Economic Development Opportunities – An Important Incentive in Attracting Companies to Your Region
by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
When organizations try to create new jobs in their area – working with companies that are considering moving to, expanding to or expanding within their areas – skilled labor availability for many regional economic development strategies may include an offering that consists of one part skills assessment, one part general skill classes and a sprinkling of worker tax credits or grants. That seems to be what most incentive packages include, but is that because: A) that is what the other offers look like; b) it has been like that for decades; C) it is assumed that is all that is available; or D) all of the above?
For over forty years headlines sounded the alarm that those institutions that were training the “workforce of tomorrow” were not succeeding in their effort as discussed in, “An Anniversary That You Won’t Want to Celebrate: Years Later and The Skill Gap Grows – Is it Finally Time to Rethink The Nation’s Approach?“). Many skilled workers that are available to work do not have the skills that employers need today. Not completely satisfied with their answers to the inevitable labor force availability and suitability questions and how workers with specific skill requirements will be found or developed, some economic development organizations are exploring other options and opportunities.
“Whether attracting new companies and helping them thrive and expand, or helping existing business to do the same, this approach is an important component of any economic development strategy.”
It is important to understand that the types of skills that employers are most concerned with – especially employer-specific, task-based skills – most likely are unavailable in the local workforce, nor have any programs been available in local institutions to develop them, simply because these new jobs, with new skill requirements, have never been in the area. The types of skills needed for most modern manufacturing and advanced manufacturing have never been developed because the need was not present nor the accurate and relevant data on these jobs available. Even if the need was present, by the time the skill is recognized, a program developed and a worker completed the learning, manufacturers either moved on or moved out.
Let’s face it, most organizations that successfully promote their region for economic development do so on the current low cost of labor, right-to-work status, low business and employment tax rates, economic incentives, availability of infrastructure and quality of life. They probably never needed a system in place to develop the skills necessary to attract modern and advanced manufacturing. Companies interested only in geographical, financial and aesthetic incentives have already moved. Other employers understand that if they want higher skilled workers, they need to expect to pay higher wages now or later when those skill levels are reached and competition for skilled labor kicks in. Read More
Many AI and Automation HR “Solutions” Face Growing Legal Challenges
by Stacey Lett, Director of Operations – Eastern U.S. – Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
If a worker, who has proven themselves competent for a job, is fired and replaced by another employee without just cause and due process, that most likely can be challenged by regulatory agencies and end up in the U.S. courts. But what happens if that same person is fired and replaced by automation or even a robot? Do the same principles apply?
In China, a tech worker was laid-off and replaced by AI. The case landed in court and the lower court ruled in favor of the worker. The case was taken to the Hangzhou Intermediate People’s Court, which “upheld an earlier decision by a lower-level court that the tech worker’s dismissal was unlawful.”
Explained the article. “The decision is being hailed by legal scholars as a reassuring signal for labor rights protection at a time when the central Chinese leadership is pushing for industries to widely adopt AI technology.” “At the heart of the case is whether a company can use AI replacement as a pretext for laying off human workers.”
It continued, “”The termination grounds cited by the company did not fall under negative circumstances such as business downsizing or operational difficulties, nor did they meet the legal condition that made it ‘impossible to continue the employment contract,'” the court said in a published article.”
The facts of the case: “Zhou [the Plaintiff] earned an annual salary of 300,000 yuan ($43,900) before AI took over his job. The company reassigned him, but to a lower-level position with a 40% pay cut. He refused and the company ended Zhou’s contract citing the disruptive impact of AI on the role and reduced staffing needs. Zhou filed an arbitration claim demanding higher compensation for wrongful termination and won. The company disagreed and filed a lawsuit in 2025. It lost at a district-level court. Now it lost again in the appeal.”
“Hangzhou court also ruled that it was not reasonable that the alternative position the company offered Zhou came with a substantial salary cut.”
“Last year, a data mapping worker in Beijing who was replaced by AI and dismissed also won his case through arbitration. The arbitration panel said the tech company’s decision to switch to AI was a business choice rather than from an uncontrollable event.”
Considering these were a legal decisions made in the communist People’s Republic of China practicing capitalism, it seems that this could put a lot a pressure on democratic countries that preach the virtue of their version of capitalism and their form of government. Read More
Challenge Employees with Self-Improvement Opportunities to Head-off Burnout
by Stacey Lett, Director of Operations, Eastern U.S. – Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
Let’s face it. Routine work can be boring. Doing the same work for extended periods can affect an employee’s attitude toward their job, employer and life. There are things employers can do to alleviate the tedium of work they need performed, keeping the incumbent employee interested and engaged and the new-hire curious and open-minded.
