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    Fire Risk Assessment - It's The Law
    Any responsible person, even with limited formal instruction or experience, can do a simple fire risk assessment. More complex buildings will need to be assessed by a person with full training and experience in fire risk assessment.Mainly companies and building owners will be affected by the new legislation but it could be anyone who has some control over premises. Fire certificates will no longer be valid.Under the new regulations it is the responsibility of employers to do a risk assessment of their places of work, which must contain provisions concerning fire safety measures in the workplace.The responsible person must go over the risk assessment frequently to keep it current, particularly if: . There is reason to believe that it is no longer valid; or . There has been a major change in the matters to which it relates, or there have been expansions or substantial changes in the organisation of workThe risk assessment should be done to make sure that appropriate fire precautions, maintenance and management measures are in place to guarantee the safety of anyone who might use your premises.The Fire and Rescue Authority will now examine premises and undertake audits of fire risk assessments to put into effect the requirements of the Regulatory Reform Order.The Five Steps To Fire Risk Assessment:Step 1: Identify fire hazards Is there a system for controlling the amounts of combustible materials and flammable liquids and gases, including cleaning fluids, stationery and waste, kept in the workplace?Is the system working correctly? Are all combustible materials and flammable liquids and gases stored safely? Are all items of portable electrical equipment checked frequently and fitted with the correct rated fuses?Step 2: Identify the persons at significant risk in case of fire Think about who might be in or near your premises that would need to know about your fire protection systems - including employees, people in adjoining buildings, visitors or contractors.Is there an adequate number of proper exits of suitable width for the persons present? Do the exits lead to a place of safety? Are passageways and escape routes
    test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission state

    Top Salespeople Manage What They Measure
    Now that you're two months into 2007, have you given much thought to how you plan to increase your productivity this year; that is, your sales and gross margin?If you are compensated on the basis of a commission or if you can earn a bonus by achieving certain sales and/or gross margin goals, you are a fortunate salesperson because you are -- to a large extent -- in charge of your financial destiny. Your raise becomes effective when you do.Most employees would kill for such an opportunity. But to take full advantage of this coveted opportunity, you must generate more results.As a salesperson with your pay tied to productivity, there are only three ways to earn a higher income:1. You can sell more to your existing customers.2. You can bring in new customers that currently buy from the competition.3. You can improve the gross margin you generate in 2007 versus the gross margin you generated in 2006.In survey after survey, salespeople report that TIME is their number one challenge. They say that if they only had more time, or if they were able to manage their time more effectively, that they could sell more.Well, we all have 24 hours a day, so one of the few ways all salespeople are equal is with respect to time. It's how salespeople use these 24 hours that separates the high achievers from those that are struggling to keep the many balls they're juggling now up in the air.The secret is to periodically measure where your time is going. My recommendation is for at least two weeks per year, keep a time log and determine how your time is being spent -- and where you are wasting time. You can create for yourself 1.56 additional weeks a year if you can figure out a way to stop wasting just 15 minutes per day.Here's how the math works: 15 minutes per day times 5 days = 75 minutes per week times 50 weeks per year = 3750 minutes per year divided by 60 minutes in an hour = 62.5 hours per year divided by 40 hours = 1.56 additional work weeks per year.Figure out how to stop wasting 30 minutes per day and you will pick up the equivalent of 3.12 additional work weeks a year.Just a few weeks ago a friend of mine (Jim Meisenheimer
    Many managers and executives sabotage employee performance systematically and regularly.

    Why would they consciously or unconsciously sabotage organization success with this destructive management style? Change can be either a curse or a blessing. Most people fear, dislike and resist any change that they perceive threatens their security, future success or well being.

    Regardless of the best corporate intentions or agendas surrounding any change in policy, procedure, re-organization or expansion, employees from the boardroom to the lunchroom tend to think the worst when change appears on the scene. Regardless of its purpose, need or anticipated outcome change is often a saboteur of individual performance and organization productivity and profits.

    In order to maintain and or increase market share, competitive posture, or long term financial stability, while keeping customer satisfaction high and turnover to a minimum, it is essential that the perceptions, attitudes, values and expectations of your human resources be taken seriously into account. In my thirty plus years of experience as a trainer, speaker and consultant to a wide variety and size organizations worldwide I have discovered there are twelve key issues that sabotage employee performance and productivity.

