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PEO Firms Provide Crucial Relief for Overwhelmed Businesses

Guest post by: Ari Rosenstein

Article Overview: In response to the growing risks and time-consuming activities related to managing employees, frustrated employers are turning to Professional Employer Organizations in record numbers. PEOs are experts in all aspects of Human Resources and help small and mid-sized employers comply with the law and offer their staff enhanced training and benefits.

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PEO Firms Provide Crucial Relief for Overwhelmed Businesses

Effectively managing Human Resources has become a daunting and complex task for small to mid-market business owners. U.S. corporations must grapple with one of the most complicated systems of employment laws in the world. This includes a laundry list of unfriendly policies, including laws governing hiring and termination, family leave, sexual harassment, paying employees, leaves of absence, employee benefits, and workers' compensation. In just the first months of 2007, dozens of laws dealing with every subject from discrimination to wage deduction have been enacted. These trends have led to an unprecedented rise of employment litigation, labor regulations, and tax laws.
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Employers continue to face fluctuating risks, and the high expense of conducting business has restricted the opportunities for business owners to remain competitive. Furthermore, it has become clear that the expertise required to manage a small to mid-sized operation has outgrown the experience and training of many entrepreneurs who started these businesses.

These complexities have led to one of the hottest business trends in the nation: Human Resources Outsourcing . Human Resource Outsourcing firms help companies reduce costs and efficiently manage HR-related issues, while navigating the complex business labyrinth, an intricate combination of policies and regulatory standards that are difficult to escape.


Outsourcing Human Resources to the Experts

HR Outsourcing enables companies to shift responsibility of non-revenue generating competencies that can be handled easily, and inexpensively, by off-site experts. These functions include the areas of labor compliance, risk and safety, payroll, benefits, and other complex workplace regulations. HR Outsourcing helps companies reduce costs by effectively managing HR functions while allowing businesses to focus on their core operations that impact profitability.

Once HR and other operations are outsourced, many companies are showing a strong return on investment, according to a recent survey of American executives, by IDC, a global provider of market intelligence. The 2006 survey of executives at the IDC Midwest Conference in Chicago showed nearly 85 percent of the respondents saved as much as they spent on outsourcing, with 26.4 percent reporting a savings of twice as much. And the savings, according to nearly 95 percent of the respondents, went toward operational performance and innovation, which improved shareholder value.

According to IDC, companies worldwide are expected to spend more than $103.3 billion just on HR Outsourcing this year, up significantly from the $61.2 billion spent in 2002. In the U.S., outsourcing HR services is the fastest growing segment of the broader business process outsourcing (BPO) industry, and is expected to grow annually at a rate of 16 percent.

In line to capitalize on those numbers are the Professional Employer Organizations, or PEOs. The increase in small businesses and the difficulty for them to manage the many facets of HR administration is leaving the door open for the PEO - the matriarch to the BPO solution.


PEOs Answer the Call

The PEO industry, formerly known as Employee Leasing, or Staff Leasing, has become a rudder for companies trying to navigate choppy seas. Taking on the responsibility of all human resource functions, the PEO can serve a multitude of functions. Primarily, the PEO creates a "co-employment" relationship with its clients, thereby sharing the risks and responsibilities of being an employer. The PEO assumes the role of the Administrative Employer, whereby the PEO pays the employees, files payroll taxes, provides health insurance, issues the workers' compensation insurance, and manages most aspects of employment. The client maintains the role as the Administrative Employer and continues to manage and oversee all day-to-day functions relating to their internal operations. This includes hiring, firing, establishing wages, and directing the workforce.

Helping Businesses and Their Employees

Through a co-employment relationship, small organizations access the economies of scale enjoyed by large corporations. The PEO client can offer premium benefit packages and retirement plans, typically provided by their larger competitors. They can maintain a simple in-house HR infrastructure or none at all by relying on the PEO. The client also can reduce hiring overhead. Costs related to monitoring of, and compliance with, employment laws are reduced, as are the often significant costs of failure to comply with such laws. In addition, the PEO provides time savings by handling routine and redundant tasks for its clients. This enables the business owner to focus on the company's core competency and grow its bottom line.

In addition to providing important services to their business clients, PEOs offer substantial advantages to worksite employees. In many cases, these employees would not be provided the number, or quality, of benefits that a PEO can offer. These benefits may include health insurance, retirement savings plans, disability insurance, life insurance, dependent care reimbursement accounts, vision care, dental insurance, employee assistance plans, job counseling and educational benefits. Each individual small business's cost of establishing and administering this range of plans would be prohibitive. However, due to economies of scale, PEOs can sponsor and offer these plans at an affordable cost.

A Surging Industry

After a decline in the number of PEOs in 2003, a strong economy has resulted in a surge over the past four years. The PEO industry serves between two and three million employees per year, with most assisting companies with less than 50 employees. The average PEO is on the rise, too, with a growth rate of more than 20 percent per year for the last six years, according to a survey by the NAPEO, the national trade association for the industry.

For an annual fee that easily trumps the cost of an HR staff, PEOs manage training and education, health benefits, payroll, benefits, workers' compensation issues and employee relations. It is apparent that the frustration brought on by obtrusive human resource standards can be offset by the value found with PEOs, and other HR Outsourcing providers.

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Home > Human-Resources > Ari Rosenstein > PEO Firms Provide Crucial Relief for Overwhelmed Businesses
Article Tags: employee leasing, PEO, professional employer organization

About the Author: Ari Rosenstein
RSS for Ari's articles - Visit Ari's website

Ari is the Director of Marketing at CPEhr, a leading Human Resources Outsourcing and Professional Employer Organization. CPEhr specializes in labor law in California, and provides a comprehensive HR service package for employers. This includes: HR compliance, training, safety consulting, payroll and employee benefits packages. With 15,000 serviced employees nationwide, CPEhr is one of the largest privately-held PEOs in the nation. CPEhr prides itself on its personalized relationships and customized HR solutions.

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