Workers of all ages are showing frightening levels of decline in engagement with their work. According to a recent Gallup survey, “The New Challenge of Engaging Younger Workers:”
- “42% of employees who are looking to find a new job say they feel their company is not maximizing their skills and abilities.” (Deloitte)
- Among the reasons for quitting, career development is the most common for employees that leave within their first 90 days in a company. (Work Institute)
- According to LinkedIn research, “94% of workers say they would be more likely to stay at a company if it invested in their career.”
With the natural increase in retirements and the loss of technical expertise, losing workers unnecessarily seems to be risk no one would want to take.
These data points were re-enforced by other measures viewing the employee attitudes from another angle. According to HR Dive, about 65% of employees said they suffered from burnout last year, according to a Dec. 18 report from isolved, a human resource management system company. Employee burnout has decreased somewhat compared to 2022, according to the report, but it’s still heavily affecting productivity. About 72% of employees said burnout impacted their performance.”
Burnout has continued to rise across all age groups. Conversely, engagement has proportionately declined. While troubling if left unaddressed, actions can be taken reverse these trends.
One, long overdue, measure that employers can take is to reexamine internally the company’s approach to onboarding and training workers once hired. Read More
Maximizing Worker Capacity Maximizes Shareholder Value…If Done Right
by Dean Prigelmeier, President of Proactive Technologies, Inc.®
To many, “maximizing shareholder value” has become synonymous with layoffs and short-term cuts that will typically have harmful effects on long-term operational capacity. An often overlooked, but more productive, goal is “maximizing worker capacity” and should be a priority for every organization – publicly traded or not. Leaders of an organization are quick to say, “our workers are our greatest asset.” Yet, efforts to maximize returns on this asset are often hard to recognize or understand.
Maximizing a worker’s capacity maximizes worker value. Collectively, maximizing each worker’s capacity maximizes an organization’s value, and that of the shareholders. It is as simple as that.
Publicly traded companies and privately held companies – some getting ready to go public – seem preoccupied with increasing quarterly earnings per share above all else. A consistently high level of earnings per share over the long-run no longer seems adequate for some. If the market is slack, an organization might carve costs out of the company from even a lean operation rather than disappoint investors. When labor is viewed as a “cost” rather than an asset, the temptation might be to cut benefits and wages. This may prop-up numbers for the short-term, but a demoralized workforce might not produce the same levels of output and quality yield as before. Sadly, a decision might be made in following quarters to cut benefits and wages even more, followed by workers if needed to make the magic number. All the while, worker and operational capacity, along with enthusiasm and loyalty, are eroding.
How does this erosion happen? When workers are cut, the work they used to perform gets transferred to the remaining workers. If there isn’t a mechanism to quickly “transfer expertise” to the worker expected to take on the new responsibilities, capacity drops until the trainee comes up to speed. For as long as the transfer takes, one well-paid subject matter expert trainer is being paid to train the paid trainee, yet productivity improvement may be negligible. And further complicating the process, perhaps no one thought about capturing the exiting workers expertise before they left the building, so some “reinventing the wheel has to occur.” Multiply this across all affected workers and the labor and opportunity costs may wipe out any anticipated gains by cutting worker payroll.
Proactive Technologies Report has presented many articles about the value of workers, how structured on-the-job training increases the worker’s capacity to perform more tasks to a level of mastery, the high cost of worker turnover, and more. It is a concept we feel strongly about. Yet we are continually surprised how this topic is avoided by company’s accounting departments and upper management when they feel inclined to trim costs here and there, avoiding cultivating the enormous wealth before them – waiting to be harvested. What would be the value of just a 10% increase in worker capacity, operational capacity, quality and quantity of work, and worker compliance (safety, ISO/AS/IATF, Nadcap, etc.) to any operation? Read More
Read the full June, 2026 Proactive Technologies Report™ newsletter, including linked industry articles and online presentation schedules.



























Proactive Technologies, Inc.®; PROTECH®; Human Resource Management for Tomorrow...Today!® and logo; PROTECH©® System of Managed Human Resource Development™; Accelerated Transfer of Expertise System™; Certificate of Job Mastery Program™, Certificate of Task Mastery Program™ are all trademarks of Proactive Technologies Inc.®;