    They are,

    1.Arrogance
    2. Ignorance
    3. Poor or no coaching
    4. Poor hiring practices
    5. Isolation
    6. Clouded perceptions
    7. Ego, Management style
    8. Inconsistent communication patterns
    9. Inadequate human resource development and training
    10. Negative motivational climate
    11. Poorly communicated corporate direction and goals
    12. Not in touch with reality
    13. Inconsistent feedback mechanisms
    14. Corporate Culture.

    Let's look at a few of these briefly.

    Arrogance. This is the general attitude that the organization is invincible regardless of its abuses of customers, employees, the environment, vendors or competitors.

    Ignorance. This is often related to arrogance, but it goes even deeper. It is being out of touch with the realities that exist within the organization as well as those outside the organization. It includes but is not limited to: a lack of effective understanding and/or use of technology, a lack of awareness of customer attitudes or perceptions, a lack of interest in employee position needs, desires, concerns or problems, a lack of understanding of marketing or consumer shifts or trends, a lack of awareness of competitor activities, objectives or agendas, and a lack of empathy for supplier issues, problems, needs, or desires.

    Isolation. This is the approach of keeping employees, customers and suppliers at a safe distance so that your perceptions, opinions, philosophy and /or opinions are not challenged.

    Clouded Perceptions. This is being unwilling to see past the visible and the evident to the underlying causes, symptoms or contributors.

    Ego. This is the desire to be right, control, manipulate, hold on to rather than delegate power, authority and responsibility beyond your office door or trusted inner circle. It is having an open door policy, but a closed mind when people walk through it.

    Management Style. This is the style in which management staff interact on a routine basis with other managers, support staff, customers and suppliers.

    Communication patterns. This is the manner in which information flows throughout the organization. From top down, bottom up, department to department, inside the organization to outside and how outside-in information is distributed.

    Human resource development. Simply stated, this is the overall philosophy about how much of your corporate resources should be invested in the skill development and attitude management of your people.

    Lack of clear communicated direction. One of the greatest obstacles to effective employee performance is when your employees haven't a clue as to who you are trying to become, where you are going and why.

    Poor feedback mechanisms. One of the biggest weaknesses of managers today is the ability to give both positive and negative feedback. Negative feedback should not be designed to punish, but modify behavior. Positive feedback is to insure that people know and understand the expectations and standards under which they are to function.

    Culture. Corporate culture is the personality of an organization. It is the written and unwritten rules and expectations of behavior, interaction, and performance. It is the rites and rituals that govern peoples attitudes and activities. It is the corporate paradigm that permeates every strategy, action, and decision.

    Let’s go into a little more detail on the above items.

    Arrogance.

    To succeed in today's competitive ever-changing global environment will require:

    a) a willingness to admit defeat and wrong decisions.
    b) humility
    c) flexibility
    d) compromise
    e) a willingness to let go of people, products, policies or procedures, regardless who

    supported them, created them, hired them that are no longer in the best interests

    of the organization as a whole. There will be a greater emphasis on what is best for

    the health and welfare of the organization rather than who said it, decided it,

    or supported it.
    f) adapting to change regardless of how uncomfortable or challenging the new environment

    may seem.

    Ignorance.

    The use of information is power. However, if you lack current information on market trends, competitor strategies and activities, customer attitudes and employee perceptions you will be operating in a vacuum. I recommend the following to ensure you are making the best possible decisions on strategy, finance, marketing, manufacturing and distribution:

    a) use your field sales people as an information gathering resource.
    b) conduct regular employee surveys to discover department, product/service, employee

    and procedure strengths, weaknesses, and needs. These surveys should be conducted

    confidentially and evaluated by an outside resource.
    c) conduct regular customer audits to evaluate perceptions, needs, trends, attitudes,

    problems and produce usage profiles.
    d) meet regularly with suppliers to determine where the relationship could be improved e) network with other business leaders both in and out of your industry.
    f) become a voracious reader of business and industry publications that directly or

    indirectly impact on your present or future.
    g) bypass your direct reports and regularly meet with support personnel to discover

    prejudices, judgments, problems and opportunities that are being missed.
    h) use your outside resources as information centers to fill in the gaps where your

    prejudices or the prejudices of your employees may be jaded.

    Isolation.

    You can't run your organization successfully from behind your desk or locked in the boardroom. The job of management is to manage not hide. If I have heard it once I have heard it hundreds of times. "We have too many meetings at the upper level of this organization that are generally a waste of time." I concede that meetings are necessary but evaluation, implementation, execution and directed purposeful action takes place on the street, on the shop floor, in the distribution center not in the meeting room. I recommend the following:

    a) start your day with a "walk-about". get to know your people. Be visible and

    interested.
    b) end your day with another "walk-about" for the same reason.
    c) be accessible for people when they need information, decisions, feedback, counsel, to

    vent, share, learn, grow, help with your insight, experience, knowledge and sense of

    history.
    d) have an open door as well as an open mind when people get there.
    e) learn to listen between the lines.
    f) ask lots of questions.
    g) never be too busy to coach an employee who asks for help, advice or guidance.

