For list, offers ideas in this latest guide of how to be a manager “For All.” In order to keep their employees, organizations (from an NBA basketball franchise to a corporate business), must have effective leaders who emphasize ethical behavior and promote trust in order to foster staff potential. Leaders of the top 100 companies are able to translate these practices into innovation and ultimately financial success. Employees look for managers who understand and support their professional as well as personal needs. VERDICT A reminder to management that while there may be differences in work motivators, all employees—from baby boomers to millennials—would appreciate an office culture that is not just about the work you produce but also about the individual you are. A great option for readers of Gary Burnison’s The Leadership Journey and Eric Chester’s On Fire at Work.—Melissa Lockaby, Univ. of North Georgia Libs., Dahlonega
“Michael Bush taught me that investing in people and a building a high-trust culture aren’t just the right things to do; they are critical to building a winning business. I can’t wait to share this book with the small business owners we work with, to demonstrate how ‘For All Leadership’ can help them deliver on their vision, mission, and values."
—Sean Murphy, CEO, Inner City Advisors (ICA), Fund Good Jobs
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
A Great Place to Work For All
By Michael C. BushBerrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc.
Copyright © 2018 Great Place to Work Institute Inc.All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-5230-9508-7
Contents
Foreword A Better View of Motivation by Dan Ariely, pg xi,Introduction A Great Place to Work For All, pg 1,
PART ONE Better for Business,
Chapter 1 More Revenue, More Profit, pg 19,
Chapter 2 A New Business Frontier, pg 33,
Chapter 3 How to Succeed in the New Business Frontier, pg 51,
Chapter 4 Maximizing Human Potential Accelerates Performance, pg 73,
PART TWO Better for People, Better for the World,
Chapter 5 When the Workplace Works For Everyone, pg 105,
Chapter 6 Better Business for a Better World, pg 129,
PART THREE The For All Leadership Call,
Chapter 7 Leading to a Great Place to Work For All, pg 155,
Chapter 8 The For All Rocket Ship, pg 181,
Notes, pg 187,
Thanks, pg 207,
Index, pg 211,
About Us, pg 221,
Authors, pg 225,
CHAPTER 1
More Revenue, More Profit
Great Places to Work For All are better for business. A consistent high-trust culture is quickly becoming critical for business success.
To see the way a Great Place to Work For All wins in business, look at how a For All culture wins on the basketball court.
That is, look at the Golden State Warriors. The professional basketball team of the San Francisco Bay Area has a motto of "Strength in Numbers," and they live up to it. In contrast to the conventional style of play that isolates the most talented players for scoring chances or defensive stops, the Warriors pass the ball incessantly on offense. And their defense involves all five players working together as a unit, constantly helping each other out and switching assignments.
For the 2016–17 season, they ranked as the second-most stingy defense in the NBA. The Warriors also ranked as the most efficient offense the past two years. They have finished first in assists each of the past three years — a sign of the cooperative, unselfish play that leads to easy baskets. These include the many three-point, long-distance shots that earned Warriors guards Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson the nickname "the Splash Brothers."
Overall, the Warriors' success over three seasons is unprecedented. They won 207 games amid just 37 losses — the best regular-season record in a three-year stretch in NBA history. The team won the league championship in 2015, came within a hair's breadth of winning it in 2016, and won the title again in 2017.
To be sure, a key to the Warriors' strong performance is the individual talent of their players, including two-time Most Valuable Player Curry as well as all-stars Thompson, Kevin Durant, and Draymond Green. But the players are thriving in a culture that consciously builds trust and a strong, inclusive community. Coach Steve Kerr took the reins of the team in 2014, and one of his first acts was to establish a set of values that ran counter to business as usual in pro basketball. Kerr, a former player and NBA champion himself, declared "competition" to be one of the team's four guiding principles. Nothing shocking there. But here were the three others: joy, mindfulness, and compassion.
In effect, Kerr wanted to bring a human touch to a sport that has at times taken itself too seriously and too often treated players more as machines than people with a love for the game. The compassion piece also signaled a level of caring and vulnerability rarely heard from a leader in any professional arena, let alone athletics.
The values aren't just words on a wall for the Warriors. The team has stood out for team chat threads, group dinners, goofy pranks on each other off the court, and giddy celebrations during games.
Much of the esprit de corps flows from Kerr himself. He has proven to be a leader who respects everyone associated with the team and is willing to diversify his talent pool. For example, Kerr made a key strategy shift in the 2015 finals series based on a recommendation from one of his lowest-ranking coaching assistants. His staff includes a 70-year-old assistant coach — Ron Adams — and a female head of physical performance and sports medicine. And while Kerr is not shy about instructing his players, he is known for hearing them out as well. "Steve is a very good listener and because of that is able to solicit good ideas from his players," Adams says. "They know what they say is going to be listened to and respected."
