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Atricle Dump - Power of Pinpointing Accountability
How To Communicate Effectively With Users On A Non-Technical Level inate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss.Inevitably, being a technical support contact, you are going to have to speak to a client, whether it's being the first point of contact and they have called you to report a problem, to get more information about a particular problem, or to let them know an issue has been resolved. Unfortunately, in my experience, most technicians do this the absolute wrong way.What's the wrong way, you ask? Well let me explain. For the purposes of this article, I will define a "user" as someone who has between 0 and 10 hours of total training of a particular product. Whether this means that they went to a nigh “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto beca Time for a New Job? I have always said that if I were to write a book on effective management principles, the first chapter in that book would be about the importance of pinpointing responsibility among an owner’s or a general manager’s reporting units. After all, one of the most popular definitions of management is getting work done through others.Whether working for a company or organization for a year or decades, it is always difficult to decide when to move on to another employer. There are certain signs that any individual can look for around the work place. While may of these seem like common sense, others are more subtle and are just an important, if not more so.Time in the jobConsider how long you have been in the same job with the same title performing the same function. If it is longer than twenty-four months and a new job for the same employer is not pending, then it may be time to look for a new job. Consider changi #1 Management Pitfall: An unwillingness to delegate. Many times the owner or general manager is the most knowledgeable and the most capable person in the company; he or she can perform many tasks better than anyone else. The problem arises when managers decide that they are the only people in an organization who can really perform a task “right.” While this may be true, when managers feel a strong need to be in total control by personally taking charge of the company’s most critical tasks, they have made a very personally limiting decision. Why? Because any single person has just so many hours in a day. So managers who are poor at delegating are limited by their own personal mental and physical stamina. A manager friend of mine recently told me a great story that I believe illustrates this point extremely well. This particular owner had founded his business almost 40 years ago and had designed the company’s first product catalog about 25 years ago. The catalog was highly successful, so he continued to hold on tightly to this task himself. No one else in the organization was as capable at selecting products for the catalog or laying out the product selection. As the business grew, however, the owner became busier and busier with involvement in other critical management functions: Banking relations, negotiating insurance programs, strategic planning, estate planning, acquiring new locations, etc. So the most current catalog was neglected and pretty soon began to look outdated. A key employee who had worked with the owner in implementing previous catalogues came to him and offered to assume responsibility for the project. However, the owner continued to sincerely believe that only he could do this job and do it “right.” But nothing happened. Realizing that she was taking a risk, the subordinate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss. “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto beca Mental Skills in Business: The 7 Key Rules of the Mental Road (Part 1 of 2) an anyone else. The problem arises when managers decide that they are the only people in an organization who can really perform a task “right.”Why is it that in some situations, our personal performance is so good while in others we struggle and cannot seem to get into the groove where we do our best work? Is it because we forget, from one day to the next, the important details of our profession or what it takes to excel? Of course we all know that this is not the reason we sometimes follow up a great personal performance with one that leaves something to be desired. The answer to these questions lies more in the inconsistent application of basic mental skills that underlie our ability to perform – whether the performance is in the boardroom While this may be true, when managers feel a strong need to be in total control by personally taking charge of the company’s most critical tasks, they have made a very personally limiting decision. Why? Because any single person has just so many hours in a day. So managers who are poor at delegating are limited by their own personal mental and physical stamina. A manager friend of mine recently told me a great story that I believe illustrates this point extremely well. This particular owner had founded his business almost 40 years ago and had designed the company’s first product catalog about 25 years ago. The catalog was highly successful, so he continued to hold on tightly to this task himself. No one else in the organization was as capable at selecting products for the catalog or laying out the product selection. As the business grew, however, the owner became busier and busier with involvement in other critical management functions: Banking relations, negotiating insurance programs, strategic planning, estate planning, acquiring new locations, etc. So the most current catalog was neglected and pretty soon began to look outdated. A key employee who had worked with the owner in implementing previous catalogues came to him and offered to assume responsibility for the project. However, the owner continued to sincerely believe that only he could do this job and do it “right.” But nothing happened. Realizing that she was taking a risk, the subordinate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss. “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto beca So You Want To Be a Personal Trainer cently told me a great story that I believe illustrates this