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Hub You - Overcome Traditions That Delay Improvements
Beware Industry Association Leaders Who Act Like Bureaucrats s shunned.If you own a small or medium sized business and you believe that by joining an industry association they will some how help you, then you might be rather upset in the future to learn that your association acts more like a bureaucracy than an actual business operation. Some say that organizations and associations act like bureaucracies in order to deal with the government bureaucracies better. This might be so but;Anyone who thinks that an Industry Association somehow helps the little guy, well they simply do not understand how all this really works. First thing you need to know is who is funding the association? Who are its members and who is paying its bills? If you have service vendors to the industry paying its bills then you need to be very careful, because these companies make money off the regulations in place. Parasite companies if you will - Insurance, leasing companies, on-going education firms and lawyers.As a case study, let's take a look at a Trucking Association for instance and specifically let's look at the Illinois Trucking Association and their various Premium and Gold Star Members. We find insurance agents, pu The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Secrets To Halving Your Business Electricity Bills INTRODUCTION TO HOW TRADITION STALLS IMPROVEMENTSWhen it comes to electricity, small and medium size enterprises can never assume they are getting a good deal. In fact, it's safe to say that - as the market stands today - businesses should assume the opposite is true, and that they are being taken for a ride by the big six energy providers. One of several smaller providers of business electricity, Electricity4Business has just compiled a free guide to help commercial electricity customers see through the dirty tricks.Despite the bad publicity heaped on industry fat cats, over 20% of customers have never switched electricity providers since deregulation of the market. The reason is that they simply don't have access to the right information. This document not only states the case for switching, it also provides all the necessary information and shows businesses how to carry it through.In the UK, the chances are high that a small or medium size business receives its electricity from one of the six major companies. In fact, between them, British Gas, EDF Energy, Npower, Powergen, Scottish & Southern Energy and Scottish Power share 96% of the market. Despite the promise of compe If It Ain't Broke, Don't Fix It A motorist asks a farmer for a glass of water. The farmer obliges, using a hand pump to draw water from a well. The pump handle turns close to a board, and the farmer curses as he scrapes his knuckles against it. Motorist: Why not move that board? It serves no purpose. Farmer: It's been there since my father's time. If it was good enough for him, it is good enough for me. Aping Human Beings Imagine a cage containing five apes. In the cage, hang a banana on a string over some stairs. Before long, as the story goes, an ape will decide to go up the stairs to grab the banana. As soon as that ape touches the stairs, spray all the apes with icy water. After awhile, another ape will approach the stairs with the same result: All the apes are sprayed with cold water. Do this repeatedly and then just watch when another ape tries to climb the stairs. The other apes will attempt to prevent the ape, even though no cold water is sprayed on them. Next remove one ape from the cage and replace that ape with a new one. The new ape sees the banana and wants to climb the stairs. To its horror, all of the other apes attack. After another thwarted attempt, the new ape knows that if it tries to climb the stairs, it will be assaulted. Now remove another of the original five apes and replace it with a new one. The newcomer goes to the stairs and is attacked. The previous newcomer enthusiastically takes part in the punishment although it has no idea why it was not permitted to climb the stairs. After replacing the third, fourth, and fifth original apes, all the apes that had been sprayed with cold water are gone from the cage. Nevertheless, no ape ever again approaches the stairs. Why not? 'Because that the way it's always been around here.' Sound familiar? TRADITIONAL WAYS TO TOE THE LINE The Pecking-Order Tradition: ' After You, Alphonse ' In most organizations, decisions have to follow a certain pathway. Someone who needs a decision begins the process by asking his or her boss. The boss asks her or his boss. This process continues until someone has the authority and wants to decide. When the decision is finally made, communicating the answer has to follow the same path in reverse down through the organizational pathway. Nothing has changed about this process since the days of feudal kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make progress? Hardly. The Hazing Tradition: Get Down! Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process. The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' The Top 4 Things To Consider When Purchasing On Online Business Opportunity t if it tries to climb the stairs, it will be assaulted. Now remove another of the original five apes and replace it with a new one. The newcomer goes to the stairs and is attacked. The previous newcomer enthusiastically takes part in the punishment although it has no idea why it was not permitted to climb the stairs.The top 4 things to consider when purchasing on online business opportunity.1.) When purchasing an online business opportunity, the first thing you need to look for is what type of products you will be selling. Most online opportunities are affiliate driven. This means, that there are several different products that you will be selling. By becoming an affiliate, you will be helping other people sell their products, and you earn a percentage of the sale. Normally, this percentage is pretty high. Sometimes you can even earn up to 75%. Being an affiliate is also nice, because then, there are no products for you to store or warehouse, someone else does all that for you. Being an affiliate will make you money, because it allows you to have several streams of income.2.) The next thing to look at when purchasing an online business opportunity, is marketing. Marketing is the most important aspect of any home-based internet business. Without marketing, there is no way to get the word out about your products. Google Adwords, and Google Adsense, are the two most popular and easy to understand forms of marketing out there. Any g After replacing the third, fourth, and fifth original apes, all the apes that had been sprayed with cold water are gone from the cage. Nevertheless, no ape ever again approaches the stairs. Why not? 'Because that the way it's always been around here.' Sound familiar? TRADITIONAL WAYS TO TOE THE LINE The Pecking-Order Tradition: ' After You, Alphonse ' In most organizations, decisions have to follow a certain pathway. Someone who needs a decision begins the process by asking his or her boss. The boss asks her or his boss. This process continues until someone has the authority and wants to decide. When the decision is finally made, communicating the answer has to follow the same path in reverse down through the organizational pathway. Nothing has changed about this process since the days of feudal kings and their lords. But is this the fastest way to make progress? Hardly. The Hazing Tradition: Get Down! Organizations don't like to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process. The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Stay In Touch With Your Customers Forever ike to allow newcomers to become part of the group until the new people are put through some ridiculous initiation that had humbled the organization's veterans. Having humiliating experiences in common makes everyone feel more comfortable with one another. The apes in the cage would recognize the process.A newsletter is a powerful weapon in your marketing arsenal. Do you have a personal newsletter you send to past, present, and future customers at this time? Probably not. Most salespeople do not use newsletters. This is a serious mistake.A simple newsletter is a very powerful tool to keep you in front of your past customers and build trust and credibility with your present and future customers. In one year's time a newsletter can double your business and income by itself. They are that powerful!You do not have to be a great writer to produce an interesting newsletter with valuable and useful information and send it to your customers and prospects. If you have information they can use and appreciate they will look forward to reading it. It can be written on the computer, printed out and copied and sent by stamped mail, or it can be sent by email. You can get your flooring information from trade newsletters and magazines and reps bringing in new products. You can get it from the internet. You can get the content you need from your experiences in the business.In addition to flooring news you add reviews of local The Slow Walking Tradition: Take the Tour Few people like it when pressure is put on them. To avoid that pressure, many people will pretend to be at full effectiveness ' while working well below their self-perceived potential. When the big bosses arrive for an inspection, those who host the visitors will take the big brass on a long, slow tour designed to demonstrate that everyone is fully and effectively engaged. Every stop will have been rehearsed for weeks in advance, and everything will be perfect. This tradition has been around for a long time. During a famine, Catherine the Great took a tour of Russia to see how the peasants were doing. A prosperous-appearing village was erected along the banks of the river just before her arrival. That night, the village was disassembled and transported down river to be erected again for viewing by the Czarina the next day in a new location. The Time-Is-Money Tradition: How Much Is This Conversation Going to Cost Me? Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Websites For Small Automobile Dealers Me?Ok you have a used car dealer license. You have a great location with lots of traffic going by the front of your lot. You have your ads in the local papers (news paper/auto trader/I wanta/Thrifty Nickel/other print ad book). You may even be flirting with TV spots or Radio spots. So are you selling all the inventory you want to? If you are selling all the inventory that you want to sell then close this article and have a nice day.So you are still here? I guess that means you would like to sell more cars this coming month. Well let me ask you a few questions. Do you have a website? By a website I mean with your own address (http://www.carlotname.com) not a little bitty one page site at cars.com but your own site. If you don't have your own site why not? Ok lets list the reasons.Lee's Top 5 Reasons for not having a website. 