| Member You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Business > Leadership Skills For A Crisis |
|
Member You - Leadership Skills For A Crisis
Today's Best Fire Prevention Tools And Techniques pert?Although knowing how to fight fires and use fire extinguishers is important, the best tool to fight fires is fire prevention. If you can take adequate steps to avoid the dangers of fire and detect the signs early then you are much less likely to be involved in a serious incident.Fire prevention ranges from knowing how to install smoke alarms to dialling emergency services and knowing emergency numbers. It also includes knowing where particular fire hazards are located and how to minimise these hazards so that fires can be prevented.Here is a guide to the best fire prevention tools and techniques to protect your home and your workplace.Smoke Alarms And Smoke DetectorsSmoke alarms (or smoke detectors) are one of the best ways to detect fires early, thereby preventing serious fires from occurring. They are particularly good for fires that might occur at night, which can be silent killers with smoke and deadly gases.Make sure you have smoke detectors If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've How To Reveal Opportunities And Deal With Change TIME. TIME. TIME is the main problem. Or rather, lack of time. Too little time to plan, to decide, to execute the plan.Whenever we throw something away, whether in the garbage can, the compost, or the recycling, it can smell terrible. Rotting organic matter smells especially badly. But it can also become rich compost for fertilizing the garden. The fragrant rose and the stinking garbage are two sides of the same existence. Without one, the other cannot be. Everything becomes a part of the garbage. After six months, the garbage is transformed into a rose. When we speak of impermanence, we understand that everything is in transformation. This becomes that, and that becomes this.Looking deeply, we can contemplate one thing and see everything else in it. We are not disturbed by change when we see the interconnectedness and continuity of all things. It is not that the life of an individual is permanent, but that life itself continues. When we identify ourselves with life and go beyond the boundaries of a separate identity, we shall be able to see the permanence in the impermanent, or the rose in Your usual coping strategies, even your best ones, may not work in a crisis. New strategies for gathering information, judging its usefulness, and deciding on the best option are absolutely necessary. You've probably never faced a situation like this. That's why it's a "CRISIS". Otherwise, it would be a problem or a challenge, but not a crisis. For a problem or a challenge, you have a set of learned behaviors, such as: 1. gather the facts, 2. consider options, 3. choose the best, then 4. act. There is no need to be fast thinking, no time restriction. In a crisis, you need perceptual skills of a different order. You must be quick to look, listen, feel, and smell to gather the pertinent information for survival. In our culture, we've seldom had to do this. Maybe never before. Some practice helps. Once you've gathered the danger information, the exit information, the key pieces of the environmental data, you must quickly choose the best option, one you've never tried before, and then do it. Our habits, our usual mental patterns, probably won't work here. You can't take the elevator, and which stairs, up or down? Maybe the only exits are windows. Do they open? If not, how do you break the glass? What floor are you on? How high up are you? A million questions to answer with your perceptions and only a few moments to find the best answers. How do you prepare for a crisis? Here are some suggestions to lay down some synapses in your memory so if the real thing happens, you will have rehearsed for faster, better decisions. Decision Making in a Life and Death Situation The first mistake you may make is the result of the way the brain processes your perceptions. The brain's first response is, of course, fight or flight or freeze. For all of these responses the brain first activates patterns you've already used. This may evoke the worst possible response. Instead of falling into a habitual pattern, you probably need to become creative. Non-survivors of Hurricane Katrina barricaded their doors and drowned when the first wave hit. The survivors used their doors as rafts to float out. Creative thinking. If you only see one option to the crisis, take a moment to find two more, then select the best. And be creative while thinking up options. Creative thinking, here, simply means to find new uses or solutions for available objects or situations Doesn't searching for three options take time? Yes, but not much. The brain works fast. This simple pause could save your life. Here’s an example of a life-threatening situation in which the best answer is counter-intuitive. If you are caught in a whirlpool, don't fight it. Instead, relax, drift to the bottom of the whirlpool where the centrifugal force is less, then you can swim out of the whirlpool and up to the surface. How do you relax when you seem to be drowning? Ah yes, there's the rub. We'll give you some strategies for this later. When you are panicked, your brain shuts down. Most of your blood goes to your limbs and you will not be creative. A peak performance state with its attendant relaxation could be your magic thinking answer. We present this in Chapter 7. Be sure you've used your eyes, ears, hands (if you are in the dark), and nose to gather as much sensory information