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  • Member You - Internal IT Departments are (almost) Dead - Long Live the Service Provider

    UPS vs. USPS
    1) UPS provides $100.00 of FREE insurance on every package. You may purchase additional insurance for higher value items. You pay for ANY insurance at the post office, and the rate STARTS at $1.35.2) UPS services are GUARANTEED! If the package does not arrive on time (unless weather affected the shipment), even on a ground shipment (except from 12/12 through 12/24 of any year due to the volume of air packages that in the system for the Christmas rush), you get a FULL REFUND of your shipping charges, usually within 2 weeks of filing. Try and get a refund from the post office, even for Express Mail.3) UPS packages are trackable. The post office charges you for the "privilege" of tracking your package. There is no need to pay for certified mail and/or return rec
    gs to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when

    At the Carwash; The Customer really is always Right
    You have no doubt heard the saying that the customer is always right. When you are a customer you happy with this position, when you are the owner of a small business, sometimes you see this is like opening Pandora’s box. But for the sake of argument, let me add a caveat to that saying: “The customer is always right, even when they’re wrong and you know it.” After 27 years in the car wash and cleaning industry, I have heard it all. Here are some ways carwashes can mitigate upset customers.Handling ComplaintsWhen you handle a complaint, you need to treat the customer as though they are in the right for expressing their opinion, and since you are taking their money, they have every right to complain. You can handle these complaints by simply listening to what
    Working in an internal IT department has its benefits. If a company has one at all, it is an indication of its revenue, after all IT staff aren't cheap. One could take this a step further and make the assumption that the package is likely to be competitive, relative to the market, and include such things as car allowance, interest free loans and medical cover for you and the family. Sounds pretty good doesn't it(?). What I think is missing though is the client to service provider relationship.

    The IT department is part of the furniture of the organisation, it has a monopoly on IT services within the company. Let's explore this a little. Having an internal monopoly is bad for all parties. Think of the employee, almost without realising it he/she has limited their exposure to technology and the application of it. Of course they have, they are only going to be implementing within this single company which, presumably, only works within a particular market sector, offering particular products. Now I'm not saying that this means people will have experience so narrow that it's worthless, but it will be narrow. What about the business itself then. They can only go to one source for advice and implementation. No option to use the RFI, RFP approach, conduct supplier interviews or perform commercial negotiations. There are no negotiations here, you have a fixed internal rate and that's the end of it.

    When you work for the supplier (particularly a small one), chargeable utilisation is paramount and measured constantly. Apply this with rates and you know exactly what's going on in the bank account. Senior staff don't all have their own PA's, fixed overheads are minimised down to flowers in reception and coffee beans for the techies. If utilisation or rate decreases, there is cash burn. Eventually heads need to roll, literally out of the door, so that the company can survive.

    If that isn't motivation for folk to deliver projects on time, to budget I don't know what is.

    Furthermore, this is fairly good motivation to establish a good working relationship with your clients so that [a] there is repeat business and [b] you've got references and the potential for case studies. So where does all of this sit when you're an internal IT department? It doesn't. So what, I hear you say - none of this affects me in my cosy cubicle in my centralised office for my Big Brand company. Well, be careful...you might be wrong.

    Think of this, your company can afford you and you're not cheap. You want a car, a bonus, a travel allowance, medical benefits, 30 days holiday, 2 weeks a year training, you want to get paid even when you're not working because you're "sick" - you are expensive.

    Stating the obvious now, this means that your employer ahs money, money to spend on IT. The question is, do you now what this means...? OK, I'll let you in on a secret. It means that other people would like that money. They would like to earn the money that currently gets paid to you. The rest is simple. You see what happens is that someone forms a company to provide IT services. These services include your exact job, the exact job description. But there's are some differences, ones that are pretty hard for you to compete with;

    1. They'll be cheaper

    Your skills are generic IT skills, they are not location specific. So, let's go somewhere in the world where labour is cheaper and source your skills.

    2. They will only charge for work that they do You cost money every day, regardless of whether you actually do anything productive or not.

    3. They will offer guarantees. No delivery, no pay - simple as that You don't offer any. If is doesn't work, you'll carry on clocking up time until it does.

    4. They will offer fixed price projects. You specify, they deliver, you pay. You won't do this, many can't do this. It's too much pressure for many.

    So there's just four reasons why your job is on the line. I know you're probably thinking that your IT department is so huge, it couldn't possibly undergo such a massive transformation. Be careful jumping to conclusions. For many companies what you are thinking is true - at the moment. But it only takes one early adopter to be the first domino and the rest will either fall into line or fall out of business.

