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Atricle Dump - Managing People for Profit
A Tough Lesson - Customer Service Tips employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design.These customer service tips will save you thousands of dollars and create a lasting bond with your customers. I was thinking recently about one of my worse home based business nightmares and how it turned out to be a very valuable lesson for creating excellent customer service.It started out like a great dream. We just started our toner and ink-jet business and our first business customer was a medical firm of about 20 offices. I had known the purchasing agent for sometime and before long we got the contract to supply these offices with printer products.We were so excited to get the order that we did not question when the purchasing agent placed a huge ord The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and s How To Improve Project Delivery Through Good Business Requirements In the hard-nosed world of managing organisations, people management is often seen as the soft side of management. Whilst considered as positively contributing to performance indicators measuring customer and employee satisfaction, people management is not seen as directly improving the bottom line.Creating good business requirements not only assures that the proposed project will address all of the organization's needs, but it helps to guarantee that the project is delivered on time and on budget.Here are some of the key reasons that improved project delivery can be achieved through good business requirements.· You are more likely to receive approval sooner from all stakeholders regarding the intended purpose of the software. This will accelerate the remaining phases of the project and help to insure that original project deadlines are met.· Risks will be identified and mitigated early on in the project lifecycle. This will reduce or eliminat People management, however, contributes directly to the bottom line. Managers who pay insufficient attention to their processes for people management are missing an opportunity to make a substantial difference to their profits. A ten year study published by Dennis Kravetz in 1996, correlated people management practices with profit performance measures. It revealed that a minimum of one hundred percent improvement in the profit performance measures correlated with high scores of people management practices. The study covered over two hundred organisations, one hundred and fifty of which were Fortune 500 companies and measured five key indicators of profitability and correlated them with companies with high people management practice scores versus low people management practice scores. The detailed results of the key indicators were 16.1% versus 7.4% for sales growth; 18.2% versus 4.4% for profit growth; 6.4% versus 3.3% for profit margin; 16.7% versus 4.7% for growth in earnings per share and 19% versus 8.8% for total returns. In the companies studied, the increase in profits equated to an average of US$67 million. Companies that improved their scores added US$294 million in profits per company, a gain of 60% over three years. Companies which experienced no change added an initial US$78 million, a gain of 16%. For the eight companies which showed a decline in scores there was a reduction in profit by US$16 million, a decline of 3%. The practices which predicted company financial success fell into the categories of management style, company culture and goals, organisation structure, communications practices, quality and customer satisfaction, recognition and reward practices, employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design. The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and se Life as a Private Enterprise erence to their profits.Consider your life as a business enterprise. Overshadowing everything else is a business goal and a strategy to reach that goal. Also there is a business philosophy, the red thread that gives meaning of existence to the enterprise. Now consider your life. You need one or several goals, immaterial and material ones. What is important to you in life? Consider that which you want to achieve, where you want to be and also what kind of people you want to be around. In this way you can find your way to a life which will yield the things in life that have a high value to you.And so we arrive at the business strategy, how to actually reach that goal. In th A ten year study published by Dennis Kravetz in 1996, correlated people management practices with profit performance measures. It revealed that a minimum of one hundred percent improvement in the profit performance measures correlated with high scores of people management practices. The study covered over two hundred organisations, one hundred and fifty of which were Fortune 500 companies and measured five key indicators of profitability and correlated them with companies with high people management practice scores versus low people management practice scores. The detailed results of the key indicators were 16.1% versus 7.4% for sales growth; 18.2% versus 4.4% for profit growth; 6.4% versus 3.3% for profit margin; 16.7% versus 4.7% for growth in earnings per share and 19% versus 8.8% for total returns. In the companies studied, the increase in profits equated to an average of US$67 million. Companies that improved their scores added US$294 million in profits per company, a gain of 60% over three years. Companies which experienced no change added an initial US$78 million, a gain of 16%. For the eight companies which showed a decline in scores there was a reduction in profit by US$16 million, a decline of 3%. The practices which predicted company financial success fell into the categories of management style, company culture and goals, organisation structure, communications practices, quality and customer satisfaction, recognition and reward practices, employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design. The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and s Easy Online Invitation Printing Services ies with high people management practice scores versus low people management practice scores.The innovations made in technology had totally