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Diane's experience as a temporary office
employee led them to consider the staffing industry.
"We looked at franchises," he said, "and decided that wasn't what
we wanted to do."
The company remains a family-owned enterprise with Modaff's son,
David, 43, the chief operating officer.
Their daughter, Lynda, a graphic artist in Los Angeles, created
Friday Services' Dalmatian Logo and the slogan: "Hang on, Friday's coming!"
Friday Services has 27 internal employees, but draws on a 3,000
person pool of available workers. That group covers eight WNC counties
from offices in Hendersonville, Asheville and Morganton.
In addition to traditional clerical staffing, the company provides
workers in technical fields, including engineering and computer services,
and for light industrial companies.
"Original equipment suppliers for new automobiles" are an active
client area, Modaff said, with Friday Services providing assembly line and
warehouse workers.
"The main reason Friday has been
selected is their
flexibility to meet our needs. They are very proactive in employee
assessment and recruitment."
Kay Arnold,
Continental Teves
senior human resources administrator
Kay Arnold, senior human resources administrator with Continental
Teves, said Friday staffers work at three company facilities in WNC,
with several dozen at the Fletcher plant.
"The main reason Friday has been selected is their flexibility to
meet our needs," Arnold said. "They are very proactive in Employee
assessment and recruitment."
Citing competitive pressures, Friday Services executives were
reluctant to discuss specific assignments.
"There were six staffing firms in the area when we started in
1987," Modaff said, "and there are close to 30 now. Everyone
wants to steal our lunch."
The American Staffing Association reports the staffing industry's
average daily employment in the first quarter of 2003 increased more than 11
percent to 2.13 million workers.
James Cothran, 76, or Asheville, who works with the housekeeping
group during the second shift at Continental Teves, said Friday Services
looks after it's workers.
"I really enjoy working for Friday,"
said the World War II Navy veteran.
"Retirement wasn't for me."
Alongside its core staffing business, the company provides
personnel search services and information technology consulting.
In the early 1990s to jump-start it's entry into recruiting and
technical services, Modaff said, the company completed two acquisitions.
Although "temporary" is still used to describe the staffing
industry, Pressley said "strategic" is more accurate, as some projects are
multi-year in length and include the same employees for the duration.
FRIDAY SERVICE
FILE
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Company president:
John Modaff, company president
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Year founded: 1987
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Business: Company
provides staffing for clerical, technical and light industrial jobs
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Revenue: More than
$10 million a year
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Staff: 27 internal
employees and a pool of 3,000 person pool of workers payroll that reaches
1,000 people in peak months,
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Offices: Asheville,
Hendersonville, Morganton
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Client base: 75 to
100 clients
Some businesses utilize so many Friday
staffers, Pressley said, a company employee works on-site to supervise those
individuals.
More than 100 Friday staffers are currently working at one
location, she noted.
Friday Services' external workers are eligible for a benefit
program, Modaff said, and 63 percent receive paychecks from the company via
direct deposit, a measure of the stability of their employee pool.
There is still plenty of turnover among temporary workers, Pressley
said.
"Sometimes they come to us because they know we are affiliated with
a certain company they want to work with," she said.
These individuals can end up with a "working interview" at desired
company, Pressley said.
About 11 percent of Friday Staffers were hired permanently in 2002,
David Modaff said.
John Modaff said he does not detect any hostility toward temporary
workers at job sites.
Since temps are the first to go in an economic downturn, he said,
they provide job security for full-timers.
Reflecting the national trend, business is up for the first six
months of 2003, Modaff said, and it also increased in 2002 and 2001 over the
prior year.
That is good news for the Western North Carolina economy, he noted,
adding, "the staffing industry is a pretty well known barometer for the
economic climate."
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