    Consider this. A retail bank, millions of customers, hundreds working in IT. If a proportion, let's say only half, where replaced by a service provider millions could be saved. If the bank passed on these savings to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when

    Summer Jobs for College Students - Read These Guidelines Before You Take a Summer Job
    I've been out of school for a few years. Since I graduated, I've learned all sorts of things I wish I knew while I was in school. I want to give you a set of guidelines for summer jobs, so you get paid what you're worth (and not worked to the bone for some unappreciative jerk of a boss.)1. Do not settle for anything less than $15-$30 an hour. Paid by the hour.Frankly, I'm disgusted with the low-wages some college students are willing to work for in the summer. When I met my girlfriend, she was folding clothes for Jasmine Sola for $8.50 an hour! And she didn't even have an option for commission (although I strongly caution against taking commission-based summer jobs anyway...)In fact, while we're on the subject - I know plenty of college students
    t the business itself then. They can only go to one source for advice and implementation. No option to use the RFI, RFP approach, conduct supplier interviews or perform commercial negotiations. There are no negotiations here, you have a fixed internal rate and that's the end of it.

    When you work for the supplier (particularly a small one), chargeable utilisation is paramount and measured constantly. Apply this with rates and you know exactly what's going on in the bank account. Senior staff don't all have their own PA's, fixed overheads are minimised down to flowers in reception and coffee beans for the techies. If utilisation or rate decreases, there is cash burn. Eventually heads need to roll, literally out of the door, so that the company can survive.

    If that isn't motivation for folk to deliver projects on time, to budget I don't know what is.

    Furthermore, this is fairly good motivation to establish a good working relationship with your clients so that [a] there is repeat business and [b] you've got references and the potential for case studies. So where does all of this sit when you're an internal IT department? It doesn't. So what, I hear you say - none of this affects me in my cosy cubicle in my centralised office for my Big Brand company. Well, be careful...you might be wrong.

    Think of this, your company can afford you and you're not cheap. You want a car, a bonus, a travel allowance, medical benefits, 30 days holiday, 2 weeks a year training, you want to get paid even when you're not working because you're "sick" - you are expensive.

    Stating the obvious now, this means that your employer ahs money, money to spend on IT. The question is, do you now what this means...? OK, I'll let you in on a secret. It means that other people would like that money. They would like to earn the money that currently gets paid to you. The rest is simple. You see what happens is that someone forms a company to provide IT services. These services include your exact job, the exact job description. But there's are some differences, ones that are pretty hard for you to compete with;

    1. They'll be cheaper

    Your skills are generic IT skills, they are not location specific. So, let's go somewhere in the world where labour is cheaper and source your skills.

    2. They will only charge for work that they do You cost money every day, regardless of whether you actually do anything productive or not.

    3. They will offer guarantees. No delivery, no pay - simple as that You don't offer any. If is doesn't work, you'll carry on clocking up time until it does.

    4. They will offer fixed price projects. You specify, they deliver, you pay. You won't do this, many can't do this. It's too much pressure for many.

    So there's just four reasons why your job is on the line. I know you're probably thinking that your IT department is so huge, it couldn't possibly undergo such a massive transformation. Be careful jumping to conclusions. For many companies what you are thinking is true - at the moment. But it only takes one early adopter to be the first domino and the rest will either fall into line or fall out of business.

    Consider this. A retail bank, millions of customers, hundreds working in IT. If a proportion, let's say only half, where replaced by a service provider millions could be saved. If the bank passed on these savings to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when

    Direct Mail - Don't Forget The Envelope
    This article is geared more towards small and medium enterprises requiring runs of 100,000 pieces or less. The same advice applies to larger runs too but it's not quite as big an issue. On the larger runs, the high setup costs I mention below are more easily absorbed into the entire sots of the job and may only contribute 10-20% to the job cost. On smaller runs, tooling and setup costs can easily make up over 50% of the cost of envelope production.Having worked in the direct mail industry for a number of years, I've seen many mistakes made, some avoidable, some not so. I can honestly say that one of the most frequent and most avoidable errors I've seen made is not applying any thought to the envelope until the last minute. A little forward planning in this respect c
    IT department? It doesn't. So what, I hear you say - none of this affects me in my cosy cubicle in my centralised office for my Big Brand company. Well, be careful...you might be wrong.

    Think of this, your company can afford you and you're not cheap. You want a car, a bonus, a travel allowance, medical benefits, 30 days holiday, 2 weeks a year training, you want to get paid even when you're not working because you're "sick" - you are expensive.

