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    Quick Tip - Shushing a Loud Cell Phone Talker
    Janet, one of my clients from Chicago, recently asked my advice on dealing with people who talk loudly on their cell phones while in public. I know I’ve been guilty of this offense before as my voice tends to project very well and sometimes I forget that I don’t need to speak very loudly for my phone to pick it up.Sometimes, like when you’re in a movie theater, any kind of loud cell phone talking needs to be quieted immediately and the most direct way is the best. But often in public, you may feel a bit awkward telling a stranger to mute him or herself.The other day at the gym, I found myself in this second scenario. I was on a treadmill with my headphones on. Despite the noise of the machine and my music, I could easily make out the cell phone conversation of a woman who was on nearby treadmill. She wasn’t directly next to me so she wouldn’t have heard a, “shush,” sent in her direction. I decided to try to use a different approach to the situation.After I finished my workout, I walked over to the woman, who by then had ended her call. I leaned in and whispered, “We have something in common.”
    p>• What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and


    A mind-set is a way we organize our thinking, whether consciously or unconsciously. Most of the time, we act based on unconscious mind-sets that simply repeat what we've done most recently. In a new situation where our conscious mind is engaged, we may also repeat past behavior because when faced with a new choice, we often search through our alternatives in a predictable pattern that includes some perspectives while ignoring many others.

    Organizations develop their mind-sets through rules, processes, and rituals, as well as through the mind-sets of those who work in them. The fewer people who enter an organization, the more likely the organizational mind-set is to become fixed.

    The Individual Stall Mind-Set

    Are you awake, aware of, and working on what you want to accomplish … or are you usually daydreaming? It's easy to spend most of your day with your conscious mind turned off while you endure your commute, struggle to stay awake during meetings, listen to long-winded people on the telephone, exercise, perform routine chores, and watch television. The focus for your whole mind starts in the conscious part of your brain. Keep that conscious focus turned off, and the whole brain runs on automatic instructions.

    Overcoming that lethargy is pretty easy. Take these steps:

    1. Create written goals for what's important.

    2. Read those goals aloud twice a day.

    3. Write out plans to help you accomplish your goals.

    4. Increase the number of hours a day when you are consciously working on those goals.

    5. Tell others what you want to accomplish and ask for their help.

    6. Check your progress daily against your goals to identify where you need to shift to doing something more effective.

    7. Get help in looking for ways to improve in those lagging areas.

    8. Put improvements in place as soon as you can.

    Some people tell us they don't have the time to add any new activities. We suggest you check out that belief. Write down everything you do and when over 24 hours a day for 14 days. Add up elapsed time totals for each category (such as spiritual activities, sleeping, eating, commuting, various aspects of work, activities around home and in the community, exercise, and recreation). Then create an ideal time allocation for how you would like to spend your time. If you are like most people who do this exercise, you'll find that you can shift 25 hours each week from what you do now into things you would like to be doing.

    At this stage, some people are still confused about what to do. They don't see a role model or example that seems to perfectly fit what they would like to be doing. Relax. That's a good sign! It means that a lot of people are stalled in pursuing what you want to do. So there's lots of untapped potential for you to grasp. Try selecting some ideas for improvement from one person's example and other ideas from a different example. Put the combination together in a new way and try it out in a low-risk test. Many such tests won't succeed, but the ones that do will cause you to zoom forward.

    The Organizational Stall Mind-Set

    Since the advent of military organizations, the goal of many groups has been to focus and direct each person's attention to a narrow, predictable path. Since communication used to be almost impossible in large organizations, there was little choice but to try to do little in order to accomplish anything. Such groups are now called command-and-control-style organizations.

    Today's fast-changing world is filled with much better educated people and more ways to communicate, so organizations can aspire to be very responsive by having those who first notice a problem or opportunity move quickly to take appropriate action. This works better if each individual knows that this should be done and develops her or his ability to notice problems and opportunities and to take appropriate, timely action.

    Too often, however, the habits of command and control are carried over intentionally or unintentionally into a free-form world that most closely resembles a fast-break opportunity in basketball. Here are some examples of progress barriers created by command-and-control stalls:

    • Meetings that focus on permanently fixed agendas drive out time and initiative that could be used to work on more important, but unperceived, issues.

    • Compensation systems that reward you for doing only part of your job encourage you to ignore what else needs to be done.

    • Lacking a focus on learning, many organizations spin their wheels by superficially reexamining areas that have been studied to death by predecessors.