changed the way businesses handle all their printing jobs. The introduction of online printing had totally helped business people handle all their printing projects without the need to leave the comfort of their homes. Thus with online printing business had achieved to attain fast turn around days and easy printing jobs.Invitation printing is among the preferred printing services opted at present. Although it is often implied that invitations can be done through the word of the mouth, people still make use of invitation cards for formality, for their clients or friends not to forget about the affair that will about t The detailed results of the key indicators were 16.1% versus 7.4% for sales growth; 18.2% versus 4.4% for profit growth; 6.4% versus 3.3% for profit margin; 16.7% versus 4.7% for growth in earnings per share and 19% versus 8.8% for total returns. In the companies studied, the increase in profits equated to an average of US$67 million. Companies that improved their scores added US$294 million in profits per company, a gain of 60% over three years. Companies which experienced no change added an initial US$78 million, a gain of 16%. For the eight companies which showed a decline in scores there was a reduction in profit by US$16 million, a decline of 3%. The practices which predicted company financial success fell into the categories of management style, company culture and goals, organisation structure, communications practices, quality and customer satisfaction, recognition and reward practices, employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design. The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and s Does Your Career Change Itch or Burn? s per company, a gain of 60% over three years. Companies which experienced no change added an initial US$78 million, a gain of 16%. For the eight companies which showed a decline in scores there was a reduction in profit by US$16 million, a decline of 3%.Two weeks ago, I received a newsy email from a former client. Dan gave me the scoop on his life and new love, and ended by saying that while work had improved, he was feeling the itch again to go after career change. He would soon give me a call for some personal coaching sessions.I replied nicely to all his news, and on the itch, I said: “Call me when it’s a burn.”Why this tough love response?I meet scores of professionals who are unhappy with their work. In almost seven years, I’ve never seen an individual make a significant shift unless there is a burning desire to change. You must have a clear articulation of the personal gain you see for y The practices which predicted company financial success fell into the categories of management style, company culture and goals, organisation structure, communications practices, quality and customer satisfaction, recognition and reward practices, employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design. The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and s 7 Bits Of Critical Information You Can't Afford NOT To Know About Your Customers employee development practices, section/promotion practices and job design.If you think customer relationship management is just a piece of software, you're dead wrong. Customer relationship management is about understanding your customers. It's about really knowing them as individuals, knowing what they mean to your business, and most of all, knowing what you need to do to keep their business.Ideally, you need a profile for each of your customers. Most customers will gladly give you the information you need especially if there is a small incentive. Offer them a coupon, a special discount, a gift certificate or even movie passes.What do you need to include in the profile? Other than personal information, data you track can b The learning from this study is obviously immense for any organisation seeking to make profit from the sales of products and services. However, it is also pertinent to public and not for profit organisations. For those focused on delivering bottom line results, the implications are that developing the means to improve employee competence and change organisational culture is as important as developing new products and services in the quest for increased profits. For those focused on human resource development, the implications are that their work is as much responsible for driving profitability as are the sales people who sell the products. Unfortunately too many human resource departments treat their role as a cross between a policy think tank and information system administrators. A risk apparent in many organisations is that human resource departments tend to forget the strategic imperative of developing human resources to meet the goals of the organisation whilst they concentrate on the development and implementation of computer systems. An example is when human resource department goals include implementing software, developing intranet sites but exclude or diminish the output of a detailed, well thought through training needs analysis. Training needs analysis should first identify the gap between what exists and what is wanted. Analysis revolves around knowledge skills and behaviour. The analysis should reveal what employees currently know vs. what they need to know, what employees currently do vs. what they need to do and what employees currently believe vs. what they need to believe. In identifying the gap, organisations need to understand what they are trying to achieve with the development of their people. Organisations need to review whether they have problems or are expecting an impending change or can use their strengths to take advantage of opportunities, any of which might be facilitated by training or other human resource development activities. The list of activities will include, but not be limited to, training, coaching, placements in external or sister organisations, cross functional project team membership and career development plans. Usually, the list of activities will be too long for the organisation to implement. Thus, prioritisation of the activities against the company's goals is required. The review process measures the importance of people improving
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