    Stating the obvious now, this means that your employer ahs money, money to spend on IT. The question is, do you now what this means...? OK, I'll let you in on a secret. It means that other people would like that money. They would like to earn the money that currently gets paid to you. The rest is simple. You see what happens is that someone forms a company to provide IT services. These services include your exact job, the exact job description. But there's are some differences, ones that are pretty hard for you to compete with;

    1. They'll be cheaper

    Your skills are generic IT skills, they are not location specific. So, let's go somewhere in the world where labour is cheaper and source your skills.

    2. They will only charge for work that they do You cost money every day, regardless of whether you actually do anything productive or not.

    3. They will offer guarantees. No delivery, no pay - simple as that You don't offer any. If is doesn't work, you'll carry on clocking up time until it does.

    4. They will offer fixed price projects. You specify, they deliver, you pay. You won't do this, many can't do this. It's too much pressure for many.

    So there's just four reasons why your job is on the line. I know you're probably thinking that your IT department is so huge, it couldn't possibly undergo such a massive transformation. Be careful jumping to conclusions. For many companies what you are thinking is true - at the moment. But it only takes one early adopter to be the first domino and the rest will either fall into line or fall out of business.

    Consider this. A retail bank, millions of customers, hundreds working in IT. If a proportion, let's say only half, where replaced by a service provider millions could be saved. If the bank passed on these savings to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when

    A Guide to LLCs
    A limited liability company or LLC provides the owners with limited liability. This implies that if the business owes money or faces a court case for some cause, only the assets of the business are at risk and not the personal possessions of the owners.LLCs do not have reservations on who can be a member. They have better flexibility pertaining to the distribution of rights, profits and assets, in comparison to corporations. The LLC is not subject to the same corporate rules and regulations that are essential in case of a corporation. On the other hand, LLCs are expected to maintain appropriate LLC records and bookkeeping. LLCs are also required to maintain the minutes of the board's meetings.The existence of LLCs begins by filing of Articles of Organization
    labour is cheaper and source your skills.

    2. They will only charge for work that they do You cost money every day, regardless of whether you actually do anything productive or not.

    3. They will offer guarantees. No delivery, no pay - simple as that You don't offer any. If is doesn't work, you'll carry on clocking up time until it does.

    4. They will offer fixed price projects. You specify, they deliver, you pay. You won't do this, many can't do this. It's too much pressure for many.

    So there's just four reasons why your job is on the line. I know you're probably thinking that your IT department is so huge, it couldn't possibly undergo such a massive transformation. Be careful jumping to conclusions. For many companies what you are thinking is true - at the moment. But it only takes one early adopter to be the first domino and the rest will either fall into line or fall out of business.

    Consider this. A retail bank, millions of customers, hundreds working in IT. If a proportion, let's say only half, where replaced by a service provider millions could be saved. If the bank passed on these savings to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when

    Is Being Attractive a Career Asset or Liability?
    I don’t recall exactly how many girls turned me down when I asked them to the senior prom, but there were a few. Even though that was 25 years ago, I still remember how much I wished I was one of “the beautiful people”. Today, I’m glad I wasn’t. When I finally made it to the major leagues of my industry, two things immediately struck me.The first was how accepting everyone was. People were amazingly supportive and oddly non-competitive. I later realized this came from their sense of security and accomplishment, since successful people don’t feel threatened by others who succeed. The second thing was that most of the powerful and famous people I met looked like ordinary average individuals, even though some of them get more for a one hour speech than many people pay
    gs to the customers by way of an interest rate rise, what's going to happen? Exactly, customers are going to flock over to the bank. What happens next? Well the customers haven't just been magic'd from thin air, they are someone else's ex-customers so now they need to react. Here's where they decide whether to fall in line or fall over.

    So now that you know all of this you need to decide whether you are doing the right thing now to secure your future. What makes you different to the many thousands of other people around the globe that hold the same job title as you? Still feeling cosy?

    My final thoughts on this are that there is going to be a complete reversal in the way the experience on our resumes is judged. In the past, and to a degree in the present, you can "get a foot in the door" of Bank A if you've worked in Bank B. But remember, IT departments are dying so when you step out of Bank A you'll need to go over to the "light side", the services side. All of a sudden you are in a far more commercial environment. Over on this side, people take risks, people make guarantees, people lose their jobs. So when you say, with an air of confidence, "I have X years experience as the manager of this that and the other for Bank A", expect to be hear in response, "I'm sorry to hear that, what part of this experience makes you think you're suitable working in our commercial organisation"?

    Good luck out there. Take the initiative now, the light side beckons. A moment paused is a moment wasted. Look to your creative side, find people to collaborate with, seek clients globally and build your company. If you don't like this idea, find some who has already done this and work for them!

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