    • Rigid protocol often requires that you cannot speak directly with your counterpart in another part of the organization, leaving your efforts isolated and ineffective.

    Decision makers live in isolated fortresses with lots of guards around to keep others away, leaving decisions in limbo.

    Become a Stallbuster

    You now have a better idea of what a stall is. You may doubt that people can change mind-sets and become vastly more productive in short periods of time. But such rapid changes may be easier than you think. "Necessity is the mother of invention" is a motto that applies to successfully dealing with crises. A big challenge can also cause that motto to come to life.

    Stallbusters

    Be Aware of Your Habits

    Most people are better at identifying others' habits than noticing their own. Ask others to tell you what habits they see in you. Then keep a diary to see which of those habits are done without much conscious thought. Next review what you have learned and think about the patterns. When would you have been better off changing the patterns?

    Be Aware of Your Organization's Habits

    For the next week, write down everything that your organization does without much thought. Pay particular attention to how problems are addressed. Consider the habitual items on your list and ask yourself the following questions:

    • Why are these things done?

    • What is the benefit?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should the habits be changed?

    • Does the organization have an effective method for making the changes?

    Be Aware of How the Habits of Others in Your Organization Affect You

    Many ambitious employees soon begin to sound, look, and think like the CEO ― down to the most miniscule variation in cadence and phrase. The more you think about habits, the more you will notice them and create the needed adjustments. Answer the following questions to gain perspective:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and

    Beef Cattle and Summer Forage
    Hot dry summer weather brings about heat and drought stress on summer annuals. Stressed plants such as the forage sorghums can occasionally accumulate dangerous concentrations of nitrates. These high nitrate plants, either standing in the field, or fed as hay, can cause abortion in pregnant cattle, or death if consumed in great enough quantities. Nitrates do not dissipate from suncured hay (in contrast to prussic acid), therefore once the hay is cut the nitrate levels remain constant. Therefore, producers should test summer annual hay fields before they cut them for hay. Stop by any County Extension office for testing details. Testing before cutting gives producers an additional option of waiting and allowing for the nitrate to lower in concentration before harvesting the hay. The major sources of nitrate toxicity in the South and Southwest will be summer annual sorghum type plants, including sudan hybrids, sorgo-sudans, sorghum-sudans, millets, and Johnsongrass.Some of the management techniques to reduce the risk of nitrate toxicity (Note: the risk of this poisoning cannot be totally eliminated), include:
    als to identify where you need to shift to doing something more effective.

    7. Get help in looking for ways to improve in those lagging areas.

    8. Put improvements in place as soon as you can.

    Some people tell us they don't have the time to add any new activities. We suggest you check out that belief. Write down everything you do and when over 24 hours a day for 14 days. Add up elapsed time totals for each category (such as spiritual activities, sleeping, eating, commuting, various aspects of work, activities around home and in the community, exercise, and recreation). Then create an ideal time allocation for how you would like to spend your time. If you are like most people who do this exercise, you'll find that you can shift 25 hours each week from what you do now into things you would like to be doing.

    At this stage, some people are still confused about what to do. They don't see a role model or example that seems to perfectly fit what they would like to be doing. Relax. That's a good sign! It means that a lot of people are stalled in pursuing what you want to do. So there's lots of untapped potential for you to grasp. Try selecting some ideas for improvement from one person's example and other ideas from a different example. Put the combination together in a new way and try it out in a low-risk test. Many such tests won't succeed, but the ones that do will cause you to zoom forward.

    The Organizational Stall Mind-Set

    Since the advent of military organizations, the goal of many groups has been to focus and direct each person's attention to a narrow, predictable path. Since communication used to be almost impossible in large organizations, there was little choice but to try to do little in order to accomplish anything. Such groups are now called command-and-control-style organizations.

    Today's fast-changing world is filled with much better educated people and more ways to communicate, so organizations can aspire to be very responsive by having those who first notice a problem or opportunity move quickly to take appropriate action. This works better if each individual knows that this should be done and develops her or his ability to notice problems and opportunities and to take appropriate, timely action.

    Too often, however, the habits of command and control are carried over intentionally or unintentionally into a free-form world that most closely resembles a fast-break opportunity in basketball. Here are some examples of progress barriers created by command-and-control stalls:

    • Meetings that focus on permanently fixed agendas drive out time and initiative that could be used to work on more important, but unperceived, issues.

    • Compensation systems that reward you for doing only part of your job encourage you to ignore what else needs to be done.