point extremely well. This particular owner had founded his business almost 40 years ago and had designed the company’s first product catalog about 25 years ago. The catalog was highly successful, so he continued to hold on tightly to this task himself. No one else in the organization was as capable at selecting products for the catalog or laying out the product selection.So you want to be a personal trainer. Or maybe you just want to be a better personal trainer. Right on, it's a pretty fun job. Not a lot of people get to say that they do their hobby for a living. However, as I'm sure a lot of you all ready know, there are some pretty crappy trainers out there floating around. This can be good or bad. Bad because we must battle these "experts" in the ongoing quest of informing the public with good information and trying to throw out the bad. Good because it means there's a lot of opportunity out there to step up to the plate and make a difference in people's lives and As the business grew, however, the owner became busier and busier with involvement in other critical management functions: Banking relations, negotiating insurance programs, strategic planning, estate planning, acquiring new locations, etc. So the most current catalog was neglected and pretty soon began to look outdated. A key employee who had worked with the owner in implementing previous catalogues came to him and offered to assume responsibility for the project. However, the owner continued to sincerely believe that only he could do this job and do it “right.” But nothing happened. Realizing that she was taking a risk, the subordinate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss. “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto beca The Number One Mistake When Writing a Teacher Cover Letter gement functions: Banking relations, negotiating insurance programs, strategic planning, estate planning, acquiring new locations, etc. So the most current catalog was neglected and pretty soon began to look outdated.How do I make my potential employer understand my desire for the teaching position without coming across as desperate? How do I explain to him all my teaching skills and teaching experience in one cover letter? How do I convince him that I am the teacher for their school?These are just some of the likely questions you will have when starting to draft your first teacher cover letter.It is natural to want to try to squeeze the answers to those questions into a well-written teacher cover letter, but it is also wrong.You see, the fact is, your cover letter is not supposed to get you t A key employee who had worked with the owner in implementing previous catalogues came to him and offered to assume responsibility for the project. However, the owner continued to sincerely believe that only he could do this job and do it “right.” But nothing happened. Realizing that she was taking a risk, the subordinate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss. “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto beca Material Handling Equipment: Efficiency Guaranteed! inate took it upon herself to take a stab at laying out the catalog. Conscientiously working at home, she burned the midnight oil so the project didn’t interfere with her normal duties at work. Finally the project was finished and she presented the rough layout to her boss.With numerous advanced equipments near at hand, work had never seemed so easy! Efficient machinery for carrying out difficult tasks is a must-have for any industry operation. Whether moving material within the yard, loading processing equipment or packing trucks and railcars with processed materials for transport, the goal is efficiency and productivity. All these tasks pertaining to the heavy industries have now been rendered easy with the availability of material handling equipments. These equipments are efficient enough to perform some really heavy jobs expected of them.In order to select th “Wow,” he exclaimed. “What a great job!” The owner finally realized that while the catalog she had designed was not laid out as artfully as perhaps he could have done it himself, the project had gotten done. What duties and tasks are you holding onto because you perform them better than anyone else? Are you assigning responsibilities to your people and holding them accountable for measurable results? So ask yourself: Is the success of your business limited by your own personal physical and mental stamina? There’s just so much that any one person -- no matter how talented -- can do and do well. #2 Management Mistake: Failure to hold your people accountable for measurable results. Have you ever told a manager that the next time you walk into the area of the business he or she is responsible for that you want that area to be neat and organized? Most owners and managers certainly have. Well, how about this question: Have you ever returned to inspect the manager's progress and been disappointed in what you observed? The reason many times is because the owner’s or manager’s idea of C-L-E-A-N is substantially different from that of the subornate. Try this: Prepare an inspection checklist. Describe clearly what your definition of clean is so that the person you’re holding accountable will know in no uncertain terms what is expected of him or her. So often managers are guilty of saying to a subordinate manager: “I want you to reduce expenses out here.” But they never suggest how much or expressing the request in measurable terms. I suggest to my clients that they hold their managers accountable for controlling operating expenses to a specified percentage of sales and pay the manager on his ability to meet this goal. Management mistake #3: Failure to establish minimum conditions of employment. In other words, make sure all employees understand in measurable terms what they have to do -- at a minimum -- to keep their job. Examples: How many new customers and how much sales volume must a salesperson attract to the business in a given period of time? What inventory turnover must the buyer achieve at a minimum? What collection days must the credit manager achieve at a minimum? How much net margin must the general manager achieve at a minimum?
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