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    Fuel Saver Scammer Finally Caught
    If you are one of those people that got involved in the Ecoenergizer Fuel Saver Scam then I have good news for you. Finally after months of looking for this shyster, R.M was caught and arrested. His other scams include Free Coral Calcium, Million Dollar Treasure, Global Free Biz, Global Free Fuel, Luke 638 and many others.There were lots of investors and founders who after being scammed lost thousands of dollars joining these different companies that he started up. He has been pulling the wool over people eyes for over 20 years and it has finally caught up with him. On Thursday 3rd there was a special report on theses scams by Fox Atlanta TV 5’s TV team and if your are interested in watching that it can be viewed here www.whsv.comIf you were in one of his fuel saver scams then Cobb County Georgia would like to hear from you as soon as possible. He has been getting away with these scams since 2003 and the statute of limitations for fraud in Georgia is only 4 years, so for some of you time is running out. If you would like to file a complaint you may contact the Cobb County Sheriff’s Dept in Georgian , Lt Mike Reece 770-499-4658 or Sgt Ken Davis 770-499-4659 or you may email them at ken.davis@cobbcounty.org for more information.He is presently incarcera
    ree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected

    Career Advice: How To Make Gossip Work For You
    That headline deserves an explanation, or else you'll think I've taken leave of my senses...or least that I am an off-the-wall contrarian.Okay, in a perfect world gossipers wouldn't exist, but we all know the world has its imperfections a plenty. Gossip and gossipers are here to stay. Deal with it.A survey by a research firm known as ISR showed that 63% of U. S. employees get all or most of their information about their companies from "water-cooler talk".The fact is that every place of employment functions with two channels of communications. One is the official channel. The second is known by various names: gossip, rumors and grapevine.The official channel is where your employer's version of the goals and procedures of the organization, the rules of the road, if you will, are laid out. The gossip mill is where you hear what your peers think of these plans, along with their assessment of them and those who sent them forth. The rumor mill provides more, ranging from malicious and personal attacks, to harmless chatter about who is flirting with whom, and what's on sale at the local mall.Separate The Wheat From The ChaffI don't mean to be cynical, but the conclusion is obvious. Gossip will exist whether you participate or not, and it
    More than ever before, 2007 will demand of most companies the ability to achieve measurable results that are specific to profitability, growth, cost containment and operational effectiveness. Of course, none of this will be possible without leadership and organizational change.

    This challenge will become a common theme in 2007 that will go uncompromised by the potential market gymnastics that we are likely to face. Without a doubt, success in 2007 will be directly dependent upon both individual and team performance. More importantly however, is the driving force that creates both individual and team effectiveness. That driving force is leadership at every level in the organization. It doesn’t matter what your position is or what your title is. Leadership does not restrict itself to the caste system of power positions we have come to know. Leadership can and must be demonstrated throughout the organization. In my years of experience in wholesale distribution I have met effective leaders at all levels in a company including employees that simply drove a forklift to inside sales people and of course at the CEO level. That withstanding, I have also seen a lack of leadership at every one of those levels I mentioned.

    Are You Prepared?

    You need to ask the following questions as you contemplate the future direction of your company:

    • Are your employees doing the right things – for the right reasons?

    • Are their actions in alignment with the strategy?

    • Do you have a strategic plan?

    • Are you doing the right things?

    • Are you functioning like a well-oiled machine?

    • Do you have a shared end game – or does it just belong to you?

    • Do you have a focused employee development plan?

    Leaders lead, they are winners. Challenges faced in 2007 will still be subservient to real solutions developed by real leaders. But, it won’t be about theory; it will be about planning and execution. There is no doubt that the New Year will be about change. That’s a good thing. Change shouldn’t be something that happens to you. Effective leaders know this. Effective leaders create change, instigate change and manage change to their advantage to create success.

    Not a Spin Zone

    That sounds like a bunch of academic tripe and it would be if it stood by itself but I won’t let it. You see, leadership can only be effective if you build a culture engrained with continuous improvement. Change without process, structure and control in itself can turn into uncontrolled chaos. Effective leaders understand this and indoctrinate change as a living breathing organism and process that needs to be embraced by everyone in a positive sense because it is controlled and managed according to your own strategic initiatives. Continuous improvement is a hand on endeavor that requires an investment of time, resources, education and training. It simply isn’t a slogan like “Kaizen” or “Do It Right & Do It Right The First Time”. All that sounds good but it doesn’t mean anything if we don’t have the horses to win. It doesn’t mean anything if you haven’t built a roadmap to get from here to where you want to go.

    Principles of Effective Change Creation

    As a leader you must implement change to create continuous improvement. It’s a hand on process. You can’t lead from afar. A former colleague of mine used to always say; “It’s easy to be brave from a distance.” Arguably that may be one of the truest statements made when it comes to the instigation of change. Change is hard work. It requires process tools that are sensitive to your organizational culture. Consider these principles for managing change:

    • Employees throughout your organization generally have the talent and the ability to be successful at meeting new challenges to growth and profitability.

