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The no. 1 productivity killer

What is the one thing that distracts our smartest people, adds no benefit to business, and makes us less competitive?

Anxiety about the fiscal cliff last fall and the sequester this winter fomented great uncertainty for business. Washington often seems indifferent to its impact on the business climate, as if its mission is all a game and all about itself. But even if the two (or is it three?) squabbling camps in the nation’s capital stop manufacturing a crisis every quarter or two and somehow overcome their mutual distrust to chart a path forward, one drag on American business that seems unyielding and impervious to whoever is in charge is numbing regulation.

When it comes to regulatory hurdles, it hasn’t seemed to matter who’s occupying the White House or Congress. The bureaucracy answers to itself. Its appetite is unlimited. There’s always a new form to be navigated, a line on a form daring to be understood, a government file cabinet hungering for paper, a hoop to be traversed, an ambiguity to be concocted. Typically, the rationale for all the documentation is barely evident. It too often feels like a competition–not against your actual competitors in business–but against the referees. And the rules are continually changing. You may be smart enough to run a business, but you can’t grasp the need for the paperwork. It’s a bureaucracy thing–you wouldn’t understand. Talk about “streamlining” recurs from time to time, but the system seems to regard the goal as an imposition, and it never sticks for too long.

How Business Suffers

Federal requirements for statistical information about our business–financial or operational–often compel us to mine for data that is not easy to retrieve, such as energy usage in kilowatt/hours or commodity consumption in pounds. As a small manufacturer, we do not have the manpower or the systems to comply with these requests without disrupting activities that create value for our business. Even if we could afford to hire someone specifically to push through this paper jungle, I’d much rather hire a productive steel worker. We’ve had to get outside help in filling out the forms, at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years. The robots on our factory floor have propelled our productivity and helped us win jobs from our peers in China and Germany–bending wire forms 100 times a minute and slicing through sheet metal a foot per second–but they can’t help fill out these forms.

…to read this article in full, visit leading US small business resource, Inc.

 

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Inc.

Inc.

Inc.com is a place where entrepreneurs and business owners can find useful information, advice, insights, resources and inspiration for running and growing their businesses.

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