How Trek Bicycles has kept a great culture rolling in a fast-moving 2020

Trek Bicycles has had to navigate very different bumps in the road from most organizations this past year.

While companies in many industries have weathered severe declines in revenue, Trek and other bicycle sellers have seen sales take off amid a pandemic that prompted people to avoid public transportation, skip indoor “spin” classes, and seek family friendly outings—like bike rides.

Demand that is doubling or tripling compared to 2019 is a good thing generally. But the bike boom has put unprecedented pressures on Waterloo, Wis.-based Trek to keep employees and customers healthy as well as to keep busy staffers from burning out. What’s more, the racial reckoning spurred by the murder of George Floyd has prompted Trek to take stock of an industry that has lacked diversity.

The company has responded with a combination of new safety protocols, higher pay, new employee recognition programs and a new commitment to racial inclusion. Trek also has continued to conduct “pulse” surveys to closely monitor the employee experience. That standing practice has enabled the company to learn and pivot quickly in a year when the challenges have popped up one after another, says Mark Joslyn, the company’s vice president of HR and IT.

“We’re never satisfied,” Joslyn says. “We’re always looking for a better way.”

With its nimble, people-first response to a difficult 2020, it’s not surprise Trek is a Fortune Best Workplaces in Retail list winner this year.

Retailers with a great culture to offer

To determine the list, Fortune partnered with people analytics firm Great Place to Work to analyze anonymous survey feedback representing more than 900,000 employees working in the retail industry in the United States.

Grocery store chain Wegmans Food Markets ranked first in the large-company category of the list, followed by auto seller CarMax, Publix Super Markets, Recreational Equipment, Inc. (REI) and grocery store chain Nugget Market.

Employees responded to more than 60 survey questions describing the extent to which their organization creates a “Great Place to Work For All.” Eighty-five percent of the evaluation is based on what employees say on Great Place to Work’s Trust Index survey about their experiences of trust and reaching their full human potential as part of their organization, no matter who they are or what they do. Great Place to Work analyzes these experiences relative to each organization’s size, workforce make up, and what’s typical relative to their peers in the industry.

The remaining 15 percent of the rank is based on an assessment of all employees’ daily experiences of innovation, the company’s values, and the effectiveness of their leaders, to ensure they’re consistently experienced. To be considered, companies had to meet the Great Place to Work-Certified standard.