    Clouded perceptions.

    Perceptions become reality. What is believed to be true regardless of whether it is true or not is acted upon as if it was true. When you make a decision, any decision, or form a judgment with less than a clear vision of what is really true, you are bound to make mistakes. Some mistakes at the top cost organizations very little, while others have put organizations out to pasture. There is only one way to ensure that your perceptions are in line with reality.

    a) create an organizational environment where it is safe to share openly problems, issues

    and concerns without the fear of retribution.
    b) don't edit the information you receive regardless of the source.
    c) remember disagreement doesn't mean disloyalty.
    d) encourage disagreement.
    e) don't criticize, punish or discipline employees for bringing reality to you.
    f) some of your best employees will be the most outspoken. They may be difficult to

    manage but they are worth their weight in gold, if you want to survive.
    g. pay attention to your "gut" feelings, they will be right more than they are wrong,

    regardless of what you hear or are told.

    Ego.

    Would you rather be happy or right? Uncontrolled egos have destroyed more enterprises than any other single ingredient. It takes a certain amount of ego to be successful when running a business, regardless of its size, but too much will earn people's wrath, contempt and scorn. None of these make for a healthy corporate environment. I recommend the following:

    a) does your need for power, fame, control ever get in the way of sound practical business decisions?
    b) are you more concerned with getting vs. giving credit?
    c) are you more interested in being right than the health or success of a project, activity or your organization as a whole?
    d) do you spend more time talking or listening?
    e) do you tend to over power, intimidate or manipulate people toward your opinion, answer or method?

    Management style.

    It is easy to determine; if your overall management style is positive or negative, if it contributes to increased or decreased market share, greater or lesser profits and increasing or decreasing customer base, if it contributes to improved employee performance or increased stress and employee turnover. There are six questions to ask yourself:

    a) is your organization a fun place to work?
    b) do people look forward to coming to work?
    c) do your people love their work?
    d) are people waiting in line to join your organization or do many of your employees have their resumes on the street?
    e) do people trust and respect each other or is mistrust rampant?
    f) do your people take ownership of department and corporate outcomes or do they show

    up, do their job and go home?

    Your answers to these questions will give you a reasonably accurate assessment as to whether you need to modify your management style or if you are on the right track.

    Communication patterns.

    Do your people have to be in the right place at the right time to know what is going on in your organization? Are all your employees kept informed in a timely manner on key corporate decisions that affect them? Is there excessive redundancy anywhere in the organization? Are there mini kingdoms where people have circled the wagons and edit information before it leaves or enters a department? Do you have excess employee turnover? Are stress levels throughout the organization increasing? Is your corporate culture defined by, "you better get it in writing?" These are just a few of the symptoms of poor communication. I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) remove any layers or blocks between employees and/or departments that may be

    preventing "real world" information getting to the people that need it.
    b) bypass your direct reports, and talk with support staff to test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission statem

    40 Hours of Hell - Is it Time to Find a New Job?
    Where did the weekend go? It’s Sunday night and although you had a lovely time leaving your butt imprint on the couch for the last 48 hours, suddenly there’s a lurch in the pit of your stomach again. Yes, looming on the horizon, there is it, another Monday morning. Another Monday, you’ll face the gridlock and angrily express your dismay with the world with one finger and clutch the huge cup of coffee that you’ll need to drag yourself through the bore that is your job. The highlight of your day, other than seeing the clock hit 4:59 will of course be the secret glee you have knowing that you’ve spent hours of company time playing Solitaire and sending out countless resumes. You know you’re a lousy employee, but in a tight job market, with younger and more qualified applicants taking greeter jobs at Wal-Mart, is it really time to find a new job?If loving what you do is the key ingredient to success, and your job gives you symptoms similar to dysentery, should you pack it in? Do you need a new attitude or a new career? If you’re going to spend about 80,000 hours of your life at work, don’t you deserve to like some of it? When is it time to move on?Before you change the “objective” paragraph on your resume to read: “Doing anything other than what I’m doing in this hellhole”, make sure you answer the following questions.Did I ever love this job? If your job were a relationship, is it just on the rocks or was it just a time filler until Mr. or Miss Right came along? Remembering that in order to have gotten this job in the first place, at some point you actually asked for it. You actually decided that you had the qualifications to do it, you would enjoy coming there each day, and you saw some kind of potential for a future there. Was this a job that you took after a long bout with unemployment or did you actually see it as a step up from something else?Do I respect this job? OK, so maybe your job relationship needs some marriage counseling, but as the marriage counselor would tell you, all good relationships are built on respect. If you had to sum up your position in one sentence, what is it that you really do and do you find that an admirable thing to be doing
    te, hold on to rather than delegate power, authority and responsibility beyond your office door or trusted inner circle. It is having an open door policy, but a closed mind when people walk through it.

