Our recent ESOP Topics Survey asked companies to reflect on how employee ownership is affecting their ability to respond to the coronavirus pandemic. The responses show some encouraging perspectives on how an ESOP and an effective culture of ownership can help companies survive and thrive in crisis.
The survey received 160 responses from a fairly diverse group of ESOP companies. Two-thirds of respondents said that being employee-owned has had a very or somewhat positive effect on their handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Most of the remaining third reported neutral or no effects, and just 3% of respondents reported negative effects.
Respondents elaborated on their answers in written comments. A few common themes emerged from the 88 responses.
Buy-in and trust. Many respondents said their ESOP has created a sense of common purpose and cohesion, a sense of being “all in this together,” that is helping the company adapt. Some comments focused on the concrete financial incentives for employee-owners to work to keep the business healthy, while others pointed to effects on morale, pride, and trust. Employee-owners may have more trust in management than they would at another company that did not share ownership, allowing the company to be more nimble and creative in changing course.
Culture is key. A number of respondents cited their ownership culture, not just the ESOP itself, as a major boon in keeping their business healthy. Conversely, some respondents with newer ESOPs or without a developed culture of ownership are not getting full the benefit from their ESOP.
Communication and transparency are paying off. Companies that have been proactive in sharing key financial information, via open-book management or other means, are seeing increased employee trust and understanding.
Idea generation. Several companies said that employees have helped devise creative solutions for maintaining a safe work environment and continuing operations. Having a preexisting culture of participation was cited as key to this.
Notes of caution. A few respondents noted that being employee-owned hasn’t proved an unalloyed good during the pandemic. One respondent noted that their ESOP loan is a cashflow burden, and that senior owners could previously have provided a cash buffer to ride out the crisis. Another expressed concern that the drop in share price from the pandemic would be a morale drain, and might make it necessary to do layoffs or pay reductions to keep the share price from falling too far. The ESOP posed a temporary issue in a PPP loan application for one company (though all companies in the survey who applied for a PPP loan were ultimately approved).
These responses shed hopeful light on employee ownership's role in keeping companies healthy in times of upheaval. In the words of one employee-owner: "Employee ownership might not make that much of a difference in good times but it really helps in bad times."
See our previous posts and summary results on the ESOP Topics Survey, and stay tuned here for more.