as possible, then you’ll be able to quickly summon three options. Only then, should you act. These instructions need some fine-tuning, but that's the general idea of how to use your brain to make the best first move. One more point to keep in mind, as you gather your perceptions, here and now, consider options, and begin to act is; be prepared to change course as any new better options appear. Sheets? If no ladder. Curtains? If no sheets? A window ledge, if neither. A wet towel? Is there time? Hands and knees? Jumping from one roof to another? These are drastic measures, and it's conceivable that finding unorthodox moves could save your life. And your child's life. I remember being in a small hotel in Los Angeles at 2 am when the fire alarm began clanging. I had been dreaming of the seminar I was teaching in Los Angeles and I thought at first it was a school bell. It woke me up. Disoriented, I reached for the telephone and a calm operator told me to find the stairs and exit immediately. First, I looked out the window. No fire truck. I was on the fifth floor. I found my robe and slippers and took time to put these on. This time could have cost me my life. My nightgown was very short and at that moment, there was no smoke, a calm operator, and so my modesty overrode my survival instinct. Stupid. Most of the hotel guests were milling around on the sidewalk and street by the time I joined them. I was so glad I had found my robe. Some of them were dressed in street clothes. Some wore lipstick. Were they courageous or already dressed at this hour? We stood around for almost half an hour while the kitchen fire was doused, then returned to our beds. Once back in bed, I realized my response (I also grabbed my purse) was not the brightest. I made a resolution to change my behavior if a fire alarm woke me up again in this life. I'll be the one in the short nightgown. Are You A Crisis Expert? If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've t Business Grants Can Make You A More Effective Entrepreneur do you break the glass? What floor are you on? How high up are you? A million questions to answer with your perceptions and only a few moments to find the best answers.
How do you prepare for a crisis?The world rotates around money, we all know that. We all want to find affordable ways of starting or improving our businesses, but money always seem to be an issue. So then, why don’t we direct our attention towards business grants? Think about it: we are talking about advantageous financial offers coming from the government – tempting, right? But before you make any decision, you might want to ask yourself: “How do I find the right business grants?” Should I Opt for a Small Business Grant? Few of you know that the loans for small businesses are being offered everywhere.If only are you able in your application, to prove that you’ve a sound management plan and credit worthiness, you can reasonably expect to succeed. So, even if your dream is to found a multilevel company and world-wide known brand, you should give small business grants a chance, especially since it usually is a free finance source that could help you gain financial stability. Why does the government give so Here are some suggestions to lay down some synapses in your memory so if the real thing happens, you will have rehearsed for faster, better decisions. Decision Making in a Life and Death Situation The first mistake you may make is the result of the way the brain processes your perceptions. The brain's first response is, of course, fight or flight or freeze. For all of these responses the brain first activates patterns you've already used. This may evoke the worst possible response. Instead of falling into a habitual pattern, you probably need to become creative. Non-survivors of Hurricane Katrina barricaded their doors and drowned when the first wave hit. The survivors used their doors as rafts to float out. Creative thinking. If you only see one option to the crisis, take a moment to find two more, then select the best. And be creative while thinking up options. Creative thinking, here, simply means to find new uses or solutions for available objects or situations Doesn't searching for three options take time? Yes, but not much. The brain works fast. This simple pause could save your life. Here’s an example of a life-threatening situation in which the best answer is counter-intuitive. If you are caught in a whirlpool, don't fight it. Instead, relax, drift to the bottom of the whirlpool where the centrifugal force is less, then you can swim out of the whirlpool and up to the surface. How do you relax when you seem to be drowning? Ah yes, there's the rub. We'll give you some strategies for this later. When you are panicked, your brain shuts down. Most of your blood goes to your limbs and you will not be creative. A peak performance state with its attendant relaxation could be your magic thinking answer. We present this in Chapter 7. Be sure you've used your eyes, ears, hands (if you are in the dark), and nose to gather as much sensory information as possible, then you’ll be able to quickly summon three options. Only then, should you act. These instructions need some fine-tuning, but that's the general idea of how to use your brain to make the best first move. One more point to keep in mind, as you gather your perceptions, here and now, consider options, and begin to act is; be prepared to change course as any new better options appear. Sheets? If no ladder. Curtains? If no sheets? A window ledge, if neither. A wet towel? Is there time? Hands and knees? Jumping from one roof to