| Atricle Dump |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Business > Overcome Traditions That Delay Improvements |
|
Atricle Dump - Overcome Traditions That Delay Improvements
Collection of Delhi Manufacturers Part - IV s are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned.We were talking about the difference between advertisements through other sources and advertisements with delhi manufacturers. Actually advertisements is advertisements whether it is online or offline. Promotion through T.V and newspaper takes more money then such type of listing which some websites provides. Not at all, in newspaper and T.V there is no surety that every person is watching t.v while the ads is running. Same case go with newspaper. This is not confirm that every person reads classified while reading newspaper. Even many people does not read paper regularly.But in case of online listing user enter the required item in search engine and browse top 10 to 20 sites and this is the rare case. Generally people browse only that sites that contains the item name in the url. Now a days what a user do is start the pc (personal computer) search sites web sites that provides online shopping facility (shopping portals) and place order.This search is not a limited search. Local user searches those web sites which provide the listing of shopping portals or a shopping site. See there is a difference between shopping portals and The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about b Computer Desks For the Professional Work Environment INTRODUCTION TO HOW TRADITION STALLS IMPROVEMENTSEmployees spend almost half of their lives in office. It is like a second home to them. However, the only difference remains in the fact that in maximum part of the working population in UK spends sitting in the office. And it is due to this fact, selecting the right kind of office furniture becomes an integral activity. Not only to provide the employees a good working condition, appropriate office furniture, like computer desks, also lends a touch of professionalism to the ambiance.An employee is a great resource. Not just the aptitude, but this resource also comes with the attitude factor which makes this resource – the ultimate and the best. But at the end of the day, an employee is a human being and it is the primary duty of the employers to take care of their staff and their well being. The right kind of computer desks, adjusted at the right heights, with a support at the back of the chair is a must to keep employees fit and healthy.At the same time we can not discount the importance of space in the office. It is very important to have adequate space in the office for free movement, smooth to and fro and at the same If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It A motorist asks a farmer for a glass of water. The farmer obliges, using a hand pump to draw water from a well. The pump handle turns close to a board, and the farmer curses as he scrapes his knuckles against it. Motorist: Why not move that board? It serves no purpose. Farmer: It's been there since my father's time. If it was good enough for him, it is good enough for me. Aping Human Beings Imagine a cage containing five apes. In the cage, hang a banana on a string over some stairs. Before long, as the story goes, an ape will decide to go up the stairs to grab the banana. As soon as that ape touches the stairs, spray all the apes with icy water. After awhile, another ape will approach the stairs with the same result: All the apes are sprayed with cold water. Do this repeatedly and then just watch when another ape tries to climb the stairs. The other apes will attempt to prevent the ape, even though no cold water is sprayed on them. Next remove one ape from the cage and replace that ape with a new one. The new ape sees the banana and wants to climb the stairs. To its horror, all of the other apes attack. After another thwarted attempt, the new ape knows that if it tries to climb the stairs, it will be assaulted. Now remove another of the original five apes and replace it with a new one. The newcomer goes to the stairs and is attacked. The previous newcomer enthusiastically takes part in the punishment although it has no idea why it was not permitted to climb the stairs. After replacing the third, fourth, and fifth original apes, all the apes that had been sprayed with cold water are gone from the cage. Nevertheless, no ape ever again approaches the stairs. Why not? 'Because that the way it's always been around here.' Sound familiar? TRADITIONAL WAYS TO TOE THE LINE The Pecking-Order Tradition: ' After You, Alphonse ' In most organizations, decisions have to follow a certain pathway. Someone who needs a decision begins the process by asking his or her boss. The boss asks her or his boss. This process continues until someone has the authority and wants to decide. When the decision is finally made, communicating the answer has to follow the same path in reverse down through the organizational pathway. Nothing has changed about this process since the days of feudal kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make progress? Hardly. The Hazing Tradition: Get Down! Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process. The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by Shave Years Off Becoming Successful On The Internet or, all of the other apes attack. After another thwarted attempt, the new ape knows that if it tries to climb the stairs, it will be assaulted. Now remove another of the original five apes and replace it with a new one. The newcomer goes to the stairs and is attacked. The previous newcomer enthusiastically takes part in the punishment although it has no idea why it was not permitted to climb the stairs.Look at all the most successful athletes and business people, they ALL have coaches. So what does that tell you? Well, for one thing, stop being so darn independent!Ever since childhood we were taught in school to NEVER look at another student's test or discuss how to solve a problem. Sure there are times when you worked together when working on fun kid projects in the classroom and singing "Yankee doodle" together, but for the most part they wanted us to think for ourselves.Unfortunately that's not how the real world works if you want to be a success more quickly and easily. To put it simply, you are not the smartest person in the world and you cannot possibly do everything by yourself.You readily accept this fact if you wanted to learn how to play the piano, martial arts, or sports because you know you need a coach. If you don't, and if you are not a prodigy, then you are going to waste years of your life trying to be cheap and doing everything by yourself.Yet when it comes to your success on how to make money on the internet, most people does not make that same connection! No experience mixed with no gui After replacing the third, fourth, and fifth original apes, all the apes that had been sprayed with cold water are gone from the cage. Nevertheless, no ape ever again approaches the stairs. Why not? 