TIJUANA, MEXICO – On a recent day off from her assembly plant job, Antonia Morena put on her prettiest blouse, painted her lips bright red, and returned to her factory, her fiancé at her side.
There, the couple took part in a mass wedding.
The factory paid for the invitations, the white roses, photos and wedding cake. It also took care of red tape involved in getting the marriage certificate and put on a splashy ceremony for Morena and her fiancé, and 30 other couples.
It's the sort of thing the Plantronics assembly plant here does on a routine basis, earning it earlier this year the U.S. State Department's corporate excellence award, one of three worldwide, and the loyalty of its 2,300-member workforce.
"Those who've worked at other plants say it's better here," Morena said before taking her wedding vows. "In other plants, they don't have physicians. They don't sponsor events to help retirement homes and orphanages. They don't help us with our savings. If we save 150 pesos, they match it."
Plantronics, based in Santa Cruz, Calif., designs and assembles headsets for use by air traffic controllers, police and fire dispatchers, and retail clients. It's had operations in Tijuana for four decades.
Just 400 yards from the U.S. border, its air-conditioned factory floor has natural light filtering in through the louvered roof. Employees, during breaks, congregate around pingpong and foosball tables. Not long ago, Baja California Symphony members set up chairs at the factory and played classical music at the end of one shift. A dance troupe, opera singers, a mime and mariachis have also regaled workers.
"It's really no wonder that the company has been named the best place to work in Mexico three years in a row," Secretary of State John Kerry said in January at a ceremony honoring the three companies that won the State Department's corporate excellence award. He was referring to the judgment of the Great Place to Work Institute in San Francisco.