    Management Style. This is the style in which management staff interact on a routine basis with other managers, support staff, customers and suppliers.

    Communication patterns. This is the manner in which information flows throughout the organization. From top down, bottom up, department to department, inside the organization to outside and how outside-in information is distributed.

    Human resource development. Simply stated, this is the overall philosophy about how much of your corporate resources should be invested in the skill development and attitude management of your people.

    Lack of clear communicated direction. One of the greatest obstacles to effective employee performance is when your employees haven't a clue as to who you are trying to become, where you are going and why.

    Poor feedback mechanisms. One of the biggest weaknesses of managers today is the ability to give both positive and negative feedback. Negative feedback should not be designed to punish, but modify behavior. Positive feedback is to insure that people know and understand the expectations and standards under which they are to function.

    Culture. Corporate culture is the personality of an organization. It is the written and unwritten rules and expectations of behavior, interaction, and performance. It is the rites and rituals that govern peoples attitudes and activities. It is the corporate paradigm that permeates every strategy, action, and decision.

    Let’s go into a little more detail on the above items.

    Arrogance.

    To succeed in today's competitive ever-changing global environment will require:

    a) a willingness to admit defeat and wrong decisions.
    b) humility
    c) flexibility
    d) compromise
    e) a willingness to let go of people, products, policies or procedures, regardless who

    supported them, created them, hired them that are no longer in the best interests

    of the organization as a whole. There will be a greater emphasis on what is best for

    the health and welfare of the organization rather than who said it, decided it,

    or supported it.
    f) adapting to change regardless of how uncomfortable or challenging the new environment

    may seem.

    Ignorance.

    The use of information is power. However, if you lack current information on market trends, competitor strategies and activities, customer attitudes and employee perceptions you will be operating in a vacuum. I recommend the following to ensure you are making the best possible decisions on strategy, finance, marketing, manufacturing and distribution:

    a) use your field sales people as an information gathering resource.
    b) conduct regular employee surveys to discover department, product/service, employee

    and procedure strengths, weaknesses, and needs. These surveys should be conducted

    confidentially and evaluated by an outside resource.
    c) conduct regular customer audits to evaluate perceptions, needs, trends, attitudes,

    problems and produce usage profiles.
    d) meet regularly with suppliers to determine where the relationship could be improved e) network with other business leaders both in and out of your industry.
    f) become a voracious reader of business and industry publications that directly or

    indirectly impact on your present or future.
    g) bypass your direct reports and regularly meet with support personnel to discover

    prejudices, judgments, problems and opportunities that are being missed.
    h) use your outside resources as information centers to fill in the gaps where your

    prejudices or the prejudices of your employees may be jaded.

    Isolation.

    You can't run your organization successfully from behind your desk or locked in the boardroom. The job of management is to manage not hide. If I have heard it once I have heard it hundreds of times. "We have too many meetings at the upper level of this organization that are generally a waste of time." I concede that meetings are necessary but evaluation, implementation, execution and directed purposeful action takes place on the street, on the shop floor, in the distribution center not in the meeting room. I recommend the following:

    a) start your day with a "walk-about". get to know your people. Be visible and

    interested.
    b) end your day with another "walk-about" for the same reason.
    c) be accessible for people when they need information, decisions, feedback, counsel, to

    vent, share, learn, grow, help with your insight, experience, knowledge and sense of

    history.
    d) have an open door as well as an open mind when people get there.
    e) learn to listen between the lines.
    f) ask lots of questions.
    g) never be too busy to coach an employee who asks for help, advice or guidance.

    Clouded perceptions.