Sports are always about teamwork, but the Warriors have pushed the concept to a new level. They are reaping the rewards of that push, including in the key area of talent attraction. Crucial to the 2017 title win was adding Durant, a former league Most Valuable Player, who was drawn to the Warriors' camaraderie and winning ways.
Those winning ways are fueled by a culture that consciously brings out the best in everyone.
In effect, the Warriors are a perfect example of how Great Places to Work For All are better for business. Most organizations aren't trying to win basketball games. But the same For All culture found in the Warriors will allow any business to enjoy more revenue and more profit.
Trust Fuels Performance
Central to a For All culture is a high level of trust. Our data and other evidence have demonstrated that high-trust cultures win in business.
For more than 30 years, Great Place to Work has studied and recognized organizations with high-trust cultures, in part through the Best Workplaces lists produced in partnership with FORTUNE magazine. For these companies, a defining feature of being recognized as a great workplace is a high level of organization-wide trust, as reported by employees. This research, along with findings from various independent research groups, illustrates that high levels of trust pay off. Among the business benefits of high-trust cultures are:
* Stock market returns two to three times greater than the market average (see Figure 2).
For more than a decade, an independent investment firm has tracked the stock performance of the publicly traded FORTUNE 100 Best Companies to Work For. In a simulated portfolio that is reset with newly named list companies each year, the research shows Best Companies have a cumulative return nearly three times the benchmark Russell 3000 and Russell 1000 indices.
A separate, independent study came to similar conclusions. Alex Edmans of the London Business School conducted a complex four-year study that proved a high-trust culture precedes the Best Workplaces' strong stock market performance, and not the other way around. He also found the 100 Best Companies delivered stock returns that beat their peers by 2 to 3 percent per year over a 26-year period.
* Turnover rates approximately 50 percent lower than industry competitors (see Figure 3).
* Increased levels of innovation, customer and patient satisfaction, employee engagement, organizational agility, and more.
A Great Place to Work study of the hospitals that made the 2016 FORTUNE 100 Best Companies to Work For list found that, on average, these high-trust hospitals have Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) patient satisfaction scores that are significantly higher than the U.S. average for overall hospital rating and whether patients would recommend the hospital (see Figure 4). As patients are the end "customer" in a health care setting, these results demonstrate the positive impact a high-trust culture can have on the overall customer experience.
For All Accelerates Performance
So, high-trust workplaces outpace business rivals. But our latest research shows organizations must clear an even higher bar to reach their full potential.
As great as the 100 Best Companies are, they typically have had significant gaps in the employee experience between groups of people. For example, there are sizeable gaps in the work experience between men and women, salaried workers and non-salaried workers, and executives and individual contributors, to name a few of these differences. These gaps mean not everyone is having a positive experience, which means they are not likely to bring the best of what they have to offer to the organization.
At the same time, we are entering a new frontier in business. This largely uncharted territory is about developing every ounce of human potential, because every employee matters in an economy that is about connectivity, innovation, and human qualities like passion, character, and collaboration.
Societal and technological changes are creating new opportunities and challenges for organizations in the competition for loyal customers and talented employees. The millennial generation, in particular, is a highly diverse group that expects meaning, growth, and balance at work. A reputation for developing employees and for welcoming people from all backgrounds and walks of life is increasingly crucial to attracting and retaining the best team possible. In short, the emerging business climate compels organizations to create an outstanding culture for everyone.
Our latest research backs the idea that organizations must create Great Places to Work For All to thrive. For one thing, we found Great Places to Work For All leave competitors in the dust. In studying employee surveys from the 2017 100 Best and the non-winning contender companies, we found the more consistent an organization is on metrics related to innovation, leadership effectiveness, and trust, the more likely it is to outperform peers in revenue growth. In particular, companies in the top quartile on these metrics — which we call our For All Score — enjoy more than three times the revenue growth of companies in the bottom quartile (see Figure 5).
We also found Great Places to Work For All grow their revenue faster than companies that simply show high levels of trust on average.
Up until this past year, we measured the employee experience by examining the overall, average response to our Trust Index Employee Survey. This "old" approach — which has been the foundation of our ranking of the FORTUNE 100 Best Companies to Work For list for the past 20 years — didn't take into account statistically significant gaps that may exist between demographic groups.
