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  • Member You - Remove the Speed Bumps to Profitability

    Who's Afraid of Large Companies?
    Whenever a company becomes dominant in its sector, many of its competitors cry foul. In a free economy that company has more than likely reached this position because it has simply outperformed its rivals. Good luck, I say. Although it goes against the grain, I recognise that there would come a point - a point, that is, when dominance turns to monopoly - when the authorities may need to clip the wings of such a successful company. However, this must surely be a last resort. I am convinced that European countries have got this wrong.The bar is too low. The alarms bells ring far too early. There is too much
    routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your experti

    Career Search from Within
    Seeking meaningful and fulfilling work can become a discouraging, confusing and overwhelming journey. Beware spending too much time looking for your answers outside of yourself. Ultimately, coming to know our right livelihood is the inner work of our whole being.In order to nurture our well-being and come to our right livelihood; it is best to frequently pause and halt the busy "doing and thinking" process. Pause, relax and trust. This runs contrary to the belief espoused within the employment industry of "looking for a job is a full-time job." Woe upon those who follow this motto.Follow the Voice o
    Ever travel through a high traffic neighborhood that wants to slow cars down -- so they install these large speed bumps? One of two things happen: You either slow down or you continue on at normal speed and have a terribly rough ride.

    What are the speed bumps in your organization that keep you from comfortably traveling forward to better profits?

    1. Lack of a concise direction

    Without a clearly stated vision and direction from the CEO, people mill around waiting for which direction to head this week. While they are waiting for the marching orders to come down from the mountain, they are profit margin dead weight, no momentum gathers, and the speed bumps result from indecision.

    To provide proper direction, establish a specific plan and stick with three basic pervasive priorities. Spell it out in such clear wording a 12-year-old can understand, and spread the word. Refocus everyone constantly on those basics and be unyielding in that focus. For example, if customer service is key, don’t stop training your newly hired employees in how to treat your customers no matter the short-term economic effects of investing in your staff.

    Be sure your middle management can effectively express and reinforce the CEO’s direction. Randomly walk through the departments and ask the department leaders what is the goal, or purpose, or direction the organization is heading. If they fumble and aren’t sure what to say, you just witnessed a speed bump!

    2. Conflicting agendas

    The complexities of working in today’s world are many and they are only exacerbated by the hidden or conflicting agendas that pervade the workplace. If a manager resents working for a female or younger or less experienced boss and tries to rebuff her or take digs at him in public at every opportunity, that manager is creating a common yet completely disruptive speed bump.

    Study people in your managerial positions. What makes them tick? What do they see is in their way to keep them from achieving their goals? It’s amazing how transparent people can be without realizing it, if we only took the time to watch and listen the actions of our managers. Take the time to witness the internal conflicts between your managers. Then ask yourself, how is this shutting down my progress? How is this impacting those who report to these people?

    Once you’ve gathered your answers and lost a night’s sleep over them, take them one by one and deal with them directly. Have a person that resents working for a female? Call him in and let him know his performance is noticeably suffering from his prejudices and you are counting on him to become more congruent in bringing his agenda in line with the agenda of the organization to be profitable and efficient. In almost every organization they are many of these conflicting agendas. Take them one at a time, address them head on, mincing no words, and them move on to the next one. Speed will increase as the speed bumps decrease.

    3. End of month gamesmanship

    It’s the last week of the month and to meet those sales goals and production targets you pay overtime for extra help to get everything out in time to be counted before the calendar changes. Whew! Great job on saving the numbers for the month. But ... aren’t you going to have to do the same thing the next month and the next and the next? So in a year’s time, how many thousands of overtime dollars have been wasted to meet a paper goal? One organization I’m aware of paid $2,400 at one facility one month for overtime and overnight shipping costs to beat a paperwork goal. It was considered routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your expertis

    What to Look Out for When Buying a Franchise
    An increasingly popular alternative to starting from scratch or buying an existing business is to buy a franchise. A franchise is a business relationship between a franchisor and a franchisee.The franschisee agrees to pay the franchisor a certain sum of money for use of the business name or method of doing business or both, usually in the form of an initial fee and some agreed percentage of sales or similar.The main advantage of starting a business by becoming a franchisee is that you are usually buying a tried and tested method for doing a particular business. Consequently, there should be a greater c
    everyone constantly on those basics and be unyielding in that focus. For example, if customer service is key, don’t stop training your newly hired employees in how to treat your customers no matter the short-term economic effects of investing in your staff.

    Be sure your middle management can effectively express and reinforce the CEO’s direction. Randomly walk through the departments and ask the department leaders what is the goal, or purpose, or direction the organization is heading. If they fumble and aren’t sure what to say, you just witnessed a speed bump!

    2. Conflicting agendas

    The complexities of working in today’s world are many and they are only exacerbated by the hidden or conflicting agendas that pervade the workplace. If a manager resents working for a female or younger or less experienced boss and tries to rebuff her or take digs at him in public at every opportunity, that manager is creating a common yet completely disruptive speed bump.

    Study people in your managerial positions. What makes them tick? What do they see is in their way to keep them from achieving their goals? It’s amazing how transparent people can be without realizing it, if we only took the time to watch and listen the actions of our managers. Take the time to witness the internal conflicts between your managers. Then ask yourself, how is this shutting down my progress? How is this impacting those who report to these people?