    • Employees understand change that is essential to achieve goals if those goals are clearly stated.

    • Employees gain increased respect for leaders that become the architects of change. This is especially true if the leader encourages and solicits input from the employees.

    • Leaders must systematically manage the change they create with fearless abandon demonstrating a purposeful and disciplined approach that engages the entire organization through active participation in the success process.

    • Employee ownership of change, the vision – end game and the strategic initiatives is one ingredient that is absolutely essential to success.

    Change Can Take on Many Forms

    MACHIAVELLI wrote in the forward to “The Prince”;

    “There is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all those who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit by the new order, this luke warmness arising partly from fear of their adversaries, who have the laws in their favor, and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly believe in anything new until they have actual experience of it.”

    Organizations change for many reasons. Change can be the result of a crisis like war, a natural disaster or government intervention. Innovation, technology and external market forces can create change. More importantly, change can be driven by the desire to succeed utilizing performance gap analysis, organizational assessment and the plain old motive of profit being the driving force that instigates man to create change.

    Effective leaders know that creating and managing change starts with the human side of the equation. Behavioral change becomes a necessity for almost every success initiative employed. This often means more effective coaching, training, skill development, and accountability. Process improvement is often a platform that supports change in the organization. And last but not least, change becomes a meaningful part of organizational structure and culture. This often requires a realignment of reporting relationships and responsibilities. From an organizational culture perspective, change may demand adjustments to some managerial styles, values and even belief systems to some degree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected

    How To Select Newspapers That Will Yield The Best Results
    Now that you have created an ad for your website, a page to collect subscribers and a system for following up with your potential customers, you have a system that will automatically collect, contact and follow up with your leads.All you have to do now is send people to your signup page and the rest will take care of itself. In order to start up your lead cycle you will need to place your first ad.In this article we are going to cover a tool you can use to effectively find, analyze and place classified ads in newspapers all over the country.The first thing you need to know is that you should stick to placing ads in places with a population of over 200,000. This is to make sure that you can get a decent amount of actions to your advertisement because some newspapers serve a population of 20,000 and chances are the profits from an ad there (if any) will be very small.The first thing you need to do is decide on a city. There isn’t any precise science to choosing a city other than making sure that it has over 200,000 people. You will also want to look at the newspaper online to make sure that it isn’t a primarily agricultural publication since that probably isn’t the demographic you want to hit.So choose a city and then you want to go to
    ight things?

    • Are you functioning like a well-oiled machine?

    • Do you have a shared end game – or does it just belong to you?

    • Do you have a focused employee development plan?

    Leaders lead, they are winners. Challenges faced in 2007 will still be subservient to real solutions developed by real leaders. But, it won’t be about theory; it will be about planning and execution. There is no doubt that the New Year will be about change. That’s a good thing. Change shouldn’t be something that happens to you. Effective leaders know this. Effective leaders create change, instigate change and manage change to their advantage to create success.

    Not a Spin Zone

    That sounds like a bunch of academic tripe and it would be if it stood by itself but I won’t let it. You see, leadership can only be effective if you build a culture engrained with continuous improvement. Change without process, structure and control in itself can turn into uncontrolled chaos. Effective leaders understand this and indoctrinate change as a living breathing organism and process that needs to be embraced by everyone in a positive sense because it is controlled and managed according to your own strategic initiatives. Continuous improvement is a hand on endeavor that requires an investment of time, resources, education and training. It simply isn’t a slogan like “Kaizen” or “Do It Right & Do It Right The First Time”. All that sounds good but it doesn’t mean anything if we don’t have the horses to win. It doesn’t mean anything if you haven’t built a roadmap to get from here to where you want to go.

    Principles of Effective Change Creation

    As a leader you must implement change to create continuous improvement. It’s a hand on process. You can’t lead from afar. A former colleague of mine used to always say; “It’s easy to be brave from a distance.” Arguably that may be one of the truest statements made when it comes to the instigation of change. Change is hard work. It requires process tools that are sensitive to your organizational culture. Consider these principles for managing change:

    • Employees throughout your organization generally have the talent and the ability to be successful at meeting new challenges to growth and profitability.

    • Employees understand change that is essential to achieve goals if those goals are clearly stated.

    • Employees gain increased respect for leaders that become the architects of change. This is especially true if the leader encourages and solicits input from the employees.

    • Leaders must systematically manage the change they create with fearless abandon demonstrating a purposeful and disciplined approach that engages the entire organization through active participation in the success process.

    • Employee ownership of change, the vision – end game and the strategic initiatives is one ingredient that is absolutely essential to success.

