Forsidebilde av showet The Left of Boom Show

The Left of Boom Show

Podkast av Michael VanDervort

engelsk

Business

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden.Avslutt når som helst.

  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • Gratis podkaster
Prøv gratis

Les mer The Left of Boom Show

Welcome to the Left of Boom Show, your go-to space for transforming businesses into exceptional workplaces! We're here to empower leaders and HR professionals with actionable insights, advice, and stories from top leadership, labor relations, and labor law experts.

Alle episoder

49 Episoder

episode The Faster Labor Contracts Act - What Employers Need to Know cover

The Faster Labor Contracts Act - What Employers Need to Know

Could the Faster Labor Contracts Act fundamentally change how first-time union contracts are negotiated in America? In this episode of The Left of Boom Show, Phil Wilson is joined by labor relations veteran Dave Sapenoff for a discussion on legislation that could dramatically shorten bargaining timelines and replace negotiations with mandatory mediation and binding arbitration. EXPLAINING THE FASTER LABOR CONTRACTS ACT They explain how the proposal would require newly organized employers and unions to begin bargaining almost immediately, allow only a limited window to negotiate a first contract, and ultimately place the terms of wages, benefits, scheduling, overtime, and other working conditions into the hands of arbitrators if no agreement is reached. Phil and Dave examine why first contracts typically take well over a year to negotiate, the unintended consequences of forcing the process into a 90-day timeline, and why both employers and employees could lose control over the final outcome. Drawing on decades of experience, Dave shares real-world bargaining examples demonstrating how arbitration could dramatically increase labor costs and potentially threaten the viability of businesses operating in competitive industries. The episode also explores the current political landscape, why this proposal may have a greater chance of advancing than previous efforts, and what employers can do now to educate leadership and engage policymakers before it's too late. In this episode you'll learn: * How the Faster Labor Contracts Act would change first-contract negotiations * Why mandatory arbitration could eliminate employee ratification votes * The risks of compressed bargaining timelines * How arbitrators could determine wages, benefits, and work rules * Real-world examples of the financial impact on employers * Why the proposal could accelerate union organizing campaigns * Practical steps employers can take to prepare and respond Whether you're an HR leader, labor relations professional, executive, or business owner, this episode explains one of the most significant labor policy proposals currently under discussion and why its implications deserve your attention. [00:00] Introduction to the Faster Labor Contracts Act [01:00] Provisions and Mechanical Changes in Labor Negotiations: [03:30] Implications for First-Time Agreements and Arbitration [06:20] Potential Risks and Unintended Consequences [09:57] Impact on Arbitration and Management Strategies [15:00] Case Studies and Real-World Examples [19:40]Political Landscape and How to Respond [26:45] What Employers Can Do Now [30:04] Final Thoughts and Call to Action

10. juni 2026 - 28 min
episode The Seven Red Flags of Collective Bargaining cover

The Seven Red Flags of Collective Bargaining

In this episode of the Left of Boom Show, host Phil Wilson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pbwilson/] sits down with Doug Hessinger [https://www.linkedin.com/in/doug-hessinger-1709274/] aka "Data Doug", a veteran labor and employee relations professional with over two decades of experience across retail, distribution, and financial tech services. Hessinger draws on his time as a labor relations department of one, managing six represented units across the US and Canada, to share hard-won lessons on contract administration, building relationships with union reps and frontline supervisors, and spotting the contract clauses most likely to cause headaches down the road. Whether you're new to a unionized environment or a seasoned pro, this episode is packed with practical, real-world guidance. Topics 00:03 -- Introduction to Labor Relations and Contract Administration 02:14 -- Navigating Unionized Environments 06:05 -- Building Relationships with Unions and Management 11:52 -- Understanding Contract Language and Administration 13:17 -- Common Pitfalls in Contract Management 17:38 -- The Importance of Proactive Communication 24:35 -- Red Flag Clauses to Watch Out For 33:53 -- Key Takeaways for Labor Relations Professionals

8. juni 2026 - 34 min
episode The Art of Negotiation: How To Effectively Manage A Union Shop cover

The Art of Negotiation: How To Effectively Manage A Union Shop

MANAGING THE UNION SHOP Every supervisor conversation, grievance response, and contract interpretation happening on your shop floor today is shaping the outcome of your next union contract negotiations Dave Sapenoff spent seven years organizing for the Teamsters before crossing to the management side and spending three decades running labor relations for Sprint Communications across 35 collective bargaining agreements in 18 states. Now he consults full-time through LRI Consulting Services. Phil Wilson and Dave discuss effective collective bargaining negotiations, workplace relationship, managing in a union shop and what most employers get wrong between negotiations. WHAT CAUSES STRIKES AND HOW TO PREPARE FOR THEM A strike is the result of a failure to prepare. Dave explains how an employer's ability to take a job action shapes everything about how they bargain, why first contracts come loaded with unrealistic expectations, and how union responsibility or the lack of it determines whether those expectations ever get tempered. MANAGING UNION EXPECTATIONS BETWEEN CONTRACTS Hostility toward the union is self-defeating. Dave walks through why being firm, predictable, and consistent matters more than being friendly, and why doing what the contract says, not what you think is seems fair is the foundation of an honest bargaining relationship. TRAINING SUPERVISORS TO HANDLE GRIEVANCES AND STEWARD CONVERSATIONS Ninety percent of the time the first conversation shouldn't involve the steward at all. Dave breaks down the difference between a grievance and a gripe, why supervisors need to reach for the contract instead of taking allegations at face value, and why admitting a mistake and moving on is almost always the right call. AVOIDING PAST PRACTICES THROUGH MANAGEMENT CONSISTENCY Inconsistent responses across supervisors are how grievance backlogs get built. Dave makes the case for cross-functional communication, regular staff meeting check-ins on what's coming up from the floor, and why predictability is the single best defense against a union looking to exploit the gaps. Fractional Labor Relations for Mid-Market Employers Most companies don't have a labor relations department and never will. Dave, who frequently fills the role of fractional labor relations advisor explains how fractional support works in practice from basic grievance calls to sitting first chair at the table during negotiations. CHAPTERS 00:00 | Introduction to Labor Relations and Dave Sapenoff 02:37 | What Causes Strikes and How to Prepare for Them 07:31 | Managing Union Expectations Between Contracts 16:22 | Training Supervisors to Handle Grievances and Steward Conversations 21:56 | Avoiding Past Practices Through Management Consistency 27:54 | Fractional Labor Relations for Mid-Market Employers