'Because that the way it's always been around here.' Sound familiar? TRADITIONAL WAYS TO TOE THE LINE The Pecking-Order Tradition: ' After You, Alphonse ' In most organizations, decisions have to follow a certain pathway. Someone who needs a decision begins the process by asking his or her boss. The boss asks her or his boss. This process continues until someone has the authority and wants to decide. When the decision is finally made, communicating the answer has to follow the same path in reverse down through the organizational pathway. Nothing has changed about this process since the days of feudal kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make progress? Hardly. The Hazing Tradition: Get Down! Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process. The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about b Identity Theft Prevention Tips rocess since the days of feudal kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make progress? Hardly.It is scary to think about just how vulnerable each of us is in regards to identity theft. You may find yourself thinking about it once your wallet or purse has been lost or stolen. Anyone who has it can access your credit cards, PIN numbers, and social security numbers if they are in there. Other methods of getting such information include over the internet, the phone, watching people when they use an ATM, and going through other people’s trash.Protect yourself from Identity TheftMonitor your credit report because fraudulent activities will show up there. Make sure you look into any questionable activities that you find on your credit report. You can get free copies of your credit report from the three major credit reporting agencies - Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Each one has to legally give you one free copy per year.Make sure you keep a list of all your passwords, bank account information, credit card numbers, social security numbers, and other personal information in a very safe place in your home. If your information is lost or stolen you have a quick way of being able to contact the issuers of the fi The Hazing Tradition: Get Down! Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process. The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about b Client Sharing Promotes Profitability the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location.How can the Beauty Profession improve its profitability? One great concept to improve profitability is to implement Client Sharing. Client Sharing will keep growing $$$ in your salon.The Beauty Profession consists of more than 1.7 million beauty and spa professionals in over 360,000 spas and salons across the US. As booth rental and commission shops alike look for ways to make their business more profitable, we turn to the value of good beauty and spa professionals working in your salon every day. Talented people bring business, retain business and most importantly can share business. Share business? What does that mean? Let me explain:If your team of talented beauty and spa professionals develops their clientele, they build relationships. Moms bring in sons and daughters, wives bring in husbands. Hair and color clients decide to have their nails done; facials are gifts from dad to mom on Mother's Day. Dad loves to have a massage once a month from the spa, shouldn't mom have one too? All this creates shared clients. If a client's main stylist leaves, will the client stick around for the other treatments?The key The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about b Earning Extra Income s are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned.Extra income is something that we all need and want but are we willing to work a second job or earn extra income in other ways? Most people like the idea but after working a full time job would find it hard to work evenings as well.More often than not extra income is something that comes in the form of a windfall and is used to pay off outstanding debts or to buy those extra additions to your home you have been longing to buy.With the cost of living increasing everyday you may however find that you have no choice other than to find some form of extra income to keep a roof over your head or to simply get by each day with out spiraling into debt.If you are looking for extra income the best place to start is the internet which will provide you with ideas and tips on how to earn extra income. There are many successful ways to do this including network marketing, affiliate marketing, advertising, writing and many other ways.Of course this will depend on what your skills are and the time you have free to dedicate to the extra work load you will be taking on.People today find it hard to survive on one income and The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Turn the best performer's approach into a simple process that those with no experience can duplicate through automated promptings. ' Make it easy and quick for customers to solve the problems they encounter. Assume customers will behave honestly if that can help speed up and ease problems. They'll reward you with continual word-of-mouth praise and increased loyalty. STALLBUSTERS Identify Your Organization's Traditions and Their Original Purposes Most traditions start with a purpose, but others start by accident. Before changing something, you should find out if the tradition still serves some useful purpose by asking the following questions: ' What traditions does the organization have that slow down or increase the cost of accomplishing important results? ' What benefits do these traditions provide? ' What values were intended to be served by the traditions? ' What problems are created by the traditions? Identify Empowering Traditions You Can Use to Improve Performance Traditions are powerful management tools for reinforcing good habits. People are more willing to abandon their own traditions when they learn that another organization's different traditions have led to high performance. ' What traditions do other organizations have that speed up progress, improve the results, and effectively reduce costs? ' Which of these traditions are consistent with your organization's values? ' How could the traditions be made more consistent with and supportive of your organization's values? ' Which aspects of these traditions are exciting and fun for people in your organization? Establish New or Amended Traditions What aspects of your organization do you want to have operating on automatic pilot for all employees? One of the best examples of automatic response is a tradition at Ritz-Carlton hotels. Whenever an employee notices or is told by a guest about a problem, the employee has the responsibility to fix the problem immediately. That tradition ensures that guests receive quick, courteous solutions while feeling encouraged to bring problems to the staff's attention. Higher guest satisfaction and loyalty usually follow from that tradition. To create or change traditions in your organization, ask the following questions: ' What are the three most useful traditions your organization could have? ' How can the new traditions be established so that everyone will be delighted? ' How can you combine elements of existing traditions with useful elements of these new traditions? ' What has been the best way that your organization has previously launched traditions? Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Requirements For Successful Fundraising For Charity How to Manage Employee Retention The Details Dance: A Simple Three-Step for Event Planners Wanting to get Online Registration Right
|