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A Start-Up with Roots in the Industry

Lone Star PEO, Inc. was established in June 2016 out of a love of the industry and a strong commitment to build and maintain close-knit client relationships. While my PEO is a start-up, my roots in the industry stretch back many years.

Intro to PEO

My father-in-law, Wallace Brumley, introduced me to the PEO industry in 1999. He asked me to research it to determine if we would like to work together as a family. I took about six months to gain industry knowledge and insight. I attended several seminars and posed many questions, but I already knew I was hooked. The idea of the PEO was fascinating to me and I saw a long-term future within the industry. We packed up our family from Houston and headed to San Antonio.

Todd Newton is president of
Lone Star PEO, Inc., San Antonio, Texas.

Once we were settled, I immediately started working as the 401(k) administrator. I had my insurance and securities license and a background in insurance and investment strategies, executive benefits, and business continuation. Once we were content with the 401(k) plan, my role expanded into an operational position. I was exposed to all facets of the business and was quickly promoted to chief operating officer. I enjoyed the technical and transactional aspects of the PEO. Other key elements I encountered were problem solving and technology development. We focused on the small business owners in Texas and learned the art of maintaining relationships and client retention. Employee gratitude, a family atmosphere, and a high moral code was also a strong focus within our office environment.

Ten years after working for the same PEO, the company was sold. Management was restructured and I was placed into a sales management and leadership role. I was then exposed to a rapid-growth PEO model and worked in that environment for several years. I realized that the sales-only role was not a good fit for me. It was then that I reevaluated my career, family obligations, and goals. I spoke at length with my wife, Becky Newton (also in the PEO industry for 10-plus years), and together we decided to “get back to our roots” and open our own PEO.

Forming Lone Star PEO

We formed our PEO and quickly obtained our license and joined NAPEO. The resources available to a small organization such as ours through NAPEO membership are invaluable. We used many offerings, including the regulatory database, educational webinars, and other resources available to members. This helped us confirm the path we wanted to take in forming our PEO.

We used our savings for the start-up costs and did not have a need for an investor or any loans. This was a risky move, but we both felt confident in our abilities, relationships, and experience to take the leap. We maximized efficiency in everything we did. We opted for a very small brick-and-mortar footprint and only signed a short-term lease. We also focused on new construction to make sure we didn’t have to deal with ailing real estate issues. Our office is also completely wireless. Everything is cloud-based, allowing us to work from anywhere. We chose to go paperless from day one to keep our costs down and remain eco-friendly. Months of planning and preparation allowed for the birth of Lone Star PEO, Inc.

We quickly secured a team of brokers and successfully onboarded our first client within 60 days of opening our doors. Our steady, cost-based growth model was in full swing. We are focusing on small blue-collar businesses. I believe that helping small businesses and developing strong relationships is the key to the success of our operation. These business owners are looking for a commitment to their businesses and hands-on service. While we may not have a large product offering at this time, we do have a high-touch customer service standard, which is imperative for each transaction. This methodology has secured us great clients, and referrals began to come in faster than we could have ever imagined. Conservation of our clients is just as important as sales and has taken a front seat in all our processes.

We recently celebrated our one-year, debt-free anniversary. We have a steady revenue stream and a high closing ratio. Our risk tolerance profile has stayed true, even though it meant turning down prospects if they were not a good fit. We have hit our base level goals and are now prospecting to larger employers and more white-collar industries. Using technology to the fullest extent while minimizing our overhead and maintaining a small footprint will help during this growth phase. We are continuing to refine our internal processes and seek highly qualified team members and consultants. Maintaining a family atmosphere and promoting a healthy work-life balance is also a focus. We allow some team members to telecommute, which fits their lifestyles, resulting in highly dedicated employees. Finding and selecting a dedicated team as a start-up was something we were initially concerned with. We have learned that open communication and flexibility when possible can make all the difference when hiring internal staff.

Growing and Refining

I am grateful for my past experiences working in the PEO industry. Working for a steady growth, family-owned business as well as working for a rapid-growth PEO has allowed me the opportunity to refine my passion. I have a firm belief that businesses have a need for the PEO and I’m excited to help in their success. Lone Star PEO will continue to seek the smaller business owners and develop relationships that will go beyond “just business.” Developing relationships and getting to know your client base is imperative in our environment. Large PEOs may have a broader product offering, but our clients want to use a small business. They appreciate the value we offer, but they also realize that sometimes the relationship is just as important as the cost of doing business. It is also quite refreshing as an owner to quickly develop a solution to a problem and revise current processes. This was not always the case in a larger PEO environment and dealing with multi-level managers. Our clients have appreciated us being small and quick on our feet.