    Perceptions become reality. What is believed to be true regardless of whether it is true or not is acted upon as if it was true. When you make a decision, any decision, or form a judgment with less than a clear vision of what is really true, you are bound to make mistakes. Some mistakes at the top cost organizations very little, while others have put organizations out to pasture. There is only one way to ensure that your perceptions are in line with reality.

    a) create an organizational environment where it is safe to share openly problems, issues

    and concerns without the fear of retribution.
    b) don't edit the information you receive regardless of the source.
    c) remember disagreement doesn't mean disloyalty.
    d) encourage disagreement.
    e) don't criticize, punish or discipline employees for bringing reality to you.
    f) some of your best employees will be the most outspoken. They may be difficult to

    manage but they are worth their weight in gold, if you want to survive.
    g. pay attention to your "gut" feelings, they will be right more than they are wrong,

    regardless of what you hear or are told.

    Ego.

    Would you rather be happy or right? Uncontrolled egos have destroyed more enterprises than any other single ingredient. It takes a certain amount of ego to be successful when running a business, regardless of its size, but too much will earn people's wrath, contempt and scorn. None of these make for a healthy corporate environment. I recommend the following:

    a) does your need for power, fame, control ever get in the way of sound practical business decisions?
    b) are you more concerned with getting vs. giving credit?
    c) are you more interested in being right than the health or success of a project, activity or your organization as a whole?
    d) do you spend more time talking or listening?
    e) do you tend to over power, intimidate or manipulate people toward your opinion, answer or method?

    Management style.

    It is easy to determine; if your overall management style is positive or negative, if it contributes to increased or decreased market share, greater or lesser profits and increasing or decreasing customer base, if it contributes to improved employee performance or increased stress and employee turnover. There are six questions to ask yourself:

    a) is your organization a fun place to work?
    b) do people look forward to coming to work?
    c) do your people love their work?
    d) are people waiting in line to join your organization or do many of your employees have their resumes on the street?
    e) do people trust and respect each other or is mistrust rampant?
    f) do your people take ownership of department and corporate outcomes or do they show

    up, do their job and go home?

    Your answers to these questions will give you a reasonably accurate assessment as to whether you need to modify your management style or if you are on the right track.

    Communication patterns.

    Do your people have to be in the right place at the right time to know what is going on in your organization? Are all your employees kept informed in a timely manner on key corporate decisions that affect them? Is there excessive redundancy anywhere in the organization? Are there mini kingdoms where people have circled the wagons and edit information before it leaves or enters a department? Do you have excess employee turnover? Are stress levels throughout the organization increasing? Is your corporate culture defined by, "you better get it in writing?" These are just a few of the symptoms of poor communication. I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) remove any layers or blocks between employees and/or departments that may be

    preventing "real world" information getting to the people that need it.
    b) bypass your direct reports, and talk with support staff to test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission state

    Medical Business Mailing List
    According to a research every year hospitals and related institutions spend billions of dollars on equipment, supplies, and services. In fact US alone has spent $1.7 billions on total health care in 2003, and topped 15% of the GDP for the first time. About one third of this, which was some $516 billion, was spent directly on hospital care, and another $20 billion on major equipment. Thus a mail list can always help to target the general and special products, to lucrative-specific and niche market.There are various kinds of medical lists such as lists of AMA and AOA Physicians, ADA Dentists, Nurses, Allied Health Professionals, Association Members, and Hospital Personnel by name.The American Medical Association list is the most comprehensive and accurate list of medical practitioners, containing over 600,000 physicians. The AMA assigns a unique number to individuals when the individual enters the medical school. The person uses this unique number throughout the career. The AMA furnishes with all the information regarding specialties, including both members and non-members of AMA.Often the medical list of practitioners furnishes information regarding the specialty of the physician, type of practice, Board certificate, demographic, education, geography, licensure states, and phone numbers.The Nurse's list is compiled from the state license information, which is highly accurate and targeted. The list compiled in such a way that it is possible to select nurses by specialty.The database of a medical hospital list is sorted after considering several different demographics such as, geographic location, service area, size of hospital, type of hospital, other vendors, and service providers, affiliation with care groups, religious institutions, number of beds, type of programs offered at the hospital, budget, and number of floors. The hospital medical list also provides the addresses of admininstrators, reasearchers, and health care professionals who are attached to the hospital.Medical lists are also available for medical related institution like clinics. Research labs, HMOs, and specialty centers. A high quality list compiled from reliable sources will always pr
    hs, weaknesses, and needs. These surveys should be conducted

    confidentially and evaluated by an outside resource.
    c) conduct regular customer audits to evaluate perceptions, needs, trends, attitudes,

    problems and produce usage profiles.
    d) meet regularly with suppliers to determine where the relationship could be improved e) network with other business leaders both in and out of your industry.
    f) become a voracious reader of business and industry publications that directly or

    indirectly impact on your present or future.
    g) bypass your direct reports and regularly meet with support personnel to discover

    prejudices, judgments, problems and opportunities that are being missed.
    h) use your outside resources as information centers to fill in the gaps where your

    prejudices or the prejudices of your employees may be jaded.