2. juni 2026 - 36 min
episode Healthcare Labor Disputes and Bargaining Challenges cover

Healthcare Labor Disputes and Bargaining Challenges

LEFT OF BOOM SHOW — EPISODE DESCRIPTION Grant Pecor [https://www.millercanfield.com/GrantPecor] has been in healthcare bargaining long enough to know when a dispute is heading somewhere bad. He heads the labor relations group at Miller Canfield in Detroit, and he's currently eight months into a nursing strike that shows no signs of resolving. Phil sits down with him to work through what actually happens at the table and what employers keep getting wrong. THE STATE OF HEALTHCARE LABOR RELATIONS Pandemic burnout, a nursing shortage that predates COVID, and inter-union competition between the Teamsters and established healthcare unions have created some of the most volatile bargaining conditions Grant has seen. He explains why healthcare remains the single hottest organizing target in the country right now. INSIDE AN ACTIVE STRIKE Grant breaks down how a Teamsters unit treating a hospital negotiation like a UPS contract collided with a new ownership group trying to reset institutional norms. He gets specific: staffing ratio demands that look like worker protections but create operational traps, call-in abuse patterns embedded in unit culture, and what happens when a union digs in so deep there's nothing left to offer. WHAT EMPLOYERS MISS AT THE TABLE Ratification failures, the politics of helping a union save face, and the difference between what employees actually want and what their union is pushing. Grant's framework for separating real employee issues from agenda items wearing a disguise is worth the listen on its own. THE ORGANIZING LANDSCAPE POST-COVID The Starbucks wave is cooling. Higher ed and skilled trades are still active. Grant walks through where organizing is getting traction, why, and what the "bully model" tells employers about their actual exposure. THE FASTER CONTRACTS ACT Why putting a deadline on collective bargaining doesn't fix the problem. It just hands one side more leverage. Chapters 00:00 | Introduction to Grant Pecor and His Background 01:43 | The State of Healthcare Labor Relations 04:38 | Bargaining Dynamics in Healthcare 09:25 | Challenges in Healthcare Strikes 14:21 | Union Dynamics and Employee Relations 19:06 | Navigating Negotiation Politics 21:18 | Navigating Labor Relations and Bargaining Challenges 25:09 | The Evolving Organizing Environment Post-COVID 30:48 | Unions: Promises vs. Reality 34:46 | The Impact of Legislation on Bargaining Processes

27. mai 2026 - 40 min
episode Living Left of Boom: Where Do We Go From Here? cover

Living Left of Boom: Where Do We Go From Here?

In this final episode, Michael VanDervort [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pbwilson/] and Phil Wilson [https://www.linkedin.com/in/pbwilson/] reflect on the key lesson of the Next 52 Weeks series: rebuilding your workplace culture after a union campaign is not a one-time project. The first year is critical, but the work of maintaining a healthy workplace never stops. They discuss the importance of continuously checking in with employees, developing frontline supervisors, and reinforcing a strong direct relationship between leaders and their teams. Culture must be sustained through habits, leadership development, and accountability to survive turnover and changing business conditions. The episode concludes with a reminder that the principles discussed throughout the series are not just about responding to organizing activity. They are about building and maintaining an extraordinary workplace over the long term. Takeaways 1. This is not a one-step program. 2. You want to create a great place to work. 3. The Next 52 weeks are a key time to get things right. 4. You can't let it die down. 5. You have to be constantly assessing your culture. 6. Earning the privilege of direct relationships is crucial. 7. It's easy to take your eye off the ball after improvements. 8. Culture is about how we act toward each other. 9. This is a way to live your life and build your company. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to the Wrap-Up Episode 01:19 Key Takeaways from the Series 03:29 Continuous Improvement in Workplace Culture 06:23 Assessing Employee Sentiment 08:25 Building Lasting Relationships with Employees 10:00 Sustaining Cultural Change Beyond Leadership 12:23 Creating a Legacy of Culture 14:19 Final Thoughts on Extraordinary Workplaces

9. mars 2026 - 13 min
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Enkelt å finne frem nye favoritter og lett å navigere seg gjennom innholdet i appen
Liker at det er både Podcaster (godt utvalg) og lydbøker i samme app, pluss at man kan holde Podcaster og lydbøker atskilt i biblioteket.
Bra app. Oversiktlig og ryddig. MYE bra innhold⭐️⭐️⭐️

Velg abonnementet ditt

Mest populær

Premium

20 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 14 dager
Deretter 99 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Premium Plus

100 timer lydbøker

  • Eksklusive podkaster

  • Ingen annonser i Podimo shows

  • Avslutt når som helst

Prøv gratis i 30 dager
Deretter 169 kr / måned

Prøv gratis

Bare på Podimo

Populære lydbøker

Ofte stilte spørsmål

Flere spørsmål og svar
Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager. 99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. Avslutt når som helst.