For some of the small businesses on this year's Star Tribune Top Workplaces list, adapting to remote operations due to the novel coronavirus pandemic was fairly simple, given existing options for employees to work from home.
Institutions like BlueSky Online School, a Bloomington-based virtual charter school for grades 6 through 12, were designed to operate remotely. Others, like Minneapolis public accounting firm Smith Schafer & Associates, implemented flexible work options years before the pandemic.
Throughout the pandemic, the leaders at some of these small firms replicated in-office camaraderie, either through the creation of hobby-focused chat rooms, or continued community service. They also continued incentives for a job well done. Opportunities for workers to advance their careers, or shift into different roles, were also common thread across several companies.
The COVID-19 outbreak didn't slow growth for Minneapolis-based digital marketing-services company Collective Measures, No. 11 on the Top Workplaces list.
Collective Measures has exceeded its growth projections for several years and currently employs more than 125 people, said CEO Donna Robinson. The company, founded in 2005, has hired more than 25 employees in 2021, and in 2020, during the middle of a pandemic, 51.
The rapid growth has led to upward mobility opportunities for existing employees, Robinson said. Those new opportunities translate into greater responsibility and opportunities to develop more skills, she added. "We tend to hire people that are really young and curious and very bright and we like to feed all of that, feed that curiosity," she said.
To accommodate its growing team, the business last year expanded its downtown Minneapolis office. Collective Measures took up the entire 20th floor of one of the Fifth Street Towers buildings, giving the company enough space to accommodate 130 employees, Robinson said. The renovation was completed in early spring 2020, and most of the company's associates have yet to step inside the expanded office.
In addition to a renovated workspace, the company is also entering a new era, having changed the company name from Nina Hale to Collective Measures in 2020. Nina Hale founded the company and sold the business to her employees in 2014. The name change, Robinson said, reflects both the employee owners and the company's performance-driven vision.