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Human Resources Advice Colorado Springs CO

Traditional business models separated work from church, requiring some employees to lead almost 'schizophrenic' lives. But now business is finding it can combine the two, as long as nobody forces the issue.

Dynamic Solutions, LLC
(719) 351-7356
102 S.Tejon St., Suite 1100
Colorado Springs, CO
KevinKearns.com
719.687.5388
PO Box 9055
Woodland Park, CO
MJ LAMBETH CONSULTING
(720) 480-5829
2119 Coronado Parkway Unit A
Thornton, CO
Viking Consulting Incorpated
720-283-3197
7612 So Spotwood Ct
Littleton, CO
Welding & Management Group
(303) 451-6759
1070 west 124th Avenue, Suite 800
Westminster, CO
Eni Inc
(719) 599-1308
1500 Garden Of The Gods Rd
Colorado Springs, CO
1st Choice Services
303-359-4390
245 Alaska Road
Boulder, CO
RMC INTERNATIONAL
303756-2800
2000 South Colorado Blvd
Denver, CO
Maxx Media Solutions
(720) 985-6947
1100 Grant St., #408
Denver, CO
Burkhart Consulting Services
970-897-3195
P.O. Box 976
Wellington, CO
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Religion Can Work in the Workplace - But No Hard Sell

In the 25 years that Mark Carr has run his automotive franchise business according to Christian teachings, he’s never considered it a conflict.

“Downsides? I don’t see any,” says Carr, who named his Houston startup Christian Brothers Automotive Corp., because he wanted to let everyone know Jesus was at the wheel.

“We are in a very, very crummy business that is known for being dishonest,” says Carr, who has 41 franchises with 2006 revenue of some $42 million. “Christianity is the driving force to be honest with customers, do the best possible job that I can and have integrity.”

There has been no systematic study to determine exactly how many U.S. startups are openly faith-based, according to David Miller, executive director of the Yale Center for Faith and Culture and a former entrepreneur.

“That said, many smaller businesses and startups are incorporating altruistic dimensions into their business plan and credo,” he says. “Some may be explicitly faith-oriented while others might not mention faith,” but were inspired by religious teachings or the entrepreneur’s personal values.

‘Divine’ Entrepreneurship

There are also church-sponsored entrepreneurship schools, like the Joseph Center in Forest Park, Ill., which views entrepreneurship as a divine calling. Worship and work are certainly not opposing forces – if they ever were, Miller says. But are they good partners?

“The old model of how to succeed in business is you kept your personal life separate,” he explains.

Author: Lynne Meredith Schreiber

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