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Digg it UP - Why Would Anyone Hold a Bad Meeting?
Business Case Study; Franchise Outlet Disclosures held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because
responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus,
without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This
masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and
promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they
spent all of their time sitting in meetings.There has always been a big issue in the world of franchising regarding how to count the number of franchised outlets that exist. Many web sites of Franchisor's show more outlets than their uniform franchise offering circular. The Uniform Franchise Offering Circular is the official Franchisor disclosure document, which would be given to each franchise buyer 10 days before purchase as mandatory by law. The number of franchised outlets must be disclosed in that document. When customers go to a web site of the franchising company they may notice that the outlets are numbered by city or zip code and there may be one outlet servicing more Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants deliv Make Big, Big Bucks Copywriting Pssst, want a stock tip that will make you rich? Okay, here it is: phone a public
corporation and ask to speak with the CEO.If you’re trying to break into the freelance writing market, you might often say aloud, “God, where’s the money in the freelance writing market?! I swear I’ll never dress up like a clown and scare people on the street again…”According to Writer’s Digest 2005 Writer’s Market, copywriting is where it’s at. Copywriter’s make $24-$100 dollars an hour producing copy for businesses. You can earn $330-$6,000 per brochure, flier, or booklet! They are also in demand for ads! And since you blog, you may already be adept at keyword optimization.If you think about it, we already knew who has the money in the world—corporations a If a secretary tells you that the CEO expects to be busy in meetings for the next six hundred years, call your broker and sell the stock short. Any company unable to manage an activity that should last an hour is on its way down the financial tubes. Although it’s true that senior executives spend much of their time in meetings, you can bet that a business is in trouble if their meetings are out of control. Surveys show companies waste an average of 20% of their payroll on bad meetings. And that’s just the beginning of the problem. Meetings keep people away from the tasks they were hired to perform -- tasks that make money for the company and keep the business ahead of the competition. Since bad meetings are so wasteful, you may wonder why anyone tolerates them. Unfortunately, many business leaders think that their meetings are just fine. They even believe that they’re experts at holding effective meetings. For example, when I phone companies to ask if they would be interested in improving their meetings, I sometimes encounter an assistant who assures me that the executives believe that they hold wonderful meetings. Then the assistant snickers, coughs softly, and regains enough composure to state that they don’t need my services. At this point the assistant sounds like someone on a sinking ship who is throwing a life jacket into the water. And that must make you wonder: why any intelligent person would hold a meeting that wastes everyone’s time and produces nothing. There are easy answers such as 1) they don’t know that their meetings could be effective, 2) they don’t know what an effective meeting is like, or 3) they don’t know how to hold an effective meeting. But what about the rest of them? That is, what about all of the executives who know how to plan and organize and run an effective business, but still hold bad meetings? Let’s dig deeper. These executives actually want to hold bad meetings because they prove to be useful. Here’s how. 1) They provide refuge. Bad meetings provide a sophisticated form of executive busyness. Some people find this useful because it keeps them from having to work on difficult tasks such as planning, coaching, learning, and communicating. Compared to these difficult tasks, sitting in a conference room is easy. In fact, it is so easy that a six-year old could do it, assuming you could convince the child to stay inside for such a pointless activity. Better: An effective meeting is business activity where people work together. 2) They avoid responsibility. Bad meetings never end with decisions, which means that no one ends up being held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus, without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they spent all of their time sitting in meetings. Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants delive Name That Customer Service Breakdown: Is It A Listening Problem or a Memory Problem? from the
tasks they were hired to perform -- tasks that make money for the company and
keep the business ahead of the competition.Harry Lorayne and Jerry Lucas, the former basketball star, teamed up years ago and wrote a sensational little self-help manual: THE MEMORY BOOK.You might have seen these two appearing on “The Tonight Show.” Their “act” consisted of simply memorizing and then repeating in order the names of everyone in the audience during a given program.That amounted to hundreds of names!They accomplished several things with their wizardry:(1) They demonstrated that memory isn’t passive; it’s an active device that anyone can learn to improve;(2) There is no practical limit to the amount we can remember; and(3) Since bad meetings are so wasteful, you may wonder why anyone tolerates them. Unfortunately, many business leaders think that their meetings are just fine. They even believe that they’re experts at holding effective meetings. For example, when I phone companies to ask if they would be interested in improving their meetings, I sometimes encounter an assistant who assures me that the executives believe that they hold wonderful meetings. Then the assistant snickers, coughs softly, and regains enough composure to state that they don’t need my services. At this point the assistant sounds like someone on a sinking ship who is throwing a life jacket into the water. And that must make you wonder: why any intelligent person would hold a meeting that wastes everyone’s time and produces nothing. There are easy answers such as 1) they don’t know that their meetings could be effective, 2) they don’t know what an effective meeting is like, or 3) they don’t know how to hold an effective meeting. But what about the rest of them? That is, what about all of the executives who know how to plan and organize and run an effective business, but still hold bad meetings? Let’s dig deeper. These executives actually want to hold bad meetings because they prove to be useful. Here’s how. 1) They provide refuge. Bad meetings provide a sophisticated form of executive busyness. Some people find this useful because it keeps them from having to work on difficult tasks such as planning, coaching, learning, and communicating. Compared to these difficult tasks, sitting in a conference room is easy. In fact, it is so easy that a six-year old could do it, assuming you could convince the child to stay inside for such a pointless activity. Better: An effective meeting is business activity where people work together. 2) They avoid responsibility. Bad meetings never end with decisions, which means that no one ends up being held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus, without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they spent all of their time sitting in meetings. Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants deliv Make Your Resume Keyword Rich and Scanner Friendly this point the assistant sounds like someone on a sinking ship