    Change Can Take on Many Forms

    MACHIAVELLI wrote in the forward to “The Prince”;

    “There is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all those who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit by the new order, this luke warmness arising partly from fear of their adversaries, who have the laws in their favor, and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly believe in anything new until they have actual experience of it.”

    Organizations change for many reasons. Change can be the result of a crisis like war, a natural disaster or government intervention. Innovation, technology and external market forces can create change. More importantly, change can be driven by the desire to succeed utilizing performance gap analysis, organizational assessment and the plain old motive of profit being the driving force that instigates man to create change.

    Effective leaders know that creating and managing change starts with the human side of the equation. Behavioral change becomes a necessity for almost every success initiative employed. This often means more effective coaching, training, skill development, and accountability. Process improvement is often a platform that supports change in the organization. And last but not least, change becomes a meaningful part of organizational structure and culture. This often requires a realignment of reporting relationships and responsibilities. From an organizational culture perspective, change may demand adjustments to some managerial styles, values and even belief systems to some degree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected

    Restaurant Management In Focus
    Restaurant management has many areas of concern especially if it’s a newly opened establishment being run by a novice restaurant manager/owner. There can be a lot of challenges to face, realizations to know and bills to pay but any person whose passion to be successful in restaurant management will get to their goals later on. Of course there will be shortcomings and endless issues with partners, food providers, employees and customers but a serious restaurant owner has to handle all these to get to a more stable business.Another fact about restaurant management is that the trends of handling and rendering service to customers changes in time. One must prepare for a great deal of changes after two, three, four and so on years. It is important to continue moving forward with any changes that may be issued both by the government and society. It is inevitable to adapt to new things because it’s also one way of growing up and maturing, the same with people. After all, a person can never claim he has lived the life to the fullest unless he has done all sorts of things and experienced failures in the past. The same principle goes with restaurant management.A restaurant in operation has to agree with many laws issued and there are also numerous potential dangers th
    lt a roadmap to get from here to where you want to go.

    Principles of Effective Change Creation

    As a leader you must implement change to create continuous improvement. It’s a hand on process. You can’t lead from afar. A former colleague of mine used to always say; “It’s easy to be brave from a distance.” Arguably that may be one of the truest statements made when it comes to the instigation of change. Change is hard work. It requires process tools that are sensitive to your organizational culture. Consider these principles for managing change:

    • Employees throughout your organization generally have the talent and the ability to be successful at meeting new challenges to growth and profitability.

    • Employees understand change that is essential to achieve goals if those goals are clearly stated.

    • Employees gain increased respect for leaders that become the architects of change. This is especially true if the leader encourages and solicits input from the employees.

    • Leaders must systematically manage the change they create with fearless abandon demonstrating a purposeful and disciplined approach that engages the entire organization through active participation in the success process.

    • Employee ownership of change, the vision – end game and the strategic initiatives is one ingredient that is absolutely essential to success.

    Change Can Take on Many Forms

    MACHIAVELLI wrote in the forward to “The Prince”;

    “There is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor more doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all those who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit by the new order, this luke warmness arising partly from fear of their adversaries, who have the laws in their favor, and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly believe in anything new until they have actual experience of it.”

    Organizations change for many reasons. Change can be the result of a crisis like war, a natural disaster or government intervention. Innovation, technology and external market forces can create change. More importantly, change can be driven by the desire to succeed utilizing performance gap analysis, organizational assessment and the plain old motive of profit being the driving force that instigates man to create change.

    Effective leaders know that creating and managing change starts with the human side of the equation. Behavioral change becomes a necessity for almost every success initiative employed. This often means more effective coaching, training, skill development, and accountability. Process improvement is often a platform that supports change in the organization. And last but not least, change becomes a meaningful part of organizational structure and culture. This often requires a realignment of reporting relationships and responsibilities. From an organizational culture perspective, change may demand adjustments to some managerial styles, values and even belief systems to some degree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected

    What Does a Good Courier Delivery Messenger Service Do?
    When you have a courier delivery messenger service, you have to work hard at building a good reputation that you can make your business grow and be successful. Having a good range of clients and references will make your job easier and better for you in the future. You can expect to make your courier delivery messenger service grow when you have happy and satisfied customers for you to pass the word about your company.When a good courier delivery messenger service gets their name out, they will find that they can have a lot of good business. They will get more attention from other companies and find that they will start to expand and make more profits. It does however; take a lot to make a great courier delivery messenger service from the beginning. You have to be ready to make sacrifices and start from scratch before you are off and running.Having good and dependable employees for a courier delivery messenger service is a must have. You have to make sure that you screen all the potential employees to make sure that they have a good background and that they are capable of making your company looks good. They have to have a valid drivers license and make sure that they do not have a criminal history that could affect their job duties. This is an impor
    nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all those who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit by the new order, this luke warmness arising partly from fear of their adversaries, who have the laws in their favor, and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not truly believe in anything new until they have actual experience of it.”

