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Companies helping workers build wealth find strategic benefits along the way

Companies helping workers build wealth find strategic benefits along the way

Technical.ly09-05-2025

From matching 401(k)s to building college pipelines, business leaders say doing good by employees can be good for business, too.
Economic mobility demands that companies go beyond wages and benefits to support long-term employee success, with transparency, intention and equity, panelists said at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's Economic Mobility Summit earlier this month.
Structure varies from company to company, but shares a common goal of promoting equity and stability through workplace investment. In short: Mobility isn't just a policy issue — it's a leadership one, according to the panelists.
'When you succeed, you have a responsibility to help the community,' said William Polacek, CEO of manufacturing firm JWF Industries. 'And when you help the community, you get a return as well.'
Polacek spoke from personal experience. His company has long prioritized workforce development, partnering with local high schools to create early job pipelines and matching up to 10% of employees' 401(k)s.
At Crayola, however, it's about culture and connection. President and CEO Peter Ruggiero said Crayola works with United Way of the Lehigh Valley and Lafayette College to help children see what's possible, from literacy programs to a chance to visit a college campus.
Crayola's challenge, Ruggiero said, is attracting and retaining workers. Most hires start as temps and grow into full-time roles, supported by tuition assistance for college or graduate degrees. Incentives are tied to clear, achievable goals.
'Imagine their loyalty to the brand and the company,' he said. 'Imagine their knowledge of how we manufacture, our culture and how we operate.'
Economic mobility support at every level
Other businesses, like Amalgamated Bank, take a structural approach to address all levels of the economic mobility pipeline, according to Priscilla Sims Brown, the bank's president and CEO.
The company's commitment to economic mobility starts with its own employees. For example, implementing a $15 minimum wage in 2015, with continued increases since. Stock options and benefit plans round out the package.
The institution partners with organizations aligned with its values that also recognize the intersectionality of the wealth gap and wealth building, Brown said.
'If you're thinking about [the wealth gap], you can't think about it in a vacuum,' she said. 'There's health disparities which contribute to the wealth gap. There's educational barriers that contribute to the wealth gap.'
Incentivising companies to do good
For Damien Dwin, founder and CEO of private investment firm Lafayette Square, providing economic incentives to companies is key. Companies that provide services to employees, such as healthcare and retirement benefits, will get an interest rate step down, for example.
Access to company data, like how much money employees make and how many are enrolled in benefits, can help Dwin come up with a personalized strategy to help companies reduce turnover, he said.
'If we can get turnover down, if we can get healthcare and retirement benefits up, workers will not only be more productive,' Dwin said. 'Society will be better off, and to us, that is the essence of economic mobility.'
Efforts to keep employees engaged require consistent attention, but being transparent about the goals of the company can help, Ruggiero said.
'Transparency about what the objectives are for the organization,' he said. 'To set targets against that, and to incentivize all of your employees to chase that.'
Sarah Huffman is a 2022-2024 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Project that pairs young journalists with local newsrooms. This position is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.

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Companies helping workers build wealth find strategic benefits along the way
Companies helping workers build wealth find strategic benefits along the way

Technical.ly

time09-05-2025

  • Technical.ly

Companies helping workers build wealth find strategic benefits along the way

From matching 401(k)s to building college pipelines, business leaders say doing good by employees can be good for business, too. Economic mobility demands that companies go beyond wages and benefits to support long-term employee success, with transparency, intention and equity, panelists said at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's Economic Mobility Summit earlier this month. Structure varies from company to company, but shares a common goal of promoting equity and stability through workplace investment. In short: Mobility isn't just a policy issue — it's a leadership one, according to the panelists. 'When you succeed, you have a responsibility to help the community,' said William Polacek, CEO of manufacturing firm JWF Industries. 'And when you help the community, you get a return as well.' Polacek spoke from personal experience. His company has long prioritized workforce development, partnering with local high schools to create early job pipelines and matching up to 10% of employees' 401(k)s. At Crayola, however, it's about culture and connection. President and CEO Peter Ruggiero said Crayola works with United Way of the Lehigh Valley and Lafayette College to help children see what's possible, from literacy programs to a chance to visit a college campus. Crayola's challenge, Ruggiero said, is attracting and retaining workers. Most hires start as temps and grow into full-time roles, supported by tuition assistance for college or graduate degrees. Incentives are tied to clear, achievable goals. 'Imagine their loyalty to the brand and the company,' he said. 'Imagine their knowledge of how we manufacture, our culture and how we operate.' Economic mobility support at every level Other businesses, like Amalgamated Bank, take a structural approach to address all levels of the economic mobility pipeline, according to Priscilla Sims Brown, the bank's president and CEO. The company's commitment to economic mobility starts with its own employees. For example, implementing a $15 minimum wage in 2015, with continued increases since. Stock options and benefit plans round out the package. The institution partners with organizations aligned with its values that also recognize the intersectionality of the wealth gap and wealth building, Brown said. 'If you're thinking about [the wealth gap], you can't think about it in a vacuum,' she said. 'There's health disparities which contribute to the wealth gap. There's educational barriers that contribute to the wealth gap.' Incentivising companies to do good For Damien Dwin, founder and CEO of private investment firm Lafayette Square, providing economic incentives to companies is key. Companies that provide services to employees, such as healthcare and retirement benefits, will get an interest rate step down, for example. Access to company data, like how much money employees make and how many are enrolled in benefits, can help Dwin come up with a personalized strategy to help companies reduce turnover, he said. 'If we can get turnover down, if we can get healthcare and retirement benefits up, workers will not only be more productive,' Dwin said. 'Society will be better off, and to us, that is the essence of economic mobility.' Efforts to keep employees engaged require consistent attention, but being transparent about the goals of the company can help, Ruggiero said. 'Transparency about what the objectives are for the organization,' he said. 'To set targets against that, and to incentivize all of your employees to chase that.' Sarah Huffman is a 2022-2024 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Project that pairs young journalists with local newsrooms. This position is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.