In 2017, the organizations that ranked highest according to the new For All methodology proved to be a different set of companies than those that ranked highest when using the traditional methodology. And the top tier of these new For All companies grew faster than the best companies determined by our traditional methodology. We found 13.7 percent median annual revenue growth for the top quartile of companies on the For All Score ranking. That compares to 12.5 percent annual revenue growth for the top quartile of companies ranked by our traditional way of gauging the employee experience (see Figure 6).
This follows other evidence from us and others that inclusive cultures provide more value to shareholders and all stakeholders:
* In a 2015 report, consulting firm McKinsey examined 366 public companies across a range of industries in Canada, Latin America, the United Kingdom, and the United States, and found companies with more diverse workforces perform better financially. Gender-diverse companies were 15 percent more likely to outperform peers with little gender diversity, while ethnically diverse companies were 35 percent more likely to outperform less-diverse peers.
* A 2016 study by the Peterson Institute for International Economics involving nearly 22,000 firms from 91 countries found "the presence of women in corporate leadership positions may improve firm performance" and that "the payoffs of policies that facilitate women rising through the corporate ranks more broadly could be significant."
* Our own research in producing the 2016 Best Workplaces for Diversity list showed that the most inclusive workplaces experienced average annual revenue gains 24 percent higher than their peer companies certified by Great Place to Work.
Our study suggested that just hiring a demographically diverse workforce will not by itself boost results. Simply increasing headcount diversity did not show a strong connection to revenue growth. Instead, our data showed that employees' experience of genuine workplace inclusion — as seen by high, consistent survey scores in areas such as fair treatment and a caring environment — is a better predictor of revenue growth than diversity alone.
Leading companies, including many FORTUNE 100 Best Companies, are on the path to For All workplaces. They are working to close the gaps in the employee experience. And they are seeing payoffs.
Take software giant Salesforce, a perennial 100 Best Company. CEO Marc Benioff and his team invested $3 million in 2015 to address a gender pay gap at the company. The move, along with a host of other equality efforts, has reaped rewards. Salesforce is becoming a beacon for talented women in technology, and it's enjoying the fruits of a more fully engaged workforce. The percentage of women employees who say they want to work at Salesforce for a long time jumped from 85 percent in 2014 to 93 percent in 2016. And 92 percent of female employees in 2016 said people look forward to coming to work at Salesforce, up from 85 percent in 2014.
Salesforce has not rested on its laurels on the gender pay issue. It conducted a similar pay equity study in 2017, investing $3 million more to close compensation gaps. Perhaps not surprisingly, the company has been growing faster than its rivals, and it dominates the customer relationship management software market.
But the Golden State Warriors may be the winningest of them all these days — and not just on the court. With its "Strength in Numbers" culture as a foundation, the franchise has been raking in business rewards as well. The value of the team rose an NBA-high 37 percent to $2.6 billion in 2017, leapfrogging from sixth place to third place in the league.
With their season ticket renewal rate at 99.5 percent, the Warriors felt confident enough in 2017 to raise season ticket prices by 15 to 25 percent. And the organization landed a $300 million deal with Chase to name the Warriors' new stadium — a record price for a U.S. arena.
Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob caught some flak for boasting in a 2016 New York Times profile that the organization, with its "Silicon Valley precepts" such as open communication and collaborative decision making, is superior to its peers. "We're light-years ahead of probably every other team in structure, in planning, in how we're going to go about things," Lacob told the Times. Lacob may be guilty of bravado, but there's little arguing with the way he and his partners have seen their investment blossom. They bought the team for $450 million in 2010, meaning their ROI as of 2017 was a gain of nearly 500 percent.
The Warriors culture is where businesses must go as well. The business case for a Great Place to Work For All isn't merely a two-point slam dunk. It's better. It's a three-point splash.
CHAPTER 2A New Business Frontier
Social and technology changes require a new way of doing business.
The rules of the road in business have changed. Just ask Uber.
In a few short years, the ride-sharing service both transformed the transportation industry and found itself crashing against new standards related to leadership, transparency, and fairness.
With its phone-based app for arranging car trips, Uber pioneered a new, cheaper, more convenient way of getting around. It jump-started the "gig economy" by tapping independent contractors rather than traditional employees and quickly became a global force. Eight years into its existence, Uber's revenue in 2016 had raced to $6.5 billion and it was valued at $70 billion — $15 billion more than General Motors.
But its brash CEO Travis Kalanick also steered into one accident after another. In January 2017, Kalanick and the company were slammed for allegedly seeking to profit when taxi drivers protested the Trump administration's refugee ban. Fueled by a #DeleteUber campaign on Twitter, roughly 500,000 users reportedly asked to delete their Uber accounts in the wake of that incident.