We are currently working on building mass and expanding our product offering to help us in this next conservative growth phase and are looking forward to 2018. We recently negotiated an excellent workers’ comp rate, which will allow us to be even more competitive. We are starting to prospect to larger, more sophisticated clients that are still defined as small businesses. We expect our internal costs to stay minimal and the size of our clients to increase. In addition, we plan to apply to become a certified PEO, making us more credible to our current and prospective clients.

It has not been our goal to be the largest PEO, nor the fastest-growing PEO. We have set reasonable expectations and are achieving our goals. It is very rewarding to develop a business plan and check off the boxes, some almost a year ahead of schedule, as one tool to measure our success. Working together side by side with my wife during this transition has made this a phenomenal experience. We enjoy working towards a common goal and look forward to watching our company grow.

White Papers and Downloadables

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Additional Resources

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Category 2

PEOs: Good for Businesses and Their Employees

Introduction

This report, highlighting the effects that partnering with professional employer organizations (PEOs) has on small and mid-sized businesses and their employees, is the fifth in NAPEO’s series of white papers designed to help the general public and the small and mid-sized business community better understand the economic impact and value of the PEO industry. It uses comprehensive survey data from both small and mid-sized business owners and their employees to examine the differences in a variety of key areas between companies that use PEOs and comparable companies that do not use PEOs. The analysis focuses on the following key areas: business success (financial, as well as competitiveness, innovation, customer service); multiple components of a company’s work, learning, and leadership environments; employee satisfaction/engagement/turnover; satisfaction with PEO services (asked of PEO clients only); and business owners’ concerns about meeting various business challenges. The analysis finds that working with PEOs yields a broad range of positive effects for PEO clients.

Quick Summary

Advantages of Using a PEO for Small and Mid-Sized Businesses

• Annual median revenue growth for PEO users was twice that of comparable non-PEO firms;
• Expected annual median revenue growth for PEO clients is 40 percent greater than that of comparable non-PEO firms;
• PEO client firms were 16 percent more likely to report an increase in profitability; and
• PEO users are significantly less concerned than non-PEO users about their ability to handle key business challenges:
o Hiring employees (45 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 70 percent of non-PEO firms);
o Increasing revenues (73 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 90 percent of non-PEO firms); and
o Raising capital/funding (18 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 45 percent of non-PEO firms).

Advantages of a PEO for Employees

Compared to employees working in businesses that are not PEO clients, employees working in businesses that are PEO clients are significantly more likely to report that their employer:
• Demonstrates a commitment to them as employees (average response was +8 percentage points higher);
• Has good hiring practices (+8);
• Has good HR policies and practices (+5);
• Does a good job of designing employees’ jobs (+4); and
• Provides employees with good training and development opportunities (+4).
Employees of PEO clients also report significantly higher scores on key measures related to employee satisfaction and confidence in company management:
• Levels of employee engagement (+5);
• Intention to stay with their current employer until retirement (+8);
• Belief that employer is taking the right steps to be competitive (+8);
• Trust that employer is supporting employees in delivering excellent customer service (+7); and
• Confidence in employer’s approach to growing the company (+5).

Business Owner Assessment of PEOs

• 98 percent of business owners who are PEO clients would recommend a PEO to a small business colleague.

Analysis of Business Owner Survey Results

The analysis reported in this section is based on data that business owners provided through a business-level survey completed as part of signing up for the free employee survey service (see Section Three: Methodology). Except where otherwise noted, this analysis used the main comparison set described in the Methodology section (Set #1).1

Clients’ direct assessments of PEOs

As part of the business owner survey, we asked those respondents who are PEO clients questions about three aspects of their experience while being a PEO client. The results were:
• 98 percent would recommend a PEO to a small business colleague;2
• 70 percent report that their revenues have increased since becoming a PEO client; and
• 66 percent report that their profitability has increased since becoming a PEO client.

Business success: growth and profitability

The business-level survey also asked multiple questions about revenue change and profitability:
• The approximate percentage change in the company’s revenues from 2015 to 2016;
• The approximate expected percentage change in the company’s revenues from 2016 to 2017; and
• Whether the company’s profits decreased, stayed about the same, or decreased from 2015 to 2016.

Comparison Set #2 (which excluded not-for-profit firms, as described in the Methodology section) was used for this analysis to ensure that effects on profits and revenues were calculated using only for-profit companies.
We found substantial differences for all three items, with results higher for PEO clients than for non-PEO clients:
• PEO client firms’ median revenue growth3 from 2015 to 2016 was twice that of comparable non-PEO firms (10 percent versus 5 percent);
• PEO client firms’ expected median revenue growth from 2016 to 2017 was 40 percent greater than that of comparable non-PEO firms (14 percent versus 10 percent); and
• PEO client firms were 16 percent more likely to report an increase in profitability from 2015 to 2016 (58 percent versus 50 percent).