another? These are drastic measures, and it's conceivable that finding unorthodox moves could save your life. And your child's life. I remember being in a small hotel in Los Angeles at 2 am when the fire alarm began clanging. I had been dreaming of the seminar I was teaching in Los Angeles and I thought at first it was a school bell. It woke me up. Disoriented, I reached for the telephone and a calm operator told me to find the stairs and exit immediately. First, I looked out the window. No fire truck. I was on the fifth floor. I found my robe and slippers and took time to put these on. This time could have cost me my life. My nightgown was very short and at that moment, there was no smoke, a calm operator, and so my modesty overrode my survival instinct. Stupid. Most of the hotel guests were milling around on the sidewalk and street by the time I joined them. I was so glad I had found my robe. Some of them were dressed in street clothes. Some wore lipstick. Were they courageous or already dressed at this hour? We stood around for almost half an hour while the kitchen fire was doused, then returned to our beds. Once back in bed, I realized my response (I also grabbed my purse) was not the brightest. I made a resolution to change my behavior if a fire alarm woke me up again in this life. I'll be the one in the short nightgown. Are You A Crisis Expert? If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've Part 1 - The Evolution of Business e’s an example of a life-threatening situation in which the best answer is counter-intuitive. If you are caught in a whirlpool, don't fight it. Instead, relax, drift to the bottom of the whirlpool where the centrifugal force is less, then you can swim out of the whirlpool and up to the surface. How do you relax when you seem to be drowning? Ah yes, there's the rub. We'll give you some strategies for this later. When you are panicked, your brain shuts down. Most of your blood goes to your limbs and you will not be creative. A peak performance state with its attendant relaxation could be your magic thinking answer. We present this in Chapter 7.Here today, I am going to share about how Business has evolved.In summary, what you will read today will be on how trade began from the time people start to exchange, to buying and selling. Brick-and-Mortar Business will be the next phase which business will go though and finally, Internet Business.As you all know, business began a long time ago. It all began with the simplest form of buying and selling – Trade.Trade mainly involves 2 or more people and the exchange of something for something. It can be in a form of service, product or money.However, we don’t normally call that “Business”, as it is much too small an activity to consider one yet.When the word “Money” was not born into this World, people had been trading for a long time, exchanging between goods of no fixed value.Goods can be highly valued; it can be low as well, depending on the buyer and seller.Even a pen in those days was regarded as highly valuable.After s Be sure you've used your eyes, ears, hands (if you are in the dark), and nose to gather as much sensory information as possible, then you’ll be able to quickly summon three options. Only then, should you act. These instructions need some fine-tuning, but that's the general idea of how to use your brain to make the best first move. One more point to keep in mind, as you gather your perceptions, here and now, consider options, and begin to act is; be prepared to change course as any new better options appear. Sheets? If no ladder. Curtains? If no sheets? A window ledge, if neither. A wet towel? Is there time? Hands and knees? Jumping from one roof to another? These are drastic measures, and it's conceivable that finding unorthodox moves could save your life. And your child's life. I remember being in a small hotel in Los Angeles at 2 am when the fire alarm began clanging. I had been dreaming of the seminar I was teaching in Los Angeles and I thought at first it was a school bell. It woke me up. Disoriented, I reached for the telephone and a calm operator told me to find the stairs and exit immediately. First, I looked out the window. No fire truck. I was on the fifth floor. I found my robe and slippers and took time to put these on. This time could have cost me my life. My nightgown was very short and at that moment, there was no smoke, a calm operator, and so my modesty overrode my survival instinct. Stupid. Most of the hotel guests were milling around on the sidewalk and street by the time I joined them. I was so glad I had found my robe. Some of them were dressed in street clothes. Some wore lipstick. Were they courageous or already dressed at this hour? We stood around for almost half an hour while the kitchen fire was doused, then returned to our beds. Once back in bed, I realized my response (I also grabbed my purse) was not the brightest. I made a resolution to change my behavior if a fire alarm woke me up again in this life. I'll be the one in the short nightgown. Are You A Crisis Expert? If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've Answer To Relieving Pain In Business es, and it's conceivable that finding unorthodox moves could save your life. And your child's life.The previous Sangaraja, the Supreme Patriarch of the monastic order (of Thailand), once went on a tour of China, where someone offered him a very beautiful teacup. It was unlike anything he'd ever seen. He thought, "Oh! The people here have real faith in me, to offer me this beautiful teacup!" And as soon as the teacup was in his hand, immediately he was suffering. Where