Laurence Ruffin

Cooperative: SCOP ALMA
City: Saint-Martin-d'Hères
Country: France
Sector: IT / Software
Founded: 1979

Working in a cooperative is succeeding to combine an interesting job with an environment which suits me, where the employees really are the centre of the business

I started my journey in an ordinary business. Six years ago I decided to change my life and to integrate into the cooperative world as a consultant, that’s how I know ALMA . Today the company amounts to 80 employees who are significant associates.

Working in a cooperative is succeeding to combine an interesting job with an environment which suits me, where the employees really are the centre of the business. The change for me is that as an informed worker, I have a larger impact in the company. We have noticed that in practice that the cooperative status is well adapted to our business domain, because editing a computer programme is a collective and creative project, and having cooperative status, we largely respect the autonomy of staff.

There is no strong hierarchy which is well adapted to a high-tech domain. ALMA is as familiar with the crisis as any business, although importantly as we have funds in reserve due to putting profits aside as an insurance for the company, we do not have problems with sustainability, which allows us to invest in our future.

Source: http://www.les-scop.coop/scop-en-vue

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What is a cooperative

Cooperatives a sustainable employment solution!

A cooperative is an autonomous association of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social, and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly-owned and democratically-controlled enterprise.

Enterprises represented by CECOP are enterprises in which workers unite to satisfy their needs in terms of creation of sustainable jobs. They can be industrial enterprises or services rooted in the territories and having a long-term strategy. They are a genuine solution for sustainable jobs in Europe: they are broken down into workers’ cooperatives, social cooperatives and other types of enterprises owned by their workers.

Workers’ cooperatives: Workers’ cooperatives are enterprises subject to the same restrictions of competition, management and profitability as other companies. Their originality lies in the fact that their workers hold the majority of the shares, at least 51%. In doing so, the workers decide jointly on the major guidelines of their enterprises and appoint their leaders (managers, boards of directors, etc.). They also decide on how to share the profit with a twofold aim: to give the preference to the workers of the enterprises, in the form of refunds based on the work done and to consolidate the enterprises with a view to handing it over onto the future generations, i.e. creating reserves to reinforce the equity and ensuring thereby the sustainability of their enterprises. In all cooperatives, the internal democratic control is based on the principle of “one man, one vote” whatever the capital share held by the respective workers. Finally, the cooperative spirit promotes its employees information and training, a prerequisite to develop the autonomy, the motivation and responsibility, accountability required in an economic world which has become insecure. (Source: www.scop.coop)

Social cooperatives: Social cooperatives are specialised in the provision of social services or reintegration of disadvantaged and marginalised workers (disabled, long-term unemployed, former detainees, addicts, etc.). A large number of such cooperatives have been set up in Italy but also in other EU countries. Most of them are owned by their workers while offering the possibility or providing for the obligation (according to the national laws) to involve other types of members (users, voluntary workers, etc.).

Other types of enterprises owned by their workers: There are other types of enterprises owned by their workers such as for example the “Sociedades Laborales” in Spain which are real driving forces of economic and social activities which have contributed to lower the unemployment level and to revamp a sustained growth in Spain.