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Hub You - Tips to Deal with Inter-Departmental Conflict in Your Organization
How to Be Comfortable at a Business Trip Meeting hing in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration.Ah, the business trip meeting. The stale coffee. The room full of strangers. The overwhelming smell of hotel lotion on your shirt collar. A business trip meeting may seem a lot like a flat mattress, no matter how much you toss and turn, you just can’t get comfortable. Still, business trip meetings aren’t an end all be all to comfort, there is a way to make them feel more like a productive session and less like a root canal. You simply need to keep yourself competent, confident, and poised with the ability to transition smoothly.Dress to impressIt may be hard to know what to wear to a business meeting. Is it casual? Is it black tie? Is it somewhere in between? Most likely, you won’t no for sure…there is no business trip meeting invitation that tells you what to wear. Dres Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can b Top 10 Franchises for Computer Geeks No matter where I work, regardless of the region of the country, there's one situation I encounter that virtually all businesses have in common -- some degree of internal conflict between sales, operations and administration.If you are interested in buying a franchise then you need to be passionate about the business in order to make it successful. So, all you computer geeks out there who are interested in franchises should consider the different computer related franchises available. When you are passionate about computers then you will be most successful with a computer related franchise. The following franchises are the top 10 for computer geeks, so check them out and find the right one for you!Franchise #1 Geeks on CallThis franchise focuses on providing on site computer services and is great for computer geeks. Computer experience is not required and training is provided, but computer geeks will especially love the Geeks on Call franchise because they are already passionate about computers. Total Operations Manager: "Those sales guys are prima donnas. There's one -- Kevin -- who is the worst offender of all. He'll invariably blast into my office at the eleventh hour with an emergency delivery one of his customers absolutely has to have the next morning on a “first-out.” He is always armed with every reason imaginable as to why he couldn't give me more notice, but the bottom line is that he wants me to "bump" another customer's order and slide his customer in its place. "I'm telling you, I've had it with him. Last week he got in my face once too often; we had it out. I told him that he could either get his orders phoned in and scheduled like all the other salespeople or his customer could just wait. I told him that his customers are no more important than the company’s other customers. "Now, Kevin won't speak to me. He now communicates with me through a manager. You'd think that a man making a six-figure income would be organized enough to get his act together and plan ahead. I can't possibly do my job when every order he enters is an exception to the rule." Salesperson: "Getting our operations manager to cooperate is the biggest hurdle I face every day. He has never grasped the concept of customer service. He does everything in his power to keep me from taking care of my customers' needs. Just last week he told me that I had to get on a schedule like everyone else or my customers could just wait. "I do the best I can out there. He thinks I have some sort of crystal ball. How does he think I can anticipate my customers' needs when my customers can’t see any further ahead than the end of their nose? Flexibility is the key to success in this business and he's about as rigid as they come. I can't do my job unless he can do his." Credit Manager: "These salespeople around here are like a bunch of grade school kids. They practically never fill out their credit applications properly. And when it comes to credits, we need a full-time person to correct their mistakes. Customers are forever refusing to pay invoices because they're priced differently from the prices they were quoted. "We could save a lot of money in our department if we didn't have to correct so much of the salespeople's work. They are the most disorganized bunch of guys I've ever had to deal with." Sound familiar? Could this be your organization? What's wrong in these companies and what's contributing to so much hostility is customer service-related. Not external customers, but internal customers. The operations manager sees Kevin as a highly paid, but selfish and inconsiderate salesperson who totally disregards the systems the operations department has designed. Of course, the operations manager is partly correct. Kevin does appear to be a last minute sort of person who could benefit from some additional training in the basic principles of time management. Kevin is also operations' internal customer. Kevin generates the sales and gross profit that make the operations job necessary. Without Kevin -- and others like him -- this company would not need an operations department. There's also validity in the credit manager's criticism of the sales personnel. By nature, many salespeople are better at building customer relationships than they are at meticulously filling out credit applications. Salespeople need to be sensitive to the additional work they create for administrative personnel when they are sloppy with paperwork. Salespeople are internal customers to the credit department, however. Without salespeople, there would be little need for any of administrative staff. If salespeople are wise, they will do everything in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration. Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can be Fall In Love With Learning How To Carry And Use Your Marbles At All Times! e no more important than the company’s other customers.You must become a business developer! Fall in love with learning how to carry and use your marbles at all times! Children under eleven years old ask first, then they tell because they are cute. Twelve years and older are not cute anymore. Now you have to give someone a reason first, then ask. Your tell & ask should not be more than 30 seconds. A TV commercial is 30 seconds. The Challenge is to use your imagination and give them a reason to give you what you want. The best tellers are the best sellers. You can always improve on, your tell, your reason.Carry three marbles at all times. The marbles remind you to A-s-k and you shall receive most of the time. Before you ask, (give) tell them a reason you should get what you want to serve hum "Now, Kevin won't speak to me. He now communicates with me through a manager. You'd think that a man making a six-figure income would be organized enough to get his act together and plan ahead. I can't possibly do my job when every order he enters is an exception to the rule." Salesperson: "Getting our operations manager to cooperate is the biggest hurdle I face every day. He has never grasped the concept of customer service. He does everything in his power to keep me from taking care of my customers' needs. Just last week he told me that I had to get on a schedule like everyone else or my customers could just wait. "I do the best I can out there. He thinks I have some sort of crystal ball. How does he think I can anticipate my customers' needs when my customers can’t see any further ahead than the end of their nose? Flexibility is the key to success in this business and he's about as rigid as they come. I can't do my job unless he can do his." Credit Manager: "These salespeople around here are like a bunch of grade school kids. They practically never fill out their credit applications properly. And when it comes to credits, we need a full-time person to correct their mistakes. Customers are forever refusing to pay invoices because they're priced differently from the prices they were quoted. "We could save a lot of money in our department if we didn't have to correct so much of the salespeople's work. They are the most disorganized bunch of guys I've ever had to deal with." Sound familiar? Could this be your organization? What's wrong in these companies and what's contributing to so much hostility is customer service-related. Not external customers, but internal customers. The operations manager sees Kevin as a highly paid, but selfish and inconsiderate salesperson who totally disregards the systems the operations department has designed. Of course, the operations manager is partly correct. Kevin does appear to be a last minute sort of person who could benefit from some additional training in the basic principles of time management. Kevin is also operations' internal customer. Kevin generates the sales and gross profit that make the operations job necessary. Without Kevin -- and others like him -- this company would not need an operations department. There's also validity in the credit manager's criticism of the sales personnel. By nature, many salespeople are better at building customer relationships than they are at meticulously filling out credit applications. Salespeople need to be sensitive to the additional work they create for administrative personnel when they are sloppy with paperwork. Salespeople are internal customers to the credit department, however. Without salespeople, there would be little need for any of administrative staff. If salespeople are wise, they will do everything in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration. Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can b Starting a Mobile Car Wash Business for as Little Money as Possible ome. I can't do my job unless he can do his."Many people want to start a mobile car wash business and want to do it as cheap as possible. Have you ever considered; starting a Mobile Car Wash Business? Perhaps you have but you want to do it for as little money as possible. Well you can do it inexpensively if you are very careful. You may have seen mobile car washers in your city operating on a shoestring budget; many are even illegal aliens, which are doing the work. Who do not follow the rules, have business licenses, driver’s licenses or even remove their waste water.The start up costs for a mobile washing system depends entirely on how you go about it. You could put the unit on a trailer, buy a plastic Agricultural water tank. Then buy a pressure washer from Home Depot that will cost about $2,000. There are some rules too that re Credit Manager: "These salespeople around here are like a bunch of grade school kids. They practically never fill out their credit applications properly. And when it comes to credits, we need a full-time person to correct their mistakes. Customers are forever refusing to pay invoices because they're priced differently from the prices they were quoted. "We could save a lot of money in our department if we didn't have to correct so much of the salespeople's work. They are the most disorganized bunch of guys I've ever had to deal with." Sound familiar? Could this be your organization? What's wrong in these companies and what's contributing to so much hostility is customer service-related. Not external customers, but internal customers. The operations manager sees Kevin as a highly paid, but selfish and inconsiderate salesperson who totally disregards the systems the operations department has designed. Of course, the operations manager is partly correct. Kevin does appear to be a last minute sort of person who could benefit from some additional training in the basic principles of time management. Kevin is also operations' internal customer. Kevin generates the sales and gross profit that make the operations job necessary. Without Kevin -- and others like him -- this company would not need an operations department. There's also validity in the credit manager's criticism of the sales personnel. By nature, many salespeople are better at building customer relationships than they are at meticulously filling out credit applications. Salespeople need to be sensitive to the additional work they create for administrative personnel when they are sloppy with paperwork. Salespeople are internal customers to the credit department, however. Without salespeople, there would be little need for any of administrative staff. If salespeople are wise, they will do everything in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration. Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can b An Insight Into The Law: Getting A Temporary Legal Secretary Job course, the operations manager is partly correct. Kevin does appear to be a last minute sort of person who could benefit from some additional training in the basic principles of time management.Leaving school and embarking on a journey in the real world can be a daunting prospects these days. Although it is an extremely liberating feeling to be earning your own money and doing what you please when you please, you may experience difficulties in getting that step up the work ladder. It therefore may be a good idea to actually get experience whilst you are still studying. Temporary jobs are ideal for students still at college. You can earn good money and gain experience at the same time, working in a temporary legal secretary job for example.Law students would gain valuable experience of the way a legal firm works if they decided to apply for a temporary legal secretary job. Not only can you actually see how you could apply your legal knowledge in future, you would receive on site Kevin is also operations' internal customer. Kevin generates the sales and gross profit that make the operations job necessary. Without Kevin -- and others like him -- this company would not need an operations department. There's also validity in the credit manager's criticism of the sales personnel. By nature, many salespeople are better at building customer relationships than they are at meticulously filling out credit applications. Salespeople need to be sensitive to the additional work they create for administrative personnel when they are sloppy with paperwork. Salespeople are internal customers to the credit department, however. Without salespeople, there would be little need for any of administrative staff. If salespeople are wise, they will do everything in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration. Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can b How Your Company Benefit From Private Labeling Beef Jerky
What does this mean to sellers of private label beef jerky? It is a prime indicator that what was once an outdoor treat reserved for hunters and truckers is now sought after by the average housewife and consumer, especially since the endorsement of beef jerky as a healthy component of a low-fat diet. The market for beef jerky has doubled every year since 1991. Complementing your products with a private label beef jerky should be a consideration.What are the advantages of private label beef jerky?1. A company utilizing private label beef jerky does not have to invest in purchasing expensive plant equipment and can divert those funds internally.2. With private label beef jerky, the hassle of USDA approval is avoided, keeping a company focused on their core competencies. hing in their power to work just as hard at building good relationships with both operations and administrative staff as they do at building relationships with customers. Serving customers can be an uphill battle without the support of operations and administration. Intelligent salespeople must eventually learn that getting "in the face" of the operations manager is a formula for eventual failure. The manager may take the salesperson's side because he cannot afford to allow internal conflict to interfere with customer service, but human nature usually dictates that operation managers will make life miserable for salespeople who show too little respect for their job function. Operations is the internal customer of the sales force. Without their willingness to service customers, salespeople are helpless. It helps when employees in various departments take time to understand that different talents are required to perform different jobs. Frustrations can be lessened when all employees understand that stress caused as a result of human differences is natural. In fact, when we appreciate the value of human differences, we are usually more tolerent of them. And more importantly, it's only through this kind of natural conflict that organizational synergy is achieved. Even though it can be uncomfortable working with people who possess different personality characteristics from yours, these characteristics are almost always necessary to efficiently perform job functions that require different types of talent. Try this: Regardless of your job function, ask yourself this question: How efficient would this organization be if everyone here possessed my exact strengths and weaknesses? The answer is obvious. None of us possesses all of the characteristics, talent and chemistry necessary to perform all jobs in the company. The sooner everyone becomes willing to admit how much each employee needs each other, the quicker teamwork will improve. Begin immediately doing your part to be more understanding of human personality differences! Suggestion to managers: If you’ve never administered psychological assessments to the key people in your organization, I strongly suggest that you do so. The investment is less than $200 per person and the insight your people gain into their strengths and weaknesses can be really eye-opening. You can email Bill Lee @ Bill@BillLeeOnLine.com.
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