Like electricity in the 20th century, broadband access is now an economic necessity
Like electricity in the 20th century, broadband access is now an economic necessity

Technical.ly

time17-03-2025

  • Technical.ly

Like electricity in the 20th century, broadband access is now an economic necessity

Broadband expansion today mirrors the past electrification of homes, evolving from a new technology into an economic necessity. Access is linked to economic opportunity, with lower adoption rates tied to higher inequality. Policymakers see internet access as crucial for jobs and mobility. Challenges fall into three areas: infrastructure (connections), affordability (cost) and literacy (knowing how to use it). All states have digital equity plans, but issues like net neutrality remain unsettled. Does broadband drive economic success, or simply reflect it? Likely both, but because the technology is still evolving, it's tricky to measure. On New Year's Eve 1927, Thomas Edison turned on the lights of Philadelphia's newest skyscraper. Edison was an aged celebrity by then, the father of industrialized research and development, which included commercializing electric light. Harnessing electricity was still novel technology — only about half of American households had it. Philadelphians alive then could have remembered the first time Chestnut Street was lit in the 1880s. Edison flipping the switch was something like Steve Jobs commemorating the launch of a new iPhone app 15 years ago. Today's defining technology is the internet, along with the interlocking digital tools that contributed to and resulted from its inception. Artificial intelligence may well usher in its own technology epoch, but even this branch of computer science is as beholden to the internet — as the internet is to electricity. How and whether high-speed internet access is like the electrification of homes can teach us something. Getting online and knowing what to do once you're there matters. The New Deal-era Rural Electrification Administration added programs in the 1930s to familiarize Americans with how to harness electricity. That's why so many policymakers, researchers and civic organizations today, including care so much about who has access to the internet and how. People who learn about emerging technologies today tend to be the entrepreneurs and tech workers of tomorrow. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia hosted a series of discussions this month on broadband infrastructure and its economic impact. Attendees traveled from Washington DC, Baltimore and New York, joining locals to dissect the Philadelphia case study: A poor big city that has steadily grown internet access amid experiments to do so faster and to boost economic gains in the hometown of one of the country's largest internet service providers. The Fed meeting wasn't open to the public, but the discussion was rich. I was teased by one of the meeting's 50 stakeholders for overusing the ' essential utility ' metaphor, but what can we learn by comparing access to electricity and access to high-speed internet? The 'digital divide' is about infrastructure, cost and literacy Much of best, earliest reporting more than 15 years ago was about internet connectivity and skills. My cofounder and I covered exhaustively a bold, if ultimately unsuccessful, $100 million 'Digital Philadelphia' vision from city leadership to both upgrade municipal IT infrastructure and launch a new attempt at government-subsidized internet. We returned often to Wireless Philadelphia, a landmark effort in the 2000s to launch a municipal wifi program that never came to be. In part, those programs sought to close what was commonly known then as the 'digital divide,' a term coined in the mid-1990s to describe how unequal access to and comfort with accelerating technology could widen economic gains. In 2011, methodology was still developing, but upwards of 40% of Philadelphia households were without broadband. That same year, Comcast launched Internet Essentials, a low-cost offering that was required for regulatory approval of its NBCUniversal acquisition. 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The Biden administration's Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program targeted adding 25 million Americans, with investments heavily focused on rural communities. City of Baltimore digital equity director Kenya Asli told me at the Fed that her dense, if poor, city — which is unusual in owning its conduit network — never expected any BEAD funding. Instead, city leaders today focus on choice and cost. A Philadelphia household internet survey conducted by the Benton Institute in 2021 found that affordability was cited by 42% of households as their primary obstacle to broadband adoption. The same survey noted that 32% of Philadelphia households were 'subscription vulnerable,' i.e. likely to drop coverage when facing an unexpected bill. Programs to subsidize connectivity, spurred by pandemic limitations, helped drive Philadelphia's broadband adoption from 70% in 2019 to 84% by 2021, yet many residents remain unaware of available assistance programs or struggle with the process to enroll successfully. Similar growth took place in cities across the country. Judging by our experience with other utilities, we may never reach full coverage. Even today more than half a million American households lack running water, according to a new analysis, largely due to affordability — there are infrastructure issues too. About 15,000 households are estimated to not have electricity, again reflecting a mix of infrastructure and affordability challenges. Many cities may be nearing the upper bounds of adoption then — according to the Census, roughly 9 in 10 households have broadband, though speed and reliability are points of contention. 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Philly weekly roundup: Gopuff fires CTO; Pollworkers adapt to election tech; RTO and company culture
Philly weekly roundup: Gopuff fires CTO; Pollworkers adapt to election tech; RTO and company culture