    Isolation.

    You can't run your organization successfully from behind your desk or locked in the boardroom. The job of management is to manage not hide. If I have heard it once I have heard it hundreds of times. "We have too many meetings at the upper level of this organization that are generally a waste of time." I concede that meetings are necessary but evaluation, implementation, execution and directed purposeful action takes place on the street, on the shop floor, in the distribution center not in the meeting room. I recommend the following:

    a) start your day with a "walk-about". get to know your people. Be visible and

    interested.
    b) end your day with another "walk-about" for the same reason.
    c) be accessible for people when they need information, decisions, feedback, counsel, to

    vent, share, learn, grow, help with your insight, experience, knowledge and sense of

    history.
    d) have an open door as well as an open mind when people get there.
    e) learn to listen between the lines.
    f) ask lots of questions.
    g) never be too busy to coach an employee who asks for help, advice or guidance.

    Clouded perceptions.

    Perceptions become reality. What is believed to be true regardless of whether it is true or not is acted upon as if it was true. When you make a decision, any decision, or form a judgment with less than a clear vision of what is really true, you are bound to make mistakes. Some mistakes at the top cost organizations very little, while others have put organizations out to pasture. There is only one way to ensure that your perceptions are in line with reality.

    a) create an organizational environment where it is safe to share openly problems, issues

    and concerns without the fear of retribution.
    b) don't edit the information you receive regardless of the source.
    c) remember disagreement doesn't mean disloyalty.
    d) encourage disagreement.
    e) don't criticize, punish or discipline employees for bringing reality to you.
    f) some of your best employees will be the most outspoken. They may be difficult to

    manage but they are worth their weight in gold, if you want to survive.
    g. pay attention to your "gut" feelings, they will be right more than they are wrong,

    regardless of what you hear or are told.

    Ego.

    Would you rather be happy or right? Uncontrolled egos have destroyed more enterprises than any other single ingredient. It takes a certain amount of ego to be successful when running a business, regardless of its size, but too much will earn people's wrath, contempt and scorn. None of these make for a healthy corporate environment. I recommend the following:

    a) does your need for power, fame, control ever get in the way of sound practical business decisions?
    b) are you more concerned with getting vs. giving credit?
    c) are you more interested in being right than the health or success of a project, activity or your organization as a whole?
    d) do you spend more time talking or listening?
    e) do you tend to over power, intimidate or manipulate people toward your opinion, answer or method?

    Management style.

    It is easy to determine; if your overall management style is positive or negative, if it contributes to increased or decreased market share, greater or lesser profits and increasing or decreasing customer base, if it contributes to improved employee performance or increased stress and employee turnover. There are six questions to ask yourself:

    a) is your organization a fun place to work?
    b) do people look forward to coming to work?
    c) do your people love their work?
    d) are people waiting in line to join your organization or do many of your employees have their resumes on the street?
    e) do people trust and respect each other or is mistrust rampant?
    f) do your people take ownership of department and corporate outcomes or do they show

    up, do their job and go home?

    Your answers to these questions will give you a reasonably accurate assessment as to whether you need to modify your management style or if you are on the right track.

    Communication patterns.

    Do your people have to be in the right place at the right time to know what is going on in your organization? Are all your employees kept informed in a timely manner on key corporate decisions that affect them? Is there excessive redundancy anywhere in the organization? Are there mini kingdoms where people have circled the wagons and edit information before it leaves or enters a department? Do you have excess employee turnover? Are stress levels throughout the organization increasing? Is your corporate culture defined by, "you better get it in writing?" These are just a few of the symptoms of poor communication. I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) remove any layers or blocks between employees and/or departments that may be

    preventing "real world" information getting to the people that need it.
    b) bypass your direct reports, and talk with support staff to test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission state