    Organizations change for many reasons. Change can be the result of a crisis like war, a natural disaster or government intervention. Innovation, technology and external market forces can create change. More importantly, change can be driven by the desire to succeed utilizing performance gap analysis, organizational assessment and the plain old motive of profit being the driving force that instigates man to create change.

    Effective leaders know that creating and managing change starts with the human side of the equation. Behavioral change becomes a necessity for almost every success initiative employed. This often means more effective coaching, training, skill development, and accountability. Process improvement is often a platform that supports change in the organization. And last but not least, change becomes a meaningful part of organizational structure and culture. This often requires a realignment of reporting relationships and responsibilities. From an organizational culture perspective, change may demand adjustments to some managerial styles, values and even belief systems to some degree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected

    Less Clutter- More Clients
    Every business wants to look good for their clients. Whether this means maintaining a shop to high standards or keeping a customer-friendly office, businesses want to ensure that their clients feel welcome and that they're exposed to the best possible aspects of the company. However, there's much more to keeping a work environment looking good than mere presentation: efficiency of work also holds a large stake in the matter.There are countless aspects to any business environment, ranging from the actual building where a business is based to specialised departments such as IT and administration. However, with all the strategic and developmental processes within a company, it can be difficult to organize operational aspects such as maintenance. For this reason, many companies often rely on efficient, effective and specialized means of support. Cleaning services, for example, are a vital investment for any business; after all, there's nothing like clutter to get in the way of running a business efficiently.But cleaning services do much more than simply clear away clutter: they organize offices and factories, manage and maintain facilities and even oversee the upkeep and cleanliness of valuable IT equipment. So while you're focusing on pushing your business forw
    ree. This is often the most challenging aspect of managing change. The leader may find himself facing the old clich? – “If you can’t change the manager --- change the manager.”

    The organizational culture itself must embody a commitment for taking ownership of the strategic vision – end game and raising the performance expectations is a matter of fact and not chance.

    Eight Reasons Why Change Efforts Fail

    There are eight basic reasons change efforts can fail. Understanding these reasons and avoiding the causes will improve your chances of effectively creating and managing change.

    1. Not establishing a great enough sense of urgency ---- Many executives tell me that they don’t feel the sense of urgency they’d like to see in their employees. If you are going to be effective at creating and managing change, every employee has to be excited enough about the potential results that a real sense of urgency is created. This starts with communicating in vivid detail the reason for change, the results of the expected change and most importantly, how each employee impacts the change and how the change will impact them.

    2. Not creating a powerful enough guiding coalition---- The specific group you assemble to lead the specifics of the change effort must function as a team. Choose wisely. They must also be empowered with enough authority and responsibility to get the job done. Do not micro manage.

    3. Lacking a vision ---- A vision is imperative to any change process. Exactly where do you expect to go? What is expected to get done and exactly what is the expected outcome. Not having answers to these basic questions is like putting a nail strip across a racetrack.

    4. Not communicating the vision ---- Make sure the vision-end game is communicated with laser like clarity. Even more important is making sure that all employees own the vision and it is not a command sent down from above by the corporate weenies. Use every vehicle possible to communicate the new vision and strategies.

    5. Failure to remove obstacles or deal with critical constraints ---- Don’t fail to kill any “Sacred Cows”. They have no place in strategic growth. If they happen to be family issues – deal with them before you initiate change. Empowering employees to act on the vision is essential. Seek out and identify obstacles to change. This can often be accomplished by identifying critical constraints by doing a SWOT analysis. Get rid of the obstacles and overcome the critical constraints. Eliminate any systems or structures that seriously undermine the vision. Encourage employees to take calculated risk.

    6. Not systematically planning and creating short term wins ----Plan and create short-term wins. Establish milestones along the way. Praise for progress. Plan for visible performance improvements and then create those improvements and acknowledge the milestone achievement. Apply a reward if the milestone warrants it.

    7. Declaring victory too soon ---- Be careful here. It is desirable to acknowledge short term gains but don’t declare that the battle is over until it’s over. Don’t use your increased credibility to change systems, structures, & policies that don’t fit the vision. Make sure you have the right people in the right seat on the bus.

    8. Not anchoring the changes in the organizational culture ---- To be effective change must become such a part of the culture that it could function on autopilot. Institutionalize the new approaches communicating the connections between the new behaviors and corporate success. Developing the means to ensure leadership development and succession.

    Creating, instigating and managing change takes passion and courage. It’s not for the weak of heart. It is not for those who embrace simple traditional expectations. Effective leaders reach beyond these expectations. They become agents of change. Most companies will thrive on the concept of change, achievement, responsibility and accountability. Make it part of your culture --- become a C.O.P ---Change on Purpose.”

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