The negative publicity continued in February 2017. Former Uber engineer Susan Fowler published a blog post claiming a culture of sexism at the company — including her charge that Uber refused to punish her manager after he made sexual advances, in part because he was a "high performer." There were legal troubles as well, including a U.S. Justice Department probe. Kalanick's reputation was further bruised by a video of him losing his temper with an Uber driver over fare policy. Several executives departed amid all the troubles.
Along with the scandals came a financial warning sign: Uber was burning through cash at an astounding rate. It posted net losses that rose to nearly $1 billion in the last quarter of 2016 — an amount that may have been the largest quarterly deficit in business history. Meanwhile, rival Lyft added more than 50 cities to its operations, and other companies were considering entering the ride-share market.
Uber tried to course correct in early 2017. The company put a plan in place to fix its culture, and fired 20 employees in June because of harassment, discrimination, and inappropriate behavior. And Kalanick pledged to get leadership coaching in the wake of his altercation with the driver. But it wasn't enough to prevent investors from pushing him out of the driver's seat. Kalanick stepped down as CEO on June 21, remaining on the company's board of directors.
What a Difference 20 Years Make
Whether Uber's culture flaws, scandals, and executive shake-up amounted to minor potholes or an insurmountable roadblock remained to be seen as of mid-2017. But the company's valuation undoubtedly backtracked amid all the trouble. And the very fact that it careened so wildly speaks to the way the business world has changed in the past two decades.
(Continues...)Excerpted from A Great Place to Work For All by Michael C. Bush. Copyright © 2018 Great Place to Work Institute Inc.. Excerpted by permission of Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- Publisher : Berrett-Koehler Publishers (March 13, 2018)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 256 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1523095083
- ISBN-13 : 978-1523095087
- Item Weight : 12.8 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.63 x 0.56 x 8.56 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #375,214 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #872 in Workplace Culture (Books)
- #954 in Human Resources & Personnel Management (Books)
- #4,502 in Leadership & Motivation
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About the authors

Michael C. Bush is CEO of Great Place to Work®, the global authority on high-trust, high performance workplaces. He was a member of President Barack Obama’s White House Business Council and served previously as President of the8Factors, an online learning organization, as well as CEO of Tetra Tech Communications—which he grew from $40 million to $300 million in revenues. Michael speaks frequently at industry events, is often quoted in major media outlets and regularly publishes articles in Fortune magazine. @MBushGPTW

"Put the right letters together and make a better day.”
I quoted that Prince lyric in my college senior yearbook in 1989, and it describes what I’ve been trying to do for nearly three decades as a journalist, researcher, speaker and book author.
My main topics are masculinity and workplace culture, as well as the intersection between the two.
Most recently, I published Reinventing Masculinity: The Liberating Power of Compassion and Connection. My co-author Dr. Ed Adams and I explore the hopeful shift under way from an outdated, unhealthy and “confined” masculinity to a "liberating" one that frees men and those around them to live fuller lives at home, at play, at work and in the world.
I have co-authored three other books.
A Great Place to Work For All, published in 2018, shows that today’s leaders have to meet a higher standard: they have to create a great workplace culture for everyone, no matter who they are or what they do for the organization.
I also co-authored Organized Innovation: A Blueprint for Renewing America's Prosperity, published in 2014. It argues that America's approach to technology development in recent decades has been disorganized to a fault, and that a new, more coordinated method is needed.
In 2011, I co-authored Good Company: Business Success in the Worthiness Era. It documents the evolution of corporate social responsibility, making the case that companies increasingly must prove themselves worthy of their employees, customers and investors.
I currently serve as senior director of content at research and advisory firm Great Place to Work. I also co-founded the Teal Team, a group aiming to help organizations evolve into more democratic, purpose-driven, soulful places.
Earlier in my career, I spent roughly 20 years as a journalist, with stints at technology media firm CNET Networks, the Oakland Tribune chain of newspapers and Workforce magazine. I also have worked as a freelance writer for publications including Wired magazine, Salon.com and The Dallas Morning News.
I've made more than 75 speaking appearances to live and online audiences. I also have organized and hosted events.
I serve as a board member of the Berrett-Koehler Authors organization and as a board member of Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
I live in San Francisco with my teenage son and daughter and artist wife Rowena Richie. In my spare time you can find me doing Qi Gong with Rowena, dancing to Daft Punk and playing disc golf with a good friend.
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Unlike many books I have read about managing teams and individuals, this book uses data that has been collected over many years. It shows how trends that made employees happy 10 years ago are no longer moving the needle. Most importantly, it underlines the most critical part of what makes a company "great " is trust.