who is throwing a life jacket into the water.If you haven’t looked for a job recently, there are new tactics that hiring professionals are using that you should be aware of before updating your resume.Employers and recruiters increasingly rely on electronic resumes, resume posting boards and job banks to find job candidates. Resumes are either being scanned or input directly into keyword-searchable databases, and accessed when an employer inputs a keyword list of requirements that best describe the position they are seeking to fill.The database searches for keywords describing job titles, responsibilities and descriptions, degree requirements, computer knowledge as And that must make you wonder: why any intelligent person would hold a meeting that wastes everyone’s time and produces nothing. There are easy answers such as 1) they don’t know that their meetings could be effective, 2) they don’t know what an effective meeting is like, or 3) they don’t know how to hold an effective meeting. But what about the rest of them? That is, what about all of the executives who know how to plan and organize and run an effective business, but still hold bad meetings? Let’s dig deeper. These executives actually want to hold bad meetings because they prove to be useful. Here’s how. 1) They provide refuge. Bad meetings provide a sophisticated form of executive busyness. Some people find this useful because it keeps them from having to work on difficult tasks such as planning, coaching, learning, and communicating. Compared to these difficult tasks, sitting in a conference room is easy. In fact, it is so easy that a six-year old could do it, assuming you could convince the child to stay inside for such a pointless activity. Better: An effective meeting is business activity where people work together. 2) They avoid responsibility. Bad meetings never end with decisions, which means that no one ends up being held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus, without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they spent all of their time sitting in meetings. Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants deliv Fundraising Reward Programs use they
prove to be useful. Here’s how.For improved fundraising results, take a little time and put together the right type of reward program, one that provides an appropriate level of reward for all participants. A little reward can produce a lot of motivation.Be sure to set the initial reward level low enough so that at least 50% of your sales force gets a direct reward. Group awards will also stimulate additional sales, but not as much as individual rewards.Use merchant prizes Contact your local merchants for better prizes that mean more to your sellers. Work deals for movie passes, merchandise discounts, gift certificates, miniature golf, theater trip 1) They provide refuge. Bad meetings provide a sophisticated form of executive busyness. Some people find this useful because it keeps them from having to work on difficult tasks such as planning, coaching, learning, and communicating. Compared to these difficult tasks, sitting in a conference room is easy. In fact, it is so easy that a six-year old could do it, assuming you could convince the child to stay inside for such a pointless activity. Better: An effective meeting is business activity where people work together. 2) They avoid responsibility. Bad meetings never end with decisions, which means that no one ends up being held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus, without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they spent all of their time sitting in meetings. Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants deliv Conducting an Effective Interview held responsible for doing anything. Some people find this useful because
responsibility implies accountability and accountability requires results. Thus,
without responsibility there is no failure and everyone appears to perform well. This
masks poor performance so that everyone continues to receive raises and
promotions, even when they accomplish nothing because (you guessed it) they
spent all of their time sitting in meetings.An employment interview is a goal oriented conversation in which the interviewer and the applicant exchange information. Even though interviews are a poor selection tool for most jobs, they are often the primary method used in evaluating applicants. The main players in the job interview are the interviewer and the applicant.The interviewer should have a pleasant personality, empathy, and the ability to listen and to communicate effectively. He or she should be aware of stereotyped views of the capabilities of women and minorities, and should be knowledgeable of the laws governing employment practices. In addition, a solid knowle Better: Effective meetings produce decisions that someone is responsible for implementing. 3) They provide excitement. Bad meetings feature all of the elements of a good drama, such as conflict, tension, and pain. For example, the participants deliver self-aggrandizing reports, denigrate their colleagues, and engage in politics. Some really terrible meetings play out like pathetic battlegrounds with verbal gladiators battling for favors while the boss watches. Better: Effective meetings occur in a safe environment of respect. 4) They serve food. Bad meetings become an enviable executive perk when they provide snacks, coffee, and (sometimes) meals. The attendees then use eating to offset the boredom of having to hear meaningless discussions. It also saves them the expense of having to buy food. Better: Meals should be a separate activity used to build relationships and (sometimes) rest. 5) They entertain. Bad meetings resemble a party. People tell stories, trade jokes, and argue over trivia. Some meetings feature comedy performances by the office fool. Others feature humorous belittlements by the office bully. And if neither of these occurs, the absolutely unbelievable discussions amaze and entertain everyone. Better: Effective meetings use process tools to make methodical progress toward results. All of this shows why the type of meetings held in a company should be of major concern when making investment decisions. If the executives need to learn how, that can be fixed by scheduling a workshop. Then you might consider investing in the company, after they complete the workshop. If, however, the executives hold bad meetings to avoid fundamental leadership responsibilities, you should seek other investments.
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