A 9:30
meeting in San Francisco…common scenario in my daily work-life. BART seemed like the best option to head to
San Francisco from my office in Concord. So, after
only 3 BART station visits, I was able to find parking and I even scored a
luxurious seat when someone unexpectedly got up in Orinda. I found myself seated next to a surprisingly
chatty, professional looking gentleman, eager for conversation.
After typical pleasantries and name
exchanges, the conversation went something like this:
PLG (Professional Looking Gentlemen): So Rick, What kind of work do you do?
Me (Rick Thorpe, BART rider and HR Options employee): I’m a sales executive for an HR consulting company called
HR Options that provides 3rd party employment services. How about you?
PLG: I’m an
Accounting Manager and handle payroll, receivables, and payables.
For the next minute or
so, we had minor chitchat, and although I frequently encourage conversation, I
kind of hoped our niceties would end there. However...
PLG: So, Rick, What
exactly does HR Options do and what
is 3rd party employment? In a previous position, I was in charge of
handling our HR, as well, so I know a little about contingent workers and
temporary employees.
Me: Great, simply
put, HR Options becomes the employer of record for our clients contingent workers.
PLG: Oh O.K., so
you’re a PEO (Professional Employer Organization).
Me: Not
really. PEOs have co-employment
arrangements with their clients and generally co-employ the entire
organization. HR Options employs just
the workers that our clients don’t want to employ themselves.
PLG: Oh, so you’re a temporary staffing company.
Me: Well, not exactly
that either. A staffing company usually
finds workers for clients and keeps a large database of potential
candidates. While our consultants can do
recruiting, our clients typically know who they want to become HR Options
employees.
PLG: So, do you
handle the payroll for these workers?
Me: Yes,
they’re HR Options employees.
PLG: Oh, so you’re pretty much a payroll company.
At this point, we’re in
the BART Tube, under the bay, and I’m starting to be concerned that the PLG
(Professional Looking Gentlemen) was not going to fully grasp the HR Options
concept by the Embarcadero station.
Me: No, we’re
not really a payroll company. Payroll
companies help their clients pay their employees. We do the payroll for HR Options employees, since
they truly are our employees.
PLG: Do you work on-site at client locations when
employing these contingent workers?
Me: Occasionally, if there is a large enough need.
PLG: Well, you sound a lot like a MSP (Managed Service
Provider) that comes on-site and handles all the vendors that supply the
contingent workers at large companies. Is that your market?
Me: Although we
have some very large clients, I think our best fit is working with companies
that have one to about 50 workers that the company has decided not to employ
directly and it would be best to 3rd party employ them through HR
Options.
PLG: OK Rick,
thanks for the conversation. I’ll think
of HR Options if we ever need temp employees.
Me: What?????
Is HR Options' offering
difficult to understand? Did I not
explain it correctly? Who knows...I don’t
expect to hear from PLG!
No comments:
Post a Comment