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    Organize Your Job Search
    The job search process involves a lot of planning and attention to detail, so it’s no wonder that many people quickly feel overwhelmed and even a bit out of control. The best way to avoid this is to organize your job search so that you have a clear strategy outline and a structured schedule to keep you moving forward.Outline your strategyStart by creating an outline of your job search strategy. List the tactics you intend to use, and the amount of time you will devote to each tactic. A typical list might include the following:· Network with cont
    population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum ben

    Do's And Don'ts Of Printed Pens
    Before you can order a box or boatload of promotional printed pens, there are a few steps you must take. There’s a good chance your graphic artist has already prepared your digital logo. What looks good on paper may not look so great on a printed pen. Follow these ten Do’s and Don’ts of printed pen preparation to create a positive experience for both you and the printer.Five Do’s 5. Prepare your artwork properly. Most printers request files in an .eps format. They should be vector based. All artwork and text for your printed pens should be vector based. Artwork and text sho
    As health care costs increase at a faster rate than other products or services, health care providers, in particular hospitals, are under continuous pressure to dramatically improve service, reduce costs, improve patient safety, reduce waiting times, and reduce errors and associated litigation.

    However, hospitals are not making the necessary improvements in cost, quality, and safety. A report by the U.S. HHS Office of the Inspector General finds that 20% of consecutive inpatient stay sequences were associated with poor quality care, unnecessary fragmentation of care, or both. The current organization and management of hospitals is an imperfect system that cannot effectively address these issues. Major projects to restructure hospitals, dramatically reduce cost, and improve customer care have had little impact on quality or cost.

    In simplistic terms, current healthcare systems are not designed to make the process or ‘value stream’ of care flow smoothly. Healthcare services are often ‘batch and queue’, with patients spending most of their time waiting until the Healthcare Professional is ready i.e. push versus pull. As the population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum bene

    Collaboration and Change
    I’m an expert on change and leadership, but my most popular speaking topic this past year, and the one I’m already getting the most requests for in 2006, is “Creative Collaboration.” This is because my corporate clients around the world (two of next year’s programs are scheduled for the UK and Belgium) are realizing that successful organizational transformation is increasing dependent on employee engagement – which, in return, is increasingly linked to employee participation in the change process.It takes a village – or at least a workforce. Over the past 23 year
    igation.

    However, hospitals are not making the necessary improvements in cost, quality, and safety. A report by the U.S. HHS Office of the Inspector General finds that 20% of consecutive inpatient stay sequences were associated with poor quality care, unnecessary fragmentation of care, or both. The current organization and management of hospitals is an imperfect system that cannot effectively address these issues. Major projects to restructure hospitals, dramatically reduce cost, and improve customer care have had little impact on quality or cost.

    In simplistic terms, current healthcare systems are not designed to make the process or ‘value stream’ of care flow smoothly. Healthcare services are often ‘batch and queue’, with patients spending most of their time waiting until the Healthcare Professional is ready i.e. push versus pull. As the population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum ben

    Is Your Business Benefiting From The Export Trading Company Act Of 1982?
    The advantages of exporting are clear. Increased exports greatly benefit a country’s economy, because they create jobs, stimulate economic growth, bring in tax revenues, and enable domestic industries to compete in international markets. Firms that export can grow faster, because they can utilize idle capacity, reduce dependence on domestic markets, increase product lifecycles, and simply make more money.Previously, the vast U.S. domestic market usually provided American companies ample opportunities to grow and remain profitable. Now, domestic market saturation and incre
    are, or both. The current organization and management of hospitals is an imperfect system that cannot effectively address these issues. Major projects to restructure hospitals, dramatically reduce cost, and improve customer care have had little impact on quality or cost.

    In simplistic terms, current healthcare systems are not designed to make the process or ‘value stream’ of care flow smoothly. Healthcare services are often ‘batch and queue’, with patients spending most of their time waiting until the Healthcare Professional is ready i.e. push versus pull. As the population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum ben

    Image is Everything, Almost
    During the good old days, a business could get away with scribbling a note or pecking on a typewriter long after the ribbon should have been replaced and sending it to a customer or potential one. The carbon paper placed between the original to make a copy for in-house records was acceptable even if it smeared. Using whiteout and typing over the mistake even though the correction was still noticeable was not a problem and didn't harm sales. Those were the good 'old days for sure. A handshake and verbal agreement was the way small businesses closed the sale. Big businesses had a mor
    tic terms, current healthcare systems are not designed to make the process or ‘value stream’ of care flow smoothly. Healthcare services are often ‘batch and queue’, with patients spending most of their time waiting until the Healthcare Professional is ready i.e. push versus pull. As the population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum ben

    Leadership Lessons from the Great Pyramids - PART 2 of 2
    ...While "attitude" was enough to build the smaller Pyramids (like that of King Sneferu), the largest, grandest, and the only of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient world still standing, with a height of 450 feet and 756 feet square: The Great Pyramid of Khufu, needed more than just a great attitude.True greatness lies in self-actualization through workWhen work becomes choice, it no longer manifests itself as work. It is the convergence of personal desire and the actions we gladly take.As it turned out from the discovery of a Workers Cemetery, building Pyramids w
    population matures, patient cycle times in the hospitals, post-care facilities, and laboratories become key measurements that need to improve.

    Our belief is that Lean Healthcare can provide a solution to successfully address some of these concerns with minimal cost but maximum benefit.

    Lean in Healthcare

    The essence of Lean Thinking is to eliminate waste through understanding how the patient defines value and how to deliver that value. Lean Thinking focuses on creating an efficient, waste-free continuous flow built on a pull vs. ‘batch and queue’ approach aligned with the continual pursuit of a perfect system.

    Examples of Healthcare Waste:

    - Redundant capture of information on admission
    - Multiple recording of patient information
    - Excess supplies stored in multiple locations
    - Excess time spent looking for charts
    - Patient waiting rooms
    - Excess time spent waiting for equipment, lab results, x-rays etc.
    - Excess time spent dealing with service complaints

    Hospitals are made up of a series of processes with diverse lines of business. As a consequence, they need to build their delivery systems with these lines of business in mind. Hospitals need to know the businesses that drive 80% of their value proposition. They need to streamline their organization systems and processes to fully support the process required to deliver high quality care.

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