Business success: employee turnover

The business-level survey also asked about voluntary and involuntary turnover, but we did not find any statistically significant differences in turnover measures between PEOs client firms and non-PEO firms.4
However, in light of our previous analysis for NAPEO, “Professional Employer Organizations: Keeping Turnover Low and Survival High,”5 which was based on a very different and much larger data base and found that PEO clients have employee turnover that is 10 to 14 percentage points lower than non-PEO clients, this lack of difference in turnover can likely be attributed to the heterogeneity of the sample (and its smaller size).

Business owners’ ability to meet various business challenges

In the business-level survey, business owners were also asked about their level of concern about a number of issues that affect business operations and success.
1 Throughout Sections One and Two, those comparisons of PEO clients and non-PEO clients that are statistically significant at a 90 percent or greater confidence level are specifically highlighted as “significantly” higher or lower. Other differences that do not meet the usual threshold for statistical significance are also discussed and can still be considered meaningful. Such results are especially typical in relatively small sample sizes like the ones used in this analysis, as discussed in additional detail in the Methodology section.
2 Although it would be an overstatement to attribute all of the increase in PEO clients’ revenues and profitability to PEOs (because firms typically grow and become more profitable with the passage of time), these findings are consistent with the other growth and profitability findings, described in the section that follows.
3 For measures with wide ranges (such as revenue growth or profitability) in small samples such as the one used in this analysis, the median is typically a more reliable measure than the mean, as it helps to ensure that one or more “outliers” do not have a disproportionate impact on the average (outliers can have a major effect on the mean but not on the median).
4 This was the case for comparison Sets #1 and #2, as well as the entire sample of 101 companies.
5 Laurie Bassi and Dan McMurrer, “Professional Employer Organizations: Keeping Turnover

Most of the differences between PEO client firms and non-PEO firms indicated lower concerns among PEO clients, but most were not statistically significant.
Three concerns did generate statistically significant differences when comparing PEO clients to non-PEO clients. In all three cases, there was less concern among business owners who were PEO clients:
• Hiring employees (45 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 70 percent of non-PEO firms);
• Increasing revenues (73 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 90 percent of non-PEO firms); and
• Raising capital/funding (18 percent of PEO clients reported this was a “moderate” or “major” concern, versus 45 percent of non-PEO firms).

Analysis of Employee Survey Results

The analysis reported in this section is based on employee survey data collected from 1,588 employees—1,143 of whom worked in PEO client firms and 445 of whom worked in non-PEO firms.7 A brief word on scoring for the employee survey: All but one survey question was presented as a statement for which respondents were asked to select their level of agreement, ranging from “strongly disagree” (scored as 0), “disagree” (25), “neutral” (50), “agree” (75), or “strongly agree” (100). Most discussions of the survey results below refer to the average score on a question or category of questions, with average scores ranging from 0 to 100 as indicated.

Business success factors: competitiveness and innovation

The employee survey included four questions that asked employees to evaluate their firm’s actions on what might be considered “summative” business success factors: taking steps to be competitive, to provide excellent customer service, to grow, and to be innovative (see Table 1).
On average, scores were 7 percentage points higher on these questions from employees of PEO clients. The differences in average responses between the two groups of employees were statistically significant for three of the four questions.8
These findings are consistent with the expectation that business owners who are PEO clients do not need to spend as much time dealing with “people issues,” and therefore have more time to focus on their core businesses, making them better able to take steps to position their businesses to be competitive and successful.

Quality of HR practices

Three survey questions asked employees to evaluate the quality of HR practices at their businesses. Across the three questions, on average, PEO clients had responses that were 7 percentage points higher than those from non-PEO clients (see Table 2). Differences in average responses were statistically significant for all three items.
These findings confirm that PEOs help their clients do a better job on the “people side” of their businesses.

Employee engagement and intent to stay

Two survey questions gauge employee satisfaction and engagement (see Table 3 for average scores), while a third question asks about employees’ intent to stay working for their employers9 (see Table 4 for percent selecting each response option). Overall, the average score on these three
6 Although the analysis reported here is based, unless otherwise noted, on the main subsample of 60 firms (using comparison Set #1, as discussed in the Methodology section), the results are quite similar to those that we found based on the entire sample of 101 firms (for which the firms are not quite as comparable across the PEO and non-PEO groups), as well as for comparison Set #2 (for-profit firms only).
7 These numbers reflect responses included in the main comparison Set #1. The entire sample included 3,054 employee survey responses (2,457 from PEO clients and 597 from non-PEO clients).
8 Only the differences for “our company is taking the right steps to enable our business to grow” did not meet the statistical test for significance.

questions was 5 percentage points higher for employees in PEO client firms compared to their peers in non-PEO firms. The difference in responses between the two groups of employees was statistically significant for the intent-to-stay question. We also found that intent to stay varied with how long a business has been a PEO client (see Table 5). Overall, the findings on engagement and intent to stay suggest that PEOs are able to help business owners create a more engaging work environment by better management of the “people side” of the business, combined with an improved ability to focus on the factors that drive business success (see the items in Table 1 on page 4), and that some of these impacts may increase the longer a business has been a client of a PEO.
Work, learning, and leadership environment Most of the questions asked in the employee survey were drawn from the McBassi People Index, which is an intensively researched measurement system designed to quantify key elements across a wide range of an organization’s peoplerelated environment.