should I put it? Where is safe to keep it? He couldn't stop worrying it would break.Before he had that teacup, he was fine. Once he had it, he wanted to show it off to the people back home in Thailand. He put it in his bag and kept telling everyone to watch out that the teacup didn't get broken. "Hey! Careful, please!" Everywhere he was watching out for it. He had nothing but suffering. Before, this suffering didn't exist, but now there was the heaviness of having the teacup.So he boarded his plane back to Thailand. When he arrived he warned the novices, "Be careful! Don't let the teacup break! You l I remember being in a small hotel in Los Angeles at 2 am when the fire alarm began clanging. I had been dreaming of the seminar I was teaching in Los Angeles and I thought at first it was a school bell. It woke me up. Disoriented, I reached for the telephone and a calm operator told me to find the stairs and exit immediately. First, I looked out the window. No fire truck. I was on the fifth floor. I found my robe and slippers and took time to put these on. This time could have cost me my life. My nightgown was very short and at that moment, there was no smoke, a calm operator, and so my modesty overrode my survival instinct. Stupid. Most of the hotel guests were milling around on the sidewalk and street by the time I joined them. I was so glad I had found my robe. Some of them were dressed in street clothes. Some wore lipstick. Were they courageous or already dressed at this hour? We stood around for almost half an hour while the kitchen fire was doused, then returned to our beds. Once back in bed, I realized my response (I also grabbed my purse) was not the brightest. I made a resolution to change my behavior if a fire alarm woke me up again in this life. I'll be the one in the short nightgown. Are You A Crisis Expert? If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've The 'Nuts & Bolts' of understanding Merchant Account Rates on your Payment Processing Provider's pert?WHAT ARE MERCHANT ACCOUNTS?There are four most common Merchant Accounts:• Visa Merchant Account • MasterCard Merchant Account • American Express Merchant Account • Interac (Debit Cards/Bank Debit Cards) Merchant AccountWhen you are setting-up your Payment Process System you will apply for Merchants Accounts on each Card that you would like to be able to allow your Customers/Clients to be able to pay by (if they so desire to do so).You do not have to have Merchant Accounts on all Cards. You can pick and choose which Cards you wish your Payment Processing System to process. You can usually always add additional cards as time goes on.Most Merchants will initially get set-up with, at least, a Debit Merchant Account and usually Visa & MasterCard Merchant Accounts.Once you have been approved for each Card you will be given an individual Merchant number for each Merchant Account that is programmed on your Payment Processing S If you have a job that entails dealing with crises, then you have been taught a certain set of procedures. Since each crisis by its very nature, is somewhat different, you have already discovered that these "set pieces" do not always fit. You must adapt to what is happening. These mental "adjustments" is what this book is about. We are not recommending specific save-your-life techniques. There are several well-researched books on this. See Index. What we are focusing on here, are the optimum thinking skills to allow you to choose the best next move when you are pressed for time. The thinking skills that work best for each unique situation. You have to be inside the unique situation with all your perceptions open and working to figure out the next best step. Since the next step could be your last, there is a certain urgency to this figuring out. Is This Your First Crisis? For those people not accustomed to crises, the urgency itself may be their undoing. Thus this rehearsal guide. You may find some of the mental shenanigans we recommend useful in other areas of your life as well. In teaching corporate America for the last 25 years, I've found that business people often use the same strategy to buy a house, choose a wife, select a pair of blue jeans, and turn down a merger. Almost everyone I've taught could learn more about their decision-making processes to improve their decisions and their lives. Each of us makes a decision with each breath yet we seldom think about how we do this. The role of perception in potentially saving your life will be considered first because that's where your thinking strategies begin. Whether you know this or not, it's true. Then, you will probably find other areas of your life improved by these skills. Refining the quantity and quality of all your perceptions could not only save you from harm but also improve your day to day decisions. All of us delete and distort our perceptions. Here are the ABC’s of improving your ability to perceive the world around you so that you see, hear, feel, and smell data will help you in a crisis. Each of our actions begins with our perceptions. Better decisions and actions depend on better perceptions. These perceptual awareness ideas are arranged in short bursts so that you can review them quickly. The mnemonic is designed to help you remember the ones you need. You might memorize the ones that are new for you, just in case you need them. The ABC mnemonic is s proven strategy to help you with the process of remembering.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Interim Management - Increasingly Part Of The Plan The Chinese Web - What's Out There Businesses for Sale - How to Sell a Business
|