    • Lacking a focus on learning, many organizations spin their wheels by superficially reexamining areas that have been studied to death by predecessors.

    • Rigid protocol often requires that you cannot speak directly with your counterpart in another part of the organization, leaving your efforts isolated and ineffective.

    Decision makers live in isolated fortresses with lots of guards around to keep others away, leaving decisions in limbo.

    Become a Stallbuster

    You now have a better idea of what a stall is. You may doubt that people can change mind-sets and become vastly more productive in short periods of time. But such rapid changes may be easier than you think. "Necessity is the mother of invention" is a motto that applies to successfully dealing with crises. A big challenge can also cause that motto to come to life.

    Stallbusters

    Be Aware of Your Habits

    Most people are better at identifying others' habits than noticing their own. Ask others to tell you what habits they see in you. Then keep a diary to see which of those habits are done without much conscious thought. Next review what you have learned and think about the patterns. When would you have been better off changing the patterns?

    Be Aware of Your Organization's Habits

    For the next week, write down everything that your organization does without much thought. Pay particular attention to how problems are addressed. Consider the habitual items on your list and ask yourself the following questions:

    • Why are these things done?

    • What is the benefit?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should the habits be changed?

    • Does the organization have an effective method for making the changes?

    Be Aware of How the Habits of Others in Your Organization Affect You

    Many ambitious employees soon begin to sound, look, and think like the CEO ― down to the most miniscule variation in cadence and phrase. The more you think about habits, the more you will notice them and create the needed adjustments. Answer the following questions to gain perspective:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and

    Making Fashion Designing Speedy And Easy – Designing Software
    The fashion industry has come a long way and has grown into one of the largest industries in the world. On account of the growth of this industry, the use of technology in this field has increased. Fashion designing software is increasingly being used by fashion designers.Fashion designing software greatly aids the work of a fashion designer and help in more effective performance. They help in saving a lot of a time, money and energy. These software packages help the designer in experimenting with a number of textures, colors and patterns for producing the perfect design. They provide a variety of sketch backgrounds, tools for designing and repeating patterns and texture mapping.There are various fashion design software packages available in the market today, such as Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Illustrator and CorelDraw among others. Fashion designers have often been observed to use customized software according to their own individual requirements. They aid the designer right from the stage of designing to the production of apparel. Perfectly fitting garments can be created. The process of creating a design or
    ge organizations, there was little choice but to try to do little in order to accomplish anything. Such groups are now called command-and-control-style organizations.

    Today's fast-changing world is filled with much better educated people and more ways to communicate, so organizations can aspire to be very responsive by having those who first notice a problem or opportunity move quickly to take appropriate action. This works better if each individual knows that this should be done and develops her or his ability to notice problems and opportunities and to take appropriate, timely action.

    Too often, however, the habits of command and control are carried over intentionally or unintentionally into a free-form world that most closely resembles a fast-break opportunity in basketball. Here are some examples of progress barriers created by command-and-control stalls:

    • Meetings that focus on permanently fixed agendas drive out time and initiative that could be used to work on more important, but unperceived, issues.

    • Compensation systems that reward you for doing only part of your job encourage you to ignore what else needs to be done.

    • Lacking a focus on learning, many organizations spin their wheels by superficially reexamining areas that have been studied to death by predecessors.

    • Rigid protocol often requires that you cannot speak directly with your counterpart in another part of the organization, leaving your efforts isolated and ineffective.

    Decision makers live in isolated fortresses with lots of guards around to keep others away, leaving decisions in limbo.

    Become a Stallbuster

    You now have a better idea of what a stall is. You may doubt that people can change mind-sets and become vastly more productive in short periods of time. But such rapid changes may be easier than you think. "Necessity is the mother of invention" is a motto that applies to successfully dealing with crises. A big challenge can also cause that motto to come to life.

    Stallbusters

    Be Aware of Your Habits

    Most people are better at identifying others' habits than noticing their own. Ask others to tell you what habits they see in you. Then keep a diary to see which of those habits are done without much conscious thought. Next review what you have learned and think about the patterns. When would you have been better off changing the patterns?

    Be Aware of Your Organization's Habits

    For the next week, write down everything that your organization does without much thought. Pay particular attention to how problems are addressed. Consider the habitual items on your list and ask yourself the following questions:

    • Why are these things done?

    • What is the benefit?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should the habits be changed?

    • Does the organization have an effective method for making the changes?

