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Digg it UP - Managing People; Living the Values
Gum Removal in Hotels on reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours.Gum removal in hotels is one of the more important tasks set for hotel cleaning crews. This is because the presence of chewing gum pollution in hotels greatly detracts from the comfortable atmosphere of cleanliness and welcome that most hotels strive for. And, because chewing gum is so prevalent in our society, the fact of the matter is that gum removal in hotels will remain something that is very important.Areas that need active gum removal in hotels:Nearly every area of most hotels will require some sort of gum removal, as chewing gum soiling is common in all areas where people go. Indeed, gum i Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introdu The Power of Knowing Your Customer There has been an unedifying politicised debate in Australia about Australian values. It is a debate about who has them, who does not and seeks to ostracise those who are considered not to have them.Often times we believe the depth of our customer does not extend beyond that of the business they do with us.In fact, it goes way beyond that. People love to talk about themselves, and if you take the time to talk to your customers about non-business topics, you will find that, more often than not, they are more than happy to engage you in conversation.By getting to know your customers, you can find a whole lot of valuable information from them. Such as where they live, do they have a family, what their hobbies are, do they have pets, etc.By finding out this type of information, you can det It is a debate where the majority of the participants have demonstrated the values of ignorance, intolerance, opportunism and political wilfulness whilst claiming to support values of fairness, mateship and egalitarianism. That's the problem with values. They are demonstrated by what we do, not by what we say. No matter which community we belong to, whether it is our family, our school, our club or our employing organisation, we cannot escape demonstrating our values each day. Our values come from our beliefs which form generally at an early age dependent on our experiences and upbringing and it is difficult to impose them upon us. My school had a statement about values incorporated into a Latin phrase under the crest of the school. We were not taught Latin, so that made it difficult for any of us even in our formative years to be influenced by the school statement about values. Our school made an attempt at defining the school's values and made a poor job of it by writing it in a language none of us understood. However, the errors of my school are nothing compared with errors being perpetrated in the name of values by organisations in both the public and private sector. The majority of organisations now have mission, vision and values statements. The aim of these statements is to cascade from what we are here for, to what do we want to achieve, to what personal values should we hold as an organisation and how we behave as individuals. The purpose of such cascading statements is to free organisations from controls and empower them to work for a common goal with a common purpose and a common set of behaviours. Introducing values should be about leading the organisation through values rather than controls. Value statements, therefore, should be a means of empowerment. However, a 2002 survey by the American Management Association reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours. Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introdu Think Positive - Care for Your Customers >No matter which community we belong to, whether it is our family, our school, our club or our employing organisation, we cannot escape demonstrating our values each day.You may publish this article in your ezine, newsletter on your web site as long as the byline is included and the article is included in it's entirety. I also ask that you activate any html links found in the article and in the byline. Please send a courtesy link or email where you publish to: support@multiplestreammktg.comOperating a business on a daily basis dealing with customers can actually be frustrating and they often don't make it easy for you and your employees to treat them nicely.You need to remember where all your revenue and sales come from for your business. Every dolla Our values come from our beliefs which form generally at an early age dependent on our experiences and upbringing and it is difficult to impose them upon us. My school had a statement about values incorporated into a Latin phrase under the crest of the school. We were not taught Latin, so that made it difficult for any of us even in our formative years to be influenced by the school statement about values. Our school made an attempt at defining the school's values and made a poor job of it by writing it in a language none of us understood. However, the errors of my school are nothing compared with errors being perpetrated in the name of values by organisations in both the public and private sector. The majority of organisations now have mission, vision and values statements. The aim of these statements is to cascade from what we are here for, to what do we want to achieve, to what personal values should we hold as an organisation and how we behave as individuals. The purpose of such cascading statements is to free organisations from controls and empower them to work for a common goal with a common purpose and a common set of behaviours. Introducing values should be about leading the organisation through values rather than controls. Value statements, therefore, should be a means of empowerment. However, a 2002 survey by the American Management Association reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours. Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introdu Get Cash For Your Business Against Future Sells! ve years to be influenced by the school statement about values.There are financial institutions offering loans and lines of credit against your upcoming sells that can provide you with all the funds you need for your business and can solve any cash flow problems that you may have.This new financial product is helping more and more starting businesses finance the cash flow difficulties that small businesses experience when they are growing. Secured with the expected sells that you and the financial institution budget for the upcoming period, you get a line of credit or a loan for the amount you need to purchase new equipment, hire more personnel, pay for supplies, fi Our school made an attempt at defining the school's values and made a poor job of it by writing it in a language none of us understood. However, the errors of my school are nothing compared with errors being perpetrated in the name of values by organisations in both the public and private sector. The majority of organisations now have mission, vision and values statements. The aim of these statements is to cascade from what we are here for, to what do we want to achieve, to what personal values should we hold as an organisation and how we behave as individuals. The purpose of such cascading statements is to free organisations from controls and empower them to work for a common goal with a common purpose and a common set of behaviours. Introducing values should be about leading the organisation through values rather than controls. Value statements, therefore, should be a means of empowerment. However, a 2002 survey by the American Management Association reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours. Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introdu How to Give Customers What They Want and Keep Them Coming Back For More! do we want to achieve, to what personal values should we hold as an organisation and how we behave as individuals.A key characteristic of a successful business is its ability to give clients what they need in a way that keeps them coming back for more. The concept seems easy enough, but how does one actually go about doing it?There is a lot to consider when providing for a client; not only do you have to keep the needs of your sales leads in mind, but you also have to know the limits of your company and your sales associates. It’s a lot to think about for just one customer, isn’t it?Not really. People become lifelong customers for very simple reasons – respect, commitment, and understanding. Offer these basic The purpose of such cascading statements is to free organisations from controls and empower them to work for a common goal with a common purpose and a common set of behaviours. Introducing values should be about leading the organisation through values rather than controls. Value statements, therefore, should be a means of empowerment. However, a 2002 survey by the American Management Association reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours. Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introdu Designing the Perfect Civilization and then franchising it World Wide on reported that whilst eighty six percent of all organisations surveyed had specifically written or stated values, seventy percent of respondents had observed micromanagement behaviours.Is it possible to design the Perfect Civilization and then franchising it World Wide; calling it the World Franchise System? Could we do this by making our own civilization perfect and then using it as a model? SimCity on steroids if you will.Perfect the required systems of the civilization first like; Water, power, infrastructure, schools and get World Bank Financing, trade and distribution points, communication, fixing of humans (healthcare), etc. It can be done. Franchising can do this.Emerging nations could see what we have ask to buy-in, we take our model of the SYSTEM and make an unbreakable Further, more than fifty percent of respondents had observed failure to give credit, dissension in senior management ranks, hidden agendas and dictatorial management behaviours. For organisations to do more than pay lip service to values as a decoration on the office wall, they must institute a programme of empowerment. Introducing a real programme of empowerment is not a light task. Implementing an empowerment programme requires an understanding of processes which can be delegated, based on the risk profile of the organisation, and ensuring the people to whom the process is delegated have both the competence and the authority to execute the process. An empowerment programme working within a set of core values which underpin the vision of the organisation and reflect the mission of the organisation is a powerful combination. Adorning walls, websites and stationery with "our values" without a real purpose is waste of time and money and potentially divisive in an organisation. The first person at risk in an organisation when values are paid lip service is the leader of the organisation. Leaders who communicate a value set for an organisation must be seen to live the values themselves or face (usually) unspoken accusations of hypocrisy. The leader who clearly flouts the often used value of integrity by some capricious act has no one but themselves to blame, but it can be much more subtle than that. Values such as "being open and honest" will at some time run into the problem of client and employee confidentiality. One person's view of confidential information will be another person's view of being closed and dishonest. Without clear processes and policies to work with inside a value system of openness and honesty, the interpretation of the value is open to all. Moreover, values, because they are expressed as words, live a life of their own and find different meanings at different levels and functions of the organisation. The meanings attached to the words expand. The leader will be judged by their behaviour, not only against their intended meaning of the written words but also the expanded sets of meanings. To make values work, organisations need to not only communicate them widely and often and build a framework of processes and policies which embrace empowerment, they must open the organisation to feedback from stakeholders about observed behaviour. This i
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