Keeping your company safe

I met a friend for lunch yesterday and we got onto the topic of unions. He spent a number of years running his own engineering company in Phoenix and he was recounting a time with his first employer, an engineering and fabrication company. The business was quite successful, more so than its competitors at the time. The owner paid fair wages based on each person's output, but the workers began talk of unionizing anyway.
 
My friend told me that the owner held a company meeting and made it clear if the union came in he would close the business. The owner said the introduction of unions to their competitors was one of the reasons they were winning business, and that some of those companies had even closed their doors because they were no longer competitive.
 
Well, the workers had a union rep come in for a meeting anyway. The owner decided to attend the meeting to hear what was said. During the meeting, the union rep stood up and announced "here are the exact numbers for this business - look how much profit it is making!" At this point, the owner quietly slipped out and called the police. He returned to the meeting, stood up and asked "where did you get that information?" The union rep stammered and wavered, not giving a direct answer. The owner finally told the crowd that the only copy of those numbers was held in his personal safe with no copies anywhere else. The police entered the room and took the union rep away. He had broken into the safe at some point prior to the meeting to secure the information in an attempt to win over the workers.
 
As my friend finished telling the story, I immediately thought of how simple business was back then and how much things had changed. Is your confidential and valuable business information truly private and secure? Do you have any way to know what your employees tell your customers? Do you have a safe in which to store the only copies of your most valued information? Considering these issues, more surely today will I record my business calls given the informational and services nature of my business --because I cannot risk the unknown. I urge you to protect your business assets and relationships in any way necessary, too.
| 0 Comments | 0 TrackBacks

Listed below are links to sites that reference Keeping your company safe:

Keeping your company safe TrackBack URL : http://blog.tmcnet.com/mt/mt-tb.cgi/38340

Around TMCnet:

Leave a comment

Around TMCnet Blogs

Latest Whitepapers

TMCnet Videos