    Be Aware of How the Habits of Others in Your Organization Affect You

    Many ambitious employees soon begin to sound, look, and think like the CEO ― down to the most miniscule variation in cadence and phrase. The more you think about habits, the more you will notice them and create the needed adjustments. Answer the following questions to gain perspective:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and

    How to 'Start' Starting your Own Business
    Most people in very small businesses start their businesses from a passion. This an excellent place to start – assuming there is a need in the marketplace for what you are selling.A business associate of mine is a residential real estate agent in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles, California. She told me recently that there are 14,000 real estate agents in the San Fernando Valley!! Holy cow that's a lot! Anyone considering starting a real estate business in this geographic area should do a lot of research and hard thinking before getting their license.When you are deciding to start your business, the absolutely most important question you need to answer is: Is there a market for this? Big companies spend sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars on market research answering that question before introducing a new product. You have a fabulous tool at your disposal that is almost totally free – the internet. That can give you a good start in your research.The next very important question that requires an answer is: Who is your target market? In other words, who, specifically, will pa
    have a better idea of what a stall is. You may doubt that people can change mind-sets and become vastly more productive in short periods of time. But such rapid changes may be easier than you think. "Necessity is the mother of invention" is a motto that applies to successfully dealing with crises. A big challenge can also cause that motto to come to life.

    Stallbusters

    Be Aware of Your Habits

    Most people are better at identifying others' habits than noticing their own. Ask others to tell you what habits they see in you. Then keep a diary to see which of those habits are done without much conscious thought. Next review what you have learned and think about the patterns. When would you have been better off changing the patterns?

    Be Aware of Your Organization's Habits

    For the next week, write down everything that your organization does without much thought. Pay particular attention to how problems are addressed. Consider the habitual items on your list and ask yourself the following questions:

    • Why are these things done?

    • What is the benefit?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should the habits be changed?

    • Does the organization have an effective method for making the changes?

    Be Aware of How the Habits of Others in Your Organization Affect You

    Many ambitious employees soon begin to sound, look, and think like the CEO ― down to the most miniscule variation in cadence and phrase. The more you think about habits, the more you will notice them and create the needed adjustments. Answer the following questions to gain perspective:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and

    Business Stationery
    Have you ever given a thought to business stationary you use in your business? Some of you may wonder what the big deal about business stationary is. The fact is that high-quality business stationary can help you build a positive image about your company irrespective of the type and size of business. Moreover, well-designed and professional business stationary can help your business stand apart from your competition.Business Stationery - An effective and powerful tool for business communication and moreBusiness stationery plays a vital role in businesses, schools, colleges, and all types of organizations. It is used for written correspondence and to manage daily business tasks. It includes pens, pencils, business cards, contact cards, letter heads, envelopes, presentation folders, stamps, labels, post-it-notes, binders and much more. It is very essential to have a good stock of stationery items for smooth functioning of business operations.Business stationary such as company letterheads, envelopes, and business cards, etc eventually impacts the way people look at your organization. Always re
    p>• What habits do people in your company pick up from the CEO?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    It's a good idea to repeat this investigation for other leaders who serve between the CEO and the bulk of those who work for the organization.

    Be Aware of How Your Habits Affect Others in Your Organization

    Habits can come from being with anyone. In fact, you are creating quite a few habits in others through your actions. Because you are the source, such habits will be easier to change than the others we describe in this section. To increase your awareness, ask yourself the following questions:

    • What habits do people in your company pick up from you?

    • What are the benefits?

    • When are these habits harmful?

    • When might these habits stall progress?

    • How should these habits be changed?

    Practice Soaring Like an Eagle

    Most impassable barriers to progress occur only in the mind. In fact, there is usually a way around (over, through, or away from) the barriers that will work just fine. To improve in seeing past your habitual ways of thinking and acting, you need success in doing something that seems impossible. An example might be to sell more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing and to enjoy a higher profit margin. Pick such a business objective that's way beyond what anyone thinks is possible and then address the following questions:

    What would have to happen for this result to be possible?

    If your organization had all of the resources and time in the world, could it be done?

    How much would it be worth to accomplish this objective?

    How much can your organization realistically afford to spend to reach the objective?

    Do other people see this objective as being impossible, or, rather, do they see it as difficult or inconvenient?

    Assuming for the moment that you could know how to reach the seemingly impossible objective (such as selling more of your company's products at a higher price with less marketing while earning a higher profit margin), what is the answer to the seemingly impossible objective?

    Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell All Rights Reserved

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