The conceptual framework that serves as the basis for the employee survey is displayed in Figure 1, above.10 The framework consists of three environments on the “people side” of an organization that combine to drive business results: leadership, work, and learning. It was our expectation that largest difference in responses between employees in PEO client firms and their peers in non-PEO firms would be found in the Work Environment category, followed by Learning Environment. We did not expect to find significant differences in the Leadership Environment (because PEO services are not typically designed to address issues such as supervisors’ behaviors and communications, which make up the Leadership Environment category).11 Indeed, this is precisely the pattern we found (see Table 6).

9 The “intent to stay” question is the one question on the survey that uses a different response scale than the “strongly disagree” (0) to “strongly agree” (100) 5-point scale used for all other items. Table 4 therefore reports percentages by response rather than the overall average score. For comparison purposes, the average scores on this item, using the same 0 to 100 scale, were 69 for employees of PEO clients and 63 for employees of non-PEO clients. 10 In addition to our six standard Work Environment categories, as indicated in this figure, we added one new category for the NAPEO employee survey. The “HR” category was added in order to be able to directly examine differences between PEO clients and non-PEO clients on employees’ assessments of HR policies and practices. 11 The six questions in the Leadership category in the employee survey related to supervisors: the extent to which they eliminate barriers to effective work, exhibit principled and ethical behavior, seek and use employee input, provide frequent feedback, communicate clearly, and facilitate free communications.

The specific survey questions (17 of the 32 overall questions) for which there was a statistically significant difference in the response of employees in PEO client firms and those in non-PEO firms are noted in Table 7.12

Analysis sample

The project was designed specifically to collect comparable data from both PEO clients and comparison groups of non-PEO clients on the measures discussed above, thereby enabling us to compare the two groups across multiple categories. To create an incentive for businesses to provide the information needed for this study, NAPEO and McBassi offered a free 2017 employee survey (including a detailed results report with benchmarking comparisons) to any business that did both of the following:
• Enrolled in the survey by completing a business-level
survey with questions on a variety of financial measures
and other elements related to business owners’
perspectives; and
• Invited its employees to respond to a 32-question survey
and receive responses from at least 50 percent of the
employees invited (with five or more total responses).
NAPEO member PEOs represented the primary distribution vehicle for the employee survey offer.13 The participating PEOs offered the free survey to their clients and were asked to offer it to non-clients as well. In many cases, these “non-clients” were either prospective clients or ASO (administrative services only) clients from another branch of the PEO. Such organizations represent particularly appropriate comparisons for PEO clients because both prospective clients and ASO clients known to participating PEOs would be expected to share many qualities, both tangible and intangible, with PEO clients.

The project, including the surveys of business owners and their employees, was conducted from April through June 2017.

Sample size

A total of 101 firms met the standards listed above, of which 71 were PEO clients and 30 were not PEO clients.15 The firms then filtered using two different criteria to ensure that our comparisons used groups of PEO client firms and non-PEO client firms that were similar to one another:
• Main comparison set (Set #1): The first filtering process eliminated from the analysis group any business that did not have at least one similar business in the comparison group. “Similar” was defined as being in the same economic sector (i.e., same industry) and having a number of employees that was between 50 and 150 percent of the number of employees for at least one corresponding business in the same sector. This filtering process left a sample of 60 firms, 40 of which were PEO clients, and 20 of which were not PEO clients.
12 Overall, 31 of the 32 questions had a positive difference (higher score for PEO clients than for non-PEO clients). The one exception was “I freely communicate my opinions and ideas to my supervisor,” for which average scores were slightly higher among non-PEO clients.
13 A total of 12 different PEOs generated at least one participating business that met the standards above. Most participating PEOs made the offer available widely to their client bases.
14 To help increase the sample size, additional efforts were made to recruit non-PEO clients through other entities as well (primarily through McBassi and NAPEO contacts), although in the end only 10 percent of non-PEO clients in the sample came from efforts outside the main PEO distribution channels.
15 The non-PEO client group includes three companies that had been PEO clients for two months or less at the time of enrollment. Because the impact of PEOs on these new clients would be expected to be minimal in early months, we included those companies in the non-PEO comparison group for the analyses.

The sizes of these two groups were large enough for valid comparisons and statistical analysis. They were relatively small samples by the standards of social science research, however, and any statistically significant findings that emerged were therefore particularly notable in light of the difficulty in finding statistical significance in smaller samples.16

This main comparison set was the sample used for most of the analyses described in this paper.
• Comparison Set #2 was used only for comparing financial outcomes from business owners, and therefore included only for-profit businesses (i.e., the not-for-profits were removed from Set #1 to create Set #2). This left a sample of 52 businesses, 36 of which were PEO clients and 16 of which were not PEO clients.
As seen in Table 8, the general characteristics of the 60 firms in the main comparison set are roughly comparable between PEO clients and non-PEO clients.

Business outcomes examined

As noted above, there were two components to a company’s participation in the project: a business-level survey and an employee survey. We used data from the business-level survey (i.e., the business owners’ enrollment form) to measure how the following outcomes varied between PEO clients and non-PEO clients:
• Clients’ direct assessments of PEOs (PEO clients only);
• Business success: growth and profitability;
• Business success: employee turnover; and
• Business owners’ ability to meet various business challenges.
We used data from the employee survey to measure how the following outcomes varied between PEO clients and non-PEO clients:
• Business success factors: competitiveness and innovation;
• Quality of HR practices;
• Employee satisfaction; and
• Multiple other elements of an organization’s work, learning, and leadership environment.

Conclusion

The results described in this paper, based on data collected directly from both business owners and their employees, indicate that PEOs have a significant positive impact on their clients in a variety of important ways.

The findings show that PEOs help their clients achieve better revenue growth and profitability. Clear results also illustrate that they help to improve their clients’ HR policies and practices, employees’ work environment and satisfaction/engagement, and businesses’ ability to focus on factors that drive business success. PEO clients also overwhelmingly indicated they would recommend PEO services to small business colleagues.

The overall pattern of results is important as well in helping to confirm the nature of the analytic results. In particular, substantial and positive differences were found on many of the specific issues that PEOs focus on, while no significant differences were found on many other issues not directly targeted by PEOs. Analytically, the expected lack of differences in some areas serves to underscore the existence of real differences elsewhere. In other words, it’s not just that the PEO clients have higher scores on everything in the analysis—their higher scores illustrate the specific impacts of PEO services.
16 Throughout the paper, those results that are statistically significant at a 90 percent or greater confidence level are specifically highlighted as “statistically significant.” Because of the relatively small sample size, many other results and differences between groups do not meet the statistical definition of significant. Many of those results are discussed in the paper and can still be considered meaningful as well. Statistical significance for employee survey items

Category 3

An Economic Analysis The PEO Industry Footprint

Highlights

Professional employer organizations (PEOs) provide an array of HR services and employee benefits to client organizations, typically small- to mid-sized businesses. This frees those clients to focus their primary efforts on the core business itself, including operations, strategy, and innovation. Our previous research on a variety of measures has found that this arrangement yields significant benefits to PEO clients, as they grow more quickly than comparable other businesses, doing so with lower rates of employee turnover and higher rates of year-to-year business survival. Anecdotally, evidence points to a growing PEO industry driven by a rebounding small business sector, an increase in the use of outsourcing by small businesses, and the rise of complicated employment regulations such as the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Precisely calculating the size of the industry, however, has proved to be tricky due to the
fact that traditional sources such as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and Hoovers do not accurately define PEOs and often include non-PEOs in the category. This white paper therefore examines that question from multiple perspectives using a variety of data sources.

We calculate the current size of the PEO industry to be between $136 and $156 billion, as measured in gross revenues (which includes clients’ payrolls as well as the fees charged to clients). PEOs provide services to between 2.7 and 3.4 million worksite employees for 156,000 to 180,000 clients, and employ between 21,000 and 27,000 internal employees. We estimate there are between 780 and 980 PEOs currently operating in the United States.

These numbers indicate the PEO industry has grown significantly since the PEO concept first began to take hold three decades ago. In each of the last 30years, the industry has added, on average, roughly 100,000 worksite employees and 6,000 net new clients. For perspective, that means that every five years, the PEO industry has added the employment equivalent of the entire utilities industry in the United States.

Multiple data sources were used to make the calculations in this paper, with primary focus on the following:
• NAPEO membership data;
• BLS data;
• NAPEO’s 2014 Financial Ratio & Operating Statistics (FROS)
Survey;
• Hoovers/Dun & Bradstreet data on all companies classified
as PEOs by Hoovers; and
• Detailed administrative data from five selected states. No single data source contains enough information by itself to accurately estimate the size of the industry, so we sought to combine the best (and most reliable) components of each in order to make the most accurate estimate possible. The lower-bound estimates are based on the most conservative assumptions for those areas where quantitative parameters are not precisely known, while higher-range estimates are based on less conservative assumptions.

