How to Keep Your Best People and Build a Stronger Team Yesterday, we covered how to gain tighter control over physical assets using the Equipment Lifecycle approach — cutting downtime, improving monitoring, and making operations more predictable. Even with strong operational discipline, many organizations still face people-related friction. Keeping capable employees, aligning teams, and maintaining engagement have become major factors for stability in 2026. The shift is clear. Running a lean, automated operation while treating talent as secondary is no longer neutral — it carries real business risk. Old habits like delayed performance reviews, disconnected teams, and vague career paths don’t hold up well anymore. When experienced people leave, you lose more than headcount. You lose know-how, working rhythms, and the internal trust that keeps things moving smoothly. The organizations gaining ground right now are treating retention as part of how they run the business — not an ...
How Small and Medium Businesses Can Succeed by Simplifying Their Digital Tools By the team at AviBusinessSolutions.com Small and medium-sized businesses today face a tough environment. With more competition, fast-changing technology, and growing expectations for social and environmental responsibility, it’s easy for business owners and managers to feel overwhelmed. Many try to keep up by adding new computer programs and online services, but this approach can cause problems if not handled thoughtfully. The Problem with Too Many Tools It might seem that the more computer programs and online services you have, the better your business will run. But research shows the opposite can happen. When companies use too many different types of software—especially ones that don’t work well together—employees end up wasting time on repetitive, manual tasks. Instead of making things easier, complicated systems slow teams down and make it harder to keep up with the competition. The Power of Pract...