Technical.ly

time22-10-2024

  • Technical.ly

Philly weekly roundup: Gopuff fires CTO; Pollworkers adapt to election tech; RTO and company culture

Gopuff fires CTO following his June arrest Gopuff CTO Sree Kotay was fired from the company last week following a June arrest for drug possession. Police filings allege one misdemeanor and two felonies, including domestic violence, intent to sell methamphetamines and possession of cocaine. The Philly-based delivery service giant also had a stop work order from the city's Department of Revenue on the door of its Northern Liberties headquarters. ➡️ Older pollworkers struggle with voting tech Philadelphia replaced its voting machines with modern versions in 2019. Even more recently, the county implemented electronic pollbooks as a tool for workers to look up voters. While longtime pollworkers told that these new systems are a positive change, older poll workers have struggled to adjust to the new tech. Additional training would also be helpful, they said. News Incubator: What else to know today • Chicago-based BaKIT Box won the PitcHER competition at the Grace Hopper Celebration, but the event still had plenty of Philly influence. Local nonprofit Philly Startup Leaders worked closely with to select the finalists and prep them for the competition. [ • Return to office mandates won't build up company culture, attendees at BarCamp Philly said during a panel discussion. Companies need to focus on intentional time spent together instead. [ • Local life sciences companies have laid off nearly 900 employees since 2022. [Philly Biz Journal] • Philadelphia City Council passed a bill to fine property owners with dysfunctional electric vehicle chargers. [WHYY] • The average internet bill for Pennsylvanians is $110, according to a survey from US News and World Report. Nearly nine in ten of the respondents from the survey said Congress should reinstate the Affordable Connectivity Program. [US News and World Report] • The viral portal art installation is coming to Philly this week. The portal shows a constant livestream between two locations. [NBC10] • The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia added Mark W. Jaindl and Gregory Matuson to its Community Depository Institutions Advisory Council. [Philadelphia Fed] • The Chamber of Commerce of Greater Philadelphia announced its 2024 to 2025 board of directors and executive committee. [Chamber of Commerce] • Mahe Bayireddi, CEO and cofounder of HR tech company Phenom, was recognized as one of the Most Exceptional Entrepreneurs of 2024 by Goldman Sachs. [BusinessWire] Help others skip the paywall Unlike many other business publications, focuses not only on up-to-the-minute news stories, but also journalism that expands access to capital and tools for economic growth to people in marginalized communities or from traditionally underrepresented backgrounds. That's why we don't have a all sounds lofty and good, but to make it work, we need you. If you're a client or preferred partner — you're already helping. Thank you. For everyone, consider making a donation to the Journalism Fund. It's tax deductible, and any amount makes a difference, whether $5 or $50 or $500 or $5,000. You have our gratitude. ➡️ Donate to the Journalism Fund today! 🗓️ On the Calendar • Drexel University is partnering with YellowDig for the Human Connection Summit on Oct. 23. [ Buy tickets ] • Partner Event: The Latina Style Business Summit takes place at the Community College of Philadelphia on Wednesday, Oct. 23, and it's totally free to attend for networking, workshops and a keynote luncheon. [ RSVP here ] • PhillyCHI and A11yPHL are cohosting a discussion about accessibility and design on Oct. 24. [ Sign up ] • Code and Coffee at Philly will be at its usual spot at the Capital One Cafe on Saturday, Oct. 26. [ Details here ] • Philadelphia Open Innovation Tournament is this weekend. [ Register here ] • 1Philadelphia is hosting its Innovation Weekend on Oct. 24 to 26. The event celebrates opportunities for equitable tech in Philly. [ Find out more ] Sarah Huffman is a 2022-2024 corps member for Report for America, an initiative of The Groundtruth Project that pairs young journalists with local newsrooms. This position is supported by the Lenfest Institute for Journalism.

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