We found that data on the PEO industry (from major business databases such as Hoovers, as well as from the BLS), often over-counts PEOs, typically by including businesses that do not meet the traditional definition of PEO and/or by mixing worksite employees and internal employees in reporting employee counts. Our calculation methods and manual data reviews were therefore designed specifically to avoid both of those problems, which can be inherent in more automated data gathering and reporting methods. The estimated 2.7 to 3.4 million employees who benefit from PEO services is a number larger than the size of the entire agriculture/forestry industry in the United States (and close to the size of the federal government, the education sector, or the information sector), based on data from the BLS.1

The estimated 780 to 980 PEOs operating in the United States thus touch a substantial number of U.S. employees across some 156,000 to 180,000 different client organizations. And, earlier findings2 that PEO clients have higher rates of growth, are significantly less likely to go out of business from one year to the next, and have notably lower rates of employee turnover suggest that PEOs are exerting a positive influence on the U.S. economy as a whole, making it possible for many small- and mid-sized enterprises to focus more successfully on their core work, while simultaneously serving as a stabilizing force in employment by reducing unwanted employee turnover among PEO clients. Notably, PEOs are doing this despite employing only a modest number of internal employees of their own: fewer than 30,000 total internal employees in total.

This underscores the tremendous leverage of those internal PEO employees, whose positive effects are felt across an employee base larger than the entire U.S.agricultural sector.

Category 1

An Economic Analysis: The PEO Industry Footprint

Highlights

Professional employer organizations (PEOs) provide an array of HR services and employee benefits to client organizations, typically small- to mid-sized businesses. This frees those clients to focus their primary efforts on the core business itself, including operations, strategy, and innovation. Our previous research on a variety of measures has found that this arrangement yields significant benefits to PEO clients, as they grow more quickly than comparable other businesses, doing so with lower rates of employee turnover and higher rates of year-to-year business survival. Anecdotally, evidence points to a growing PEO industry driven by a rebounding small business sector, an increase in the use of outsourcing by small businesses, and the rise of complicated employment regulations such as the Affordable Care Act (ACA). Precisely calculating the size of the industry, however, has proved to be tricky due to the fact that traditional sources such as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and Hoovers do not accurately define PEOs and often include non-PEOs in the category. This white paper therefore examines that question from multiple perspectives using a variety of data sources.

We calculate the current size of the PEO industry to be between $136 and $156 billion, as measured in gross revenues (which includes clients’ payrolls as well as the fees charged to clients). PEOs provide services to between 2.7 and 3.4 million worksite employees for 156,000 to 180,000 clients, and employ between 21,000 and 27,000 internal employees. We estimate there are between 780 and 980 PEOs currently operating in the United States.

Table 1, below, summarizes the key statistics that emerged from this industry analysis. Ranges provided are large due to the vagaries of the data, as noted above. These numbers indicate the PEO industry has grown significantly since the PEO concept first began to take hold three decades ago. In each of the last 30 years, the industry has added, on average, roughly 100,000 worksite employees and 6,000 net new clients. For perspective, that means that every five years, the PEO industry has added the employment equivalent of the entire utilities industry in the United States.

Multiple data sources were used to make the calculations in this paper, with primary focus on the following:

• NAPEO membership data;
• BLS data;
• NAPEO’s 2014 Financial Ratio & Operating Statistics (FROS) Survey;
• Hoovers/Dun & Bradstreet data on all companies classified as PEOs by Hoovers; and
• Detailed administrative data from five selected states.

No single data source contains enough information by itself to accurately estimate the size of the industry, so we sought to combine the best (and most reliable) components of each in order to make the most accurate estimate possible. The lower-bound estimates are based on the most conservative assumptions for those areas where quantitative parameters are not precisely known, while higher-range estimates are based on less conservative assumptions.

We found that data on the PEO industry (from major business databases such as Hoovers, as well as from the BLS), often over-counts PEOs, typically by including businesses that do not meet the traditional definition of PEO and/or by mixing worksite employees and internal employees in reporting employee counts. Our calculation methods and manual data reviews were therefore designed specifically to avoid both of those problems, which can be inherent in more automated data gathering and reporting methods.

The estimated 2.7 to 3.4 million employees who benefit from PEO services is a number larger than the size of the entire agriculture/forestry industry in the United States (and close to the size of the federal government, the education sector, or the information sector), based on data from the BLS.1 The estimated 780 to 980 PEOs operating in the United States thus touch a substantial number of U.S. employees across some 156,000 to 180,000 different client organizations. And, earlier findings2 that PEO clients have higher rates of growth, are significantly less likely to go out of business from one year to the next, and have notably lower rates of employee turnover suggest that PEOs are exerting a positive influence on the U.S. economy as a whole, making it possible for many small- and mid-sized enterprises to focus more successfully on their core work, while simultaneously serving as a stabilizing force in
employment by reducing unwanted employee turnover among PEO clients.