1.Websites cost too much. 2.I do not need a website my customers all know me. 3.I do not know how to do a website. 4.I do not know how to use a computer. 5.I never had a website before. 6.My grandfather started this biz selling model T fords we don't need a website.I cou Many organizations run themselves to be cost efficient. With stop watches and clipboards in hand, cost analysts ensure that activities not earning an adequate profit are ruthlessly slashed. In this way, profits are increased. Or are they? Sometimes the effects of the cost cutting actually harm profits. Here's an example: There's no profit in taking back unsatisfactory products. Stores will put as few people as possible working on this task. There may be 30 customers in the store and 19 of them will be in line to return items while a single clerk works as slowly as possible. But wait in too many of these long lines and customers will buy somewhere else ' where the return lines aren't so long. A lost customer can cost a company thousands in profits. Sometimes that short-term cutting focus is the wrong way to look at things. The Isolation Tradition: Solitary Confinement for Learning Development Most organizations are reluctant to credit innovations and ideas that have prospered in other organizations. Engineers often skeptically refer to the sloppy work that everyone else does. Ironically, this approach is more often known as the 'Not Invented Here' Syndrome that almost always means falling behind the competition because everything 'Not Invented Here' is shunned. The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Contractor Estimating - What They Need To Know s shunned.There are many different types of contractors. Each type has specific guidelines that they must follow.In the construction industry, the guidelines can be very strict. In today busy world, those who are in the market for a contractor do not want to take any chances of hiring someone that is not properly trained. They prefer to hire someone who has a degree in one of five different fields. These fields are building construction, construction science, construction management, architecture or engineering.Many construction estimators who work in the contractor-estimating field have extensive experience in construction this knowledge comes from working in the construction industry for many years.Most consumers have little knowledge of the construction industry. Those who do have some knowledge of areas of construction such as heavy construction, masonry work, and electrical or plumbing applications find that they have an edge on everyone else.Contract estimating is a highly focused industry. The person estimating the contract must have knowledge and experience in the industry that they are estimating. In the constructi The Inertia Tradition: Millwork Is My Trade In 1848, gold was found at Sutter's Mill in northern California. There were literally large nuggets sitting in the river beds that could be picked up by the handful. Five minutes' labor would pay for a week's expenses. Sutter lost his business as a result. He kept trying to earn money with his sawmill while workers quit to carry off fortunes in gold. Similarly, many organizations focus on their past activities rather than grasping the great potential of the present. STALL ERASERS Many people find it hard to challenge their old ways of doing business, especially when stalled by tradition. Here are some examples of how leaders have been able to erase harmful traditions: ' Pretend to be a new management team that has been asked to turn around the problems brought about by the prior management's complacency. ' Take the least productive tasks you do now and delegate them to someone else who will do them well and appreciate the opportunity. Encourage that person to delegate her or his least productive tasks in the same way. And so on. ' If the methods you've been using don't work, begin controlled experiments to test all other ways even ways that call for reversing your direction. ' Turn the best performer's approach into a simple process that those with no experience can duplicate through automated promptings. ' Make it easy and quick for customers to solve the problems they encounter. Assume customers will behave honestly if that can help speed up and ease problems. They'll reward you with continual word-of-mouth praise and increased loyalty. STALLBUSTERS Identify Your Organization's Traditions and Their Original Purposes Most traditions start with a purpose, but others start by accident. Before changing something, you should find out if the tradition still serves some useful purpose by asking the following questions: ' What traditions does the organization have that slow down or increase the cost of accomplishing important results? ' What benefits do these traditions provide? ' What values were intended to be served by the traditions? ' What problems are created by the traditions? Identify Empowering Traditions You Can Use to Improve Performance Traditions are powerful management tools for reinforcing good habits. People are more willing to abandon their own traditions when they learn that another organization's different traditