Insights
NEWS FEATURES BY DATE
List of Services
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3/31/2025 Artisan Custom Closets Acquires Carolina Closets Plus3/31/2025
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10/25/2024 Georgia Oak Invests in T Management10/25/2024
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10/14/2024 Georgia Oak Promotes Corey Clemons to Vice President10/14/2024
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5/30/2024 Growth Expert Jeff Tankersley Joins Septic Blue as CEO5/30/2024
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4/22/2024 Artisan Custom Closets Expands Reach with Acquisition of Chattanooga Closet Company4/22/2024
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1/11/2024 Georgia Oak Sponsors M&A South1/11/2024
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11/29/2023 David Walker Joins Georgia Oak11/29/2023
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11/15/2023 Georgia Oak Partners Announces Strategic Acquisition of Septic Blue11/15/2023
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10/4/2023 Aditi Further Expands its Technology Solution Services by Acquiring Resolvit10/4/2023
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9/21/2023 Atlanta Braves legend Dale Murphy joins Georgia Oak Partners as Managing Director9/21/2023
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7/11/2023 Corey Clemons Joins Georgia Oak7/11/2023
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6/5/2023 Artisan Custom Closets Acquires Spacemakers and Carolina Closets6/5/2023
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5/22/2023 Home Improvement Expert Lindsay Tillie Joins Artisan Custom Closets as CEO5/22/2023
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1/30/2023 Stacy Sutton Joins Georgia Oak1/30/2023
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12/22/2022 Georgia Oak Partners Invests in Artisan Custom Closets12/22/2022
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12/6/2022 Georgia Oak Partners Adds Emerald Transportation Solutions to its Portfolio12/6/2022
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1/6/2022 Lars Heck Joins Georgia Oak Partners1/6/2022
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3/18/2021 GA Governor Kemp Announces Sailfish Expansion3/18/2021
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3/16/2021 Georgia Oak Partners Invests in Aditi Consulting3/16/2021
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12/22/2020 Georgia Oak Partners: Our History, Your Future12/22/2020
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2/19/2019 Forbes Features Farm Burger Invasive Species Sandwich Launch2/19/2019
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12/11/2018 Former Back Yard Burgers CEO Joins Your Pie as COO12/11/2018
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10/11/2018 Spectrum Staffing Named Finalist for Pinnacle Small Business Awards10/11/2018
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9/19/2018 Farm Burger Honored on Good Good 100 Restaurants™ List9/19/2018
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9/18/2018 Georgia Oak Partners Founder Named to 2018 40 Under Forty by Atlanta Business Chronicle9/18/2018
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8/19/2018 Georgia Oak Partners Founder Named to 2018 40 Under Forty by Atlanta Business Chronicle8/19/2018
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7/25/2018 Your Pie Celebrates 10 Years with Franchise Fest, Contest7/25/2018
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7/13/2018 Your Pie Named to Restaurant Business "Future 50" List7/13/2018
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6/29/2018 Georgia Oak Partners Founder Named to 2018 Emerging Leaders by The M&A Advisor6/29/2018
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5/16/2018 Farm Burger Named a "Sizzling Better-Burger Concept to Watch" by QSR Magazine5/16/2018
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4/17/2018 QSR Magazine: Your Pie Opens 5 Locations in First Quarter4/17/2018
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3/30/2018 Spectrum Staffing Wins Movers & Makers MVP Award3/30/2018
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2/12/2018 Farm Burger Named to QSR Magazine's 40 Under 40 Units List2/12/2018
A Year of Growth: Focusing on Human Capital in 2021
As our partners across industries search for ways to move forward from the trials and tribulations of 2020, we’re seeing an increased focus on developing and supporting people – well beyond the human resources function or the staffing industry. From technology, manufacturing and logistics, to hospitality and healthcare, human capital is more important than ever. Identifying and retaining the right people in the right jobs is as essential to surviving in uncertain times as it is to thriving in the future.
Putting Employees First Across the Org Chart
We’ve spent several months focusing on recruiting and retaining the right people in key leadership roles. Since one of our specialties at Georgia Oak is to assist our partners in filling those roles, we have deep expertise in the importance of making the right choices for the executive team.
But the importance of focusing on people goes well beyond the C-Suite. Strong team leadership and company culture is as important on the factory floor and the hospital hallways as it is in the corner office. By expanding your people-first focus to include the full spectrum of human resources, you increase both the opportunities and the strength to leverage toward success.
Employee Retention
Perhaps one of the most overlooked aspect of keeping a business healthy, employee retention rarely gets the attention it deserves from company leadership. What’s more, the attention focused in this area is often based on misguided assumptions or a lack of understanding what is important to workers.
According to Adam Borstein of Entrepreneur:
"Entrepreneurs know how to make customers happy: We learn their needs and then create products and services to match. But too often, we don’t do the same thing with our employees. We make incorrect assumptions about what workers value—and, in the process, overlook what will give them long-term."
Contrary to supply-and-demand management wisdom, wages, salary and profit-sharing bonuses are often loosely related (at best) to a strong employee retention policy. Take-home pay ranks high as a consideration with most workers when deciding whether to accept a position, and a lack of equitable or steadily increasing pay can certainly be a factor in employee discouragement. It turns out, however, that the reverse isn’t necessarily true. A competitive pay scale or even frequent increases in pay based on performance don’t necessarily lead to employee retention or loyalty.
So, what does keep people around?
According to Thomas Smale, writing for Entrepreneur, the 4 keys are growth opportunities, recognition of not only achievement but effort, flexibility and a healthy work environment. Each of these constructs will be translated differently depending on the industry and job function – flexibility, for example, looks different in a manufacturing plant than it does on a software development team. Looking for tangible ways to incorporate these motivations into your employee retention plan, however, will enhance your competitiveness as an employer and improve productivity and loyalty among current employees.
Employee Satisfaction
Employee Retention and Satisfaction are related concepts, but not interchangeable. Job Satisfaction is one of many reasons employees will stay with a company, but it also has implications for the quality of work a person produces, as well as the extent to which her job integrates with her life, health and overall well being.
Many of us assume that if we find interesting and fulfilling work, and are paid well (or at least fairly), our job satisfaction will be high. An extensive meta-analysis of job satisfaction studies conducted at the University of Houston, however, concludes that the people with whom we work has a much greater impact on job satisfaction than previously assumed.
Kevin Hoff, assistant professor of industrial-organizational psychology, notes in the Journal of Vocational Behavior:
“Our main finding was that interest fit significantly predicts satisfaction, but it's not as strong of a relation as people expect…Other things that lead to satisfaction include the organization you work for, your supervisor, colleagues and pay.”
The lesson here for company leaders is that culture matters. Recruiting and supporting supervisors and managers with whom employees enjoy working—and creating an environment in which workers feel connected, valued, and appreciated—may have far-reaching personal and professional impact.
Performance, Compensation and Benefits
None of this is to say that compensation is irrelevant. In fact, fair and productive evaluation of performance is one of the most efficient ways to help employees understand their roles, attributes, and paths to growth. Performance evaluations provide essential data for the company and workers alike. They ensure that employees receive acknowledgement for their contributions and additional training or support in areas where they are struggling. They also provide an opportunity for both employee and manager to verbalize what they see (or hope to see) on the path ahead.
While performance is not always tied to compensation, the two are part of a critical two-pronged approach to ensuring that employees receive compensation that is not only competitive but targeted to acknowledge their contributions and grow with their careers.
Tying it all Together: Organizational Development
As you may have already guessed, none of these critical areas of personnel development can exist in a vacuum, or be championed by a single person or department (even if that person is the company’s founder or CEO). To function as a healthy system, the tenets of employee retention, satisfaction and performance must be integrated into the heart and soul of the company culture.
This requires a knowledge of, and attention to, Organizational Development—especially in the company’s early years. Your company’s purpose, and its commitment to its employees, must be woven into the structure of the organization itself: from the onboarding process for new employees to conflict resolution and meeting culture.
In this respect, 2021 presents an opportunity for companies of all sizes, to reinvent themselves with the structure and culture that will serve them best in the future.
Links & Resources
• 3 Ways to Retain Your Top Employees: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/348230
• Employee Retention: 4 Tips https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/361293
• Job Satisfaction (Forbes): https://www.forbes.com/sites/alisonescalante/2020/11/17/your-job-satisfaction-may-have-more-to-do-with-who-you-work-with-than-what-you-do/
• Job Satisfaction – University of Houston Study: https://uh.edu/news-events/stories/2020/november-2020/11112020-kevin-hoff-interest-job-satisfaction.php
• Tracking Performance: https://www.businessnewsdaily.com/15967-how-to-evaluate-employee-performance-.html
• Organizational Development: https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/362895
• Investors and Human Capital: https://www.financialexecutives.org/FEI-Daily/January-2021/What-Investors-Are-Looking-for-in-Human-Capital-Ma.aspx
• Why 2021 is the Year of Change: https://hrexecutive.com/sage-gavin-why-2021-is-the-year-of-change/
At Georgia Oak, we’re committed to enhancing your business and helping founders grow their legacies
to their fullest potential. If you find we’re a good fit for your next step, please reach out to us.