Notably, PEOs are doing this despite employing only a modest number of internal employees of their own: fewer than 30,000 total internal employees in total. This underscores the tremendous leverage of those internal PEO employees, whose positive effects are felt across an employee base larger than the entire U.S. agricultural sector.

We were also able to use data from the combined databases to estimate the distribution of PEOs (and worksite wages) across states (see Figure 1 and Table 2, page 4), and used Hoovers data to estimate the percentage of women-owned and minority-owned businesses in the PEO industry. An estimated total of 15 percent of all PEOs are womenowned, 3 while 5 percent are minority-owned4 (see Figures 2 and 3). Both of these percentages are lower than the percentages of women-owned and minority-owned businesses in the United States as a whole (30 percent for women-owned and 21 percent for minorityowned), suggesting one potential challenge for the PEO industry to address in the years ahead.

Overall, the findings point to a PEO industry that is significant in size and scope, distributed broadly across the country, and well-positioned to continue to have a positive economic impact on its clients and, by extension, on the U.S. economy overall.

The remainder of this report contains additional, more technical, details on the analysis, findings, and
calculation methodology.

Detailed Description of Analysis and Findings

How large is the PEO industry?

We estimate a range for PEO industry size. Our first calculations apply conservative assumptions wherever applicable, and thus represent lower-bound estimates (essentially, the “floor” for each value). Based on the conservative set of assumptions, we calculate the PEO industry in the United States to be at least $136 billion, as measured in gross revenues (which includes clients’ payrolls as well as the fees charged to clients). Conservative estimates indicate there are at least 780 PEOs that combine to provide services to at least 2.7 million worksite employees in at least 156,000 client organizations, while employing approximately 21,000 internal employees of their own.

A second, less conservative, set of estimates and calculations points to an industry about 15 to 30 percent larger than the more conservative estimates: gross revenues of up to $156 billion, 3.4 million worksite employees in 180,000 client organizations, and 27,000 internal employees distributed across almost 1,000 PEOs.

Both sets of calculations take into account the most significant source of potential error in the lower-bound calculations: the extent to which some PEOs are missing from both NAPEO membership data and the Hoovers data. As described below, we used available state administrative data for five states to estimate the percentage of PEOs from those states that were not included in the combined NAPEO and Hoovers data. We then applied percentages from the combined set of five states to the national totals (while also assuming that any PEOs missing from both databases would be, on average, smaller than the average PEO).

We are confident that the ranges reported above represent accurate, analytically responsible estimates of the true size of the full PEO industry

What sources of data were used for the calculations?
To calculate industry size, we relied on information from the following sources:
• Current NAPEO member records, including data on actual worksite wages, worksite employees, and (when available) number of clients;
• NAPEO’s 2014 Financial Ratio & Operating Statistics (FROS) Survey;
• A subscription-based database of information from Hoovers/Dun & Bradstreet containing a variety of information on those companies classified in the database as PEOs; and
• State administrative data from Florida, Indiana, New York, Oklahoma, and Texas6 to compare comprehensive counts of PEOs in each of those states with the estimates derived from the NAPEO and Hoovers databases.
We sought to combine the best elements of each data source—those elements that were the most accurate, the most reliable, or that were unavailable from any other source. The primary elements of the analysis were thus the following:
• Worksite records from NAPEO’s member files on 259 companies (including summative data from members’ IRS Form 941 records on wages and numbers of worksite employees, as well as data on number of clients when available);7
• Extensive financial detail from the FROS survey data, including breakdowns by size group of ratios such as number of worksite employees per internal employee and gross profit as percentage of total revenue;
• Basic company information (including location, size, and ownership) from Hoovers on non-NAPEO members in the PEO industry; and
• Databases of registered PEOs in five selected states to attempt to estimate what percentage of PEOs might be missing from both the NAPEO and Hoovers data.

The key elements of each primary data source are summarized in Table 3.

BLS data was also examined but was ultimately not incorporated into the calculations due to the fact that the BLS definition of the PEO industry appears significantly broader than that used by NAPEO. This is explored in additional detail in the discussion below.
Two factors unique to the PEO industry create particular challenges for purposes of calculating its size and scope:
• Because of the nature of the work done by PEOs, worksite employees are sometimes incorrectly treated as internal employees in public records and databases, with this information then reflected in the Hoovers data. This significantly exaggerates the apparent size of such companies, and means that extensive data cleaning is necessary before available databases such as Hoovers can be usefully applied to industry size calculations.
• Databases such as Hoovers also classify into the PEO industry a number of other types of companies that do not provide the full range of services traditionally associated with PEOs. The most common such companies are temporary staffing companies, but numerous other types (e.g., IT, transportation, home healthcare) are also sometimes incorrectly classified as PEOs. Significant data cleaning is required to eliminate such companies as well.

How were the industry size estimates calculated?
Our calculation model uses actual data when available (in particular, information from NAPEO members on worksite wages, worksite employees, and number of clients), supplemented by information from Hoovers, FROS, and state administrative records to enable the extension of the calculations to apply more broadly across the full scope of the PEO industry.

First, we therefore started our calculations with the NAPEO data on worksite wages, worksite employees, and number of clients. We then verified and adjusted the existing NAPEO membership data against an aggregated measure of worksite wages from the Employer Services Assurance Corporation (ESAC),a third-party accreditation organization with highly reliable, audited data for a subset of NAPEO members. We also used NAPEO’s numbers to estimate numbers of internal employees (not included in the NAPEO data) for its members. Second, several steps were taken to convert raw Hoovers data into information that could be used to supplement the NAPEO data. These included manually identifying which companies in the Hoovers data should be counted as PEOs and then

calculating or verifying as PEOs and then calculating or verifying worksite wages and worksite employees for those companies. (The Hoovers data included internal employees, but not specific information on worksite employees.) Third, we then summed the totals from Hoovers and NAPEO to generate a single industry estimate, and adjusted that estimate to include PEOs that are not a part of either database. These calculations included summing up worksite wages, worksite employees, and number of clients8 for PEO companies for which data were available (NAPEO members), and using known industry ratios to estimate internal employees for those PEOs. For those PEO
companies for which worksite data were not available (Hoovers data), we estimated worksite wages and worksite employees based on Hoovers data on internal employees (after correcting for possible errors that counted worksite employees as internal employees for some companies) and we estimated numbers of clients by applying calculated ratios based on FROS data on number of clients for various ranges of company size, using numbers of internal PEO employees to determine the appropriate size range. For those companies in the Hoovers data that were identified by Hoovers as PEOs but were not examined as part of the sample that was manually verified by NAPEO or McBassi, we accounted for the uncertainty by applying to each company a weighting factor (0.45) that exactly matched the percentage of companies that had been correctly identified as PEOs in the manual sample.

We also adjusted for the fact that some existing PEOs are not included in either the Hoovers or NAPEO databases and thus would be left out of the estimates entirely unless the data were adjusted accordingly. We did this by using administrative data from five different states where state registration of PEOs is required. We calculated the total number of PEOs in each state (after excluding out-of-state registrants and inactive corporations) as a percentage of the number included in the combined NAPEO/Hoovers data for that state. We found the states had, on average, 66 percent more PEOs than were included in the NAPEO/Hoovers count. We used actual numbers of PEOs for those five states, and applied that percentage to remaining states to enable the industry estimates as a whole to reflect companies not included in either NAPEO or Hoovers data.

As part of those calculations, we assumed the missing PEOs were smaller than average PEOs (because we had found smaller PEOs were more likely to have been excluded from the Hoovers data) but similar in all other ways (i.e., the same industry ratios on other key measures). We used two different assumptions for average company size (five employees per company and 10 employees per company). These adjustments for missing companies thus increased the overall size of the industry by 10 to 20 percent (when measured by worksite wages and fees), by 11 to 22 percent (when measured by number of worksite employees), and by 3 to 15 percent (when measured by the number of PEO clients). What about the BLS data that reports the PEO industry employs more than 300,000 employees? Based on our calculations, complemented by our experience with manually examining company-by-company data in Hoovers (which is typically drawn on publicly available sources), we believe the BLS data applies a much broader definition of PEO than is used by NAPEO (and within the PEO industry itself) and/or may incorrectly include worksite employees for some employers. We are confident that our estimates of 21,000 to 27,000 internal PEO employees are much closer to the true number for the PEO industry as it is defined by NAPEO.

How were the state distribution estimates calculated?
For the lower-range estimate of the number of PEOs in each state, we used our most conservative estimates of the full sample of NAPEO data, all Hoovers companies that were either manually confirmed as PEOs or had a weighting factor applied to account for the likelihood of being PEOs, and the estimate of the number of PEOs missing from the two databases. We used available data on primary state location to count the estimated number of PEOs based in each state and adjusted it for the estimated missing PEOs. For the higher-range estimate, we used our alternative estimates of each of the above elements.

Estimates of state worksite wages were calculated similarly, using actual NAPEO data when available, supplemented with Hoovers companies that were either manually confirmed as PEOs or had a weighting factor applied to account for the likelihood of being PEOs, and adding in estimated worksite wages for missing companies using the smallest size estimates. Worksite wages are calculated based on the state in which a PEO is located, and do not incorporate any information on clients’ locations (in other words, if a PEO in California has clients in other states, all worksite wages are assigned to California for purposes of these estimates).

How were the women-owned and minority-owned estimates calculated?
Using the full sample of Hoovers companies that were either manually confirmed as PEOs or had a weighting factor applied to account for the likelihood of being PEOs, we calculated the percentage of those companies that Hoovers had coded as women-owned or minority-owned.

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