    Once you’ve gathered your answers and lost a night’s sleep over them, take them one by one and deal with them directly. Have a person that resents working for a female? Call him in and let him know his performance is noticeably suffering from his prejudices and you are counting on him to become more congruent in bringing his agenda in line with the agenda of the organization to be profitable and efficient. In almost every organization they are many of these conflicting agendas. Take them one at a time, address them head on, mincing no words, and them move on to the next one. Speed will increase as the speed bumps decrease.

    3. End of month gamesmanship

    It’s the last week of the month and to meet those sales goals and production targets you pay overtime for extra help to get everything out in time to be counted before the calendar changes. Whew! Great job on saving the numbers for the month. But ... aren’t you going to have to do the same thing the next month and the next and the next? So in a year’s time, how many thousands of overtime dollars have been wasted to meet a paper goal? One organization I’m aware of paid $2,400 at one facility one month for overtime and overnight shipping costs to beat a paperwork goal. It was considered routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your experti

    Wake Up and Learn Something New
    The US Government has just released last month’s job creation figures. It was the lowest number in two years. This is a revealing and disturbing snapshot of what is actually happening in the real economy, not the one artificially created for the headlines. Our US GNP or Gross National Product, is based upon manufactured durable goods. Unfortunately, the manufacturing economy in the US has not yet recovered from the devastating collapse it saw commence in the spring of 2000. The recent improvements in jobs and growth are substantially confined to the service sector. Manufacturing is what drives the US economy and it
    ty, that manager is creating a common yet completely disruptive speed bump.

    Study people in your managerial positions. What makes them tick? What do they see is in their way to keep them from achieving their goals? It’s amazing how transparent people can be without realizing it, if we only took the time to watch and listen the actions of our managers. Take the time to witness the internal conflicts between your managers. Then ask yourself, how is this shutting down my progress? How is this impacting those who report to these people?

    Once you’ve gathered your answers and lost a night’s sleep over them, take them one by one and deal with them directly. Have a person that resents working for a female? Call him in and let him know his performance is noticeably suffering from his prejudices and you are counting on him to become more congruent in bringing his agenda in line with the agenda of the organization to be profitable and efficient. In almost every organization they are many of these conflicting agendas. Take them one at a time, address them head on, mincing no words, and them move on to the next one. Speed will increase as the speed bumps decrease.

    3. End of month gamesmanship

    It’s the last week of the month and to meet those sales goals and production targets you pay overtime for extra help to get everything out in time to be counted before the calendar changes. Whew! Great job on saving the numbers for the month. But ... aren’t you going to have to do the same thing the next month and the next and the next? So in a year’s time, how many thousands of overtime dollars have been wasted to meet a paper goal? One organization I’m aware of paid $2,400 at one facility one month for overtime and overnight shipping costs to beat a paperwork goal. It was considered routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your experti

    Flexible Working - How Does It Affect You?
    On 6 April 2007, new laws on flexible working were introduced in the UK. Prior to this date, only parents with children under six and disabled children under 18 had the right to apply for flexible working. The Work and Families Act 2006 has extended the rights to carers of adults.The new rights give an estimated 1.4 million more employees the right to request flexible working to care for an adult. The definition of a carer is someone who is or expects to be a carer of an adult who is:• married to or the partner of an employee, • is a near relative of the employee or • lives at the sam
    a of the organization to be profitable and efficient. In almost every organization they are many of these conflicting agendas. Take them one at a time, address them head on, mincing no words, and them move on to the next one. Speed will increase as the speed bumps decrease.

    3. End of month gamesmanship

    It’s the last week of the month and to meet those sales goals and production targets you pay overtime for extra help to get everything out in time to be counted before the calendar changes. Whew! Great job on saving the numbers for the month. But ... aren’t you going to have to do the same thing the next month and the next and the next? So in a year’s time, how many thousands of overtime dollars have been wasted to meet a paper goal? One organization I’m aware of paid $2,400 at one facility one month for overtime and overnight shipping costs to beat a paperwork goal. It was considered routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your experti

    Career Success Through Loving What You Do
    Rumor has it that most people are living lives of quiet desperation, not engaged in work that brings them fulfillment. If that’s true for you, take heart. There is a way for you to love what you do and do what you love.Some people set out working in organizations or committed to jobs only to find they have surprisingly moved away from their original intention. If they moved into their field to “make a difference,” they now push paper and feel far removed from the reasons that led them to this place.Others long ago bought into the belief that it’s nearly impossible to be doing work that brings them joy
    routine, because every month the last week chaos was an accepted practice.

    Is this the best use of company resources? That's $28,800 directly off the profit line -- to serve what purpose? That’s an expensive speed bump, not to mention the stress and wear and tear on the employees running around talking to each other about how clueless management must be to do this every month.

    If this sounds familiar to you, why not take a one-month hit? One month you decide not to waste the overtime money and additional shipping expense, and you explain it as a cost saving measure. That end of month shipment will be the first shipment of the next month, making that next month whole again, thus stopping the cycle of wasting money and effort and over the course of the year the same amount of product will be shipped! Resist the urge to play paperwork games. The speed bump of games brings your expertise into question. Manipulation of paper numbers is a speed bump you need to remove.

    Corporations are often more worried about the speed bumps placed in their way by regulations and competitors; when in fact, a closer focus on the internal speed bump removal will have a greater return on the investment of time and financial resources. By eliminating just these three obstacles, your profits will be easier to obtain and your ride much smoother.

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