    Elevator Wheelchair Lift - What You Need to Know
    Wouldn’t it be great to have an elevator at home especially if it is very difficult to climb the flight of stairs? This will be very convenient for those who use wheelchairs and the good new is, it exists.The elevator wheelchair lift is a miniature version of the kind often seen in offices and hotels. Though these are not high speed, it can still take on the job of bringing a disable person up or down in the home.There are various models available. There are those that can go up or down and there are those that do this diagonally. The different types also allow the person to exit on the opposite side where one came in, on the side or in the same place.This usually come with a lock and a non-skid surface on the bottom to make sure the wheelchair does not move when it is in operation.The elevator wheelchair lift operates using a gearbox, chain and some weights. This can be hooked up to the fuse box at home and can carry a maximum load of 550 pounds should the person be quite big and heavy.Elevator wheelchair lifts cannot be found in just any store. This is because it takes a specialist to develop, produce and distribute it to a client. Though there are existing models available, many of these are still custom built depending on the size of the home.The homeowner can choose the spot where this will be placed then get the measurements or have a representative from the company to do it. The elevator wheelchair lift is quite big so clients feel better knowing that this will be assembled upon delivery to the home.Most elevator wheelchair lifts are ADA compliant. This means it has undergone rigorous testing to make sure it is safe for people to use.If the person is able to find a company that will make this elevator, it is best to check on the maintenance and warranty of these machines. Some offer a standard check every 6 months or more while others will offer money a back guarantee if the customer is not satisfied after 30 days.People who need this machine should really think if this is very practical for the home. This is because the basic model is almost $10,000 while those who want to add other accessories will cost more.
    difficult to

    manage but they are worth their weight in gold, if you want to survive.
    g. pay attention to your "gut" feelings, they will be right more than they are wrong,

    regardless of what you hear or are told.

    Ego.

    Would you rather be happy or right? Uncontrolled egos have destroyed more enterprises than any other single ingredient. It takes a certain amount of ego to be successful when running a business, regardless of its size, but too much will earn people's wrath, contempt and scorn. None of these make for a healthy corporate environment. I recommend the following:

    a) does your need for power, fame, control ever get in the way of sound practical business decisions?
    b) are you more concerned with getting vs. giving credit?
    c) are you more interested in being right than the health or success of a project, activity or your organization as a whole?
    d) do you spend more time talking or listening?
    e) do you tend to over power, intimidate or manipulate people toward your opinion, answer or method?

    Management style.

    It is easy to determine; if your overall management style is positive or negative, if it contributes to increased or decreased market share, greater or lesser profits and increasing or decreasing customer base, if it contributes to improved employee performance or increased stress and employee turnover. There are six questions to ask yourself:

    a) is your organization a fun place to work?
    b) do people look forward to coming to work?
    c) do your people love their work?
    d) are people waiting in line to join your organization or do many of your employees have their resumes on the street?
    e) do people trust and respect each other or is mistrust rampant?
    f) do your people take ownership of department and corporate outcomes or do they show

    up, do their job and go home?

    Your answers to these questions will give you a reasonably accurate assessment as to whether you need to modify your management style or if you are on the right track.

    Communication patterns.

    Do your people have to be in the right place at the right time to know what is going on in your organization? Are all your employees kept informed in a timely manner on key corporate decisions that affect them? Is there excessive redundancy anywhere in the organization? Are there mini kingdoms where people have circled the wagons and edit information before it leaves or enters a department? Do you have excess employee turnover? Are stress levels throughout the organization increasing? Is your corporate culture defined by, "you better get it in writing?" These are just a few of the symptoms of poor communication. I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) remove any layers or blocks between employees and/or departments that may be

    preventing "real world" information getting to the people that need it.
    b) bypass your direct reports, and talk with support staff to test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission state

    Mint Money in Your Business through Print Media! Business Strategy for Success
    Gold Up! Money Down! Minting gold coins is a slow process; need to be attended very carefully for its quality and quantity standards. Today’s 10 grams of gold coin is worth more in money value tomorrow. It goes up and up daily. But, the value of currency declines when compared with Gold any day after today. Price of silver, copper, steel, metals and other commodities also go up steadily.Faster Business Growth! But, printing currencies is easier than making any metal coins. Please don’t mistake me. I am not going to guide you either to mint gold coin or print currencies illegally. Now, I am going to tell the ways of making money fast through genuine business. It is all about making a faster growth in business through some special techniques. I am telling about bringing multiple fold growth in business through the print media.Print Gold Coins! It is like making gold coins in a printing press. More in value, quick in process! Now you can mint gold with the speed of a modern printing press! In other words, you will earn a big money faster than usual speed. This is by application of sales promotion and marketing techniques with the help of print media.Small and Effective! Let me tell you about the smallest printed materials that enhance the product appeal and bring assured business. You might have seen very small and simple stickers that give ‘value addition’ to the products. A small and round sticker just with two letters (O.K.) brings great confidence in the minds of the buyers.Total Quality control: These give a good assurance about the total quality control being adopted in the production process. They guarantee about the utility value of the product on hand. If you are sure that your final product is of expected quality and endurance, then a small OK sticker will also be okay to produce great sales promotion!Small stickers bring big impact: Some small linear rectangular shaped stickers with small words like, TESTED OK, CHECKED OK, VERIFIED, QUALITY TESTED, 20%Free, 30%EXTRA, QUALITY GUARANTEED, ISI STANDARD, ISO NO: 9003, Agmark, Hallmark, BIS mark, Gold Coin Inside, Silver Coin Inside,
    test the integrity of the messages that are getting through to your organization or department.
    c) ensure that there are no duel or mixed messages that are penetrating the organization.
    d) correct destructive rumors that may be creating incorrect perceptions.
    e) encourage the upward flow of unedited information.
    f) listen and read between the lines of all communication.
    g) listen for the emotion and feeling behind conversations.
    h) weigh truth on truth scales and sincerity on sincerity scales.

    Human resource development.

    The investment you make in your people's skills and attitudes will come back again and again to your bottom line. It may not always be evident directly but it will show up in improved loyalty, morale, ability and overall performance. Training is an investment in a secure future not a cost. There is never a bad time to train and educate people. Training should be on-going and relevant. I recommend the following:

    a) use inside resources for technical and industry training and out-source general skills and attitude training.
    b) off the shelf training programs have limited benefit, consider only custom designed in-house programs when out-sourcing this activity.
    c) training must be regularly reinforced. You can not change behavior for the long haul with a half day public or in-house seminar or video.
    d) prior to developing a training or human resource development program survey the real needs, issues, problems and opportunities that are present with the group that will participate.
    e) have clear focused objectives for any program and develop some form of measurement device no matter how simple or unsophisticated.

    Lack of clear communicated direction.

    Do your people, all of them, know where you are going, and do they care? One of the biggest obstacles to effective employee performance is a lack of awareness as to the direction or mission of the organization. Your mission is your general statement of purpose. What you stand for and believe in. It is your corporate identity. There is a right and need to know when it comes to corporate information. Not every employee needs to understand your financial statement, the details of future growth plans or acquisitions, however, every employee has a need and right to be privy to your general direction, and how they will fit into the new picture.

    I recommend the following ideas for your consideration:

    a) if you have not written a corporate mission statement, I encourage you to do so. When developing it, ensure that it is consistent with who your organization really is not who or what you believe it to be.
    b) once written share it with every employee to ensure both understanding and acceptance.
    c) put your top three goals in writing and see that every employee gets a copy.
    d) constantly re-evaluate to determine if your activities, communication, tasks, objectives and agendas are consistent with your mission statement.

    Poor feedback mechanisms.

    Everyone wants and needs to know if what they are doing is correct and how they are doing it is acceptable. Negative feedback should not be designed to punish, but modify behavior. Feedback both positive and negative can dramatically improve performance and results. I recommend the following:

    a) praise in public and private.
    b) criticize in private.
    c) don't ignore negative behavior. It sends the message that it is acceptable or tolerable.
    d) annual reviews are generally a waste of time. Most are conducted poorly. Besides, if you have behavior that needs changing you don't want to wait a year to correct it. I suggest quarterly informal discussions on: expectations, needs, problems and issues either from the perspective of the supervisor or the employee.
    e) feedback should be immediate and delivered in a manner to ensure understanding,

    acceptance and ownership.
    f) ask your employees to give you a review every time you give them one. If you think you are perfect or they don't know your weaknesses you are living in fantasyland.

    Culture.

    Culture is the personality style of the organization. It is the unwritten rules, rights and rituals that act as a filter through which every decision, project, task, goal and activity must pass. Corporate culture has its stamp on every person, policy and procedure. There can also be department, division and group cultures within the overall corporate culture. The impact of culture on the health, success and longevity of an organization can not be denied. I suggest the following:

    a) conduct an employee culture audit. This can be done either formally or informally. It can be written or verbal. It can be confidential or public.
    b) see if your culture is consistent with your mission statements' premises and philosophy.
    c) is your culture changing? If so how? How fast? In the direction you would like?
    d) remember all culture is top down. It flows down from the senior person in the group, department or organization. You must take full responsibility for it regardless of its nature or description.
    e) if you want to change your culture it will take time, lots of time.

    Well there you have it. Woven in the above concepts are the seeds of improved employee and organization productivity or the seeds of destruction. I challenge you to reflect on these ideas to determine in which areas you, one of your executives or managers or the organization as a whole needs modification or improvement.

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