Frontline workers are the engine that drives any business. At Beekeeper, our mission is to keep that engine fired up by empowering frontline organizations with technology that keeps employees engaged and happy.
Table of contents
Frontline workers are the engine that drives any business. At Beekeeper, our mission is to keep that engine fired up by empowering frontline organizations with technology that keeps employees engaged and happy.
“We have to engage in a very people-driven service delivery. Without our people, without them being engaged and understanding the company, we can’t deliver. It’s people out there creating work zones and keeping people safe.”
- Chris Byerly, Director of Brand & Strategy at Flagger Force
One of the biggest challenges frontline organizations face is hiring and retaining employees. According to Deloitte, 71% of CEOs say that the labor and skills shortage is the biggest disruptor in 2022, up from 32% only two years ago.
Factors fueling the shortage include:
These factors are making it harder than ever for companies to engage with their employees. For the traffic control company Flagger Force, keeping their highly dispersed workforce engaged in an industry known for high turnover was a challenge.
A recent webinar explored how Flagger Force created a strong employee referral program to address the labor shortage.
Panelists included:
Let’s recap what we discussed.
When Flagger Force partnered with Beekeeper to relaunch their employee referral program, their goal was to use the platform to combine monetary referral bonuses with new hire mentorship.

“Our strategy was to create awareness and illuminate success stories around the people who we were bringing in through this referral program and how we were supporting them as newly hired employees.”
- Tamara Palmer, Internal Communications Manager at Flagger Force
The results spoke for themselves:
The new referral program successfully helped Flagger Force source and hire new talent. Not only was the company able to hire more employees out of a larger pool of referrals, those hires often stayed with the company longer than employees they hired through traditional methods they had used previously. At a time when new hire churn rates are at an all-time high in frontline industries, this increase in referrals and retention rates is huge.
In fact, employees hired through the Flagger Force referral program stayed with the company an average of 50 days longer than employees hired through other methods.
This led to an estimated $250,000 in cost savings in terms of training and onboarding. And that doesn’t even take into account the revenue brought in by employees hired through the new referral program.
Flagger Force started with some referral program best practices that the company adapted to their own needs. Those best practices were to:
We’ve talked about the metrics and business outcomes of Flagger Force’s referral program, but let’s look at an example of how it worked in practice through the lens of one special employee: Ernest McFadden.

Ernest’s achievement of referring four successful hires was only one of his contributions to the program. He also mentored new hires to support their needs so that they can achieve certain milestones. Not only did Ernest help other hires achieve their goals, he did so in a way that brought him benefits as well.
This process created more opportunities for new hires to engage with the company early in the onboarding process, setting them up for success in the future.
The visibility of Ernest's story and the impact he made were visible to other employees and leadership through Beekeeper. This created a model for others to follow and displayed the tangible, human results of the program.
The leadership team at Flagger Force became aware that the referral program was also a great way to find talent.
“When you look at the people who are highly engaged in our platform–supporting people, telling stories, liking comments, etc.–those are often the people getting promoted and rising up in the company.”
Eugene Bougher, a field leader at Flagger Force, was part of an expansion team in North Carolina. In the 60 days he spent there, he took pictures of what was going on and shared the details of his experiences through Beekeeper.
Eugene’s storytelling made him the voice of this expansion. When the leadership team was doing a corporate retrospective, they invited Eugene to participate. This eventually got Eugene promoted to field leader and he continues to be an active platform user to this day.
Flagger Force continued to expand its employee referral program by using Beekeeper’s ability to integrate with other platforms. For Flagger Force, the integration with the highest impact was the mobile-based training platform eduMe.

One of Flagger Force’s biggest priorities is compliance and awareness around employee safety. With a dispersed workforce, the company wanted to enable continuous learning around topics of safety.
We want to make learning short and sweet so that employees can digest information and, ultimately, upskill themselves, do better when they’re at work, and become more productive.
- Connor Hunsicker, Enterprise Success Lead at eduMe
With eduMe, Flagger Force was able to create a digital microlearning strategy that delivered information in small segments on a continuous basis. Instead of one-time training sessions that often lead employees to forget what they learn, Micro Learning aids in long-term retention. eduMe also makes learning convenient by providing one-click access to learning in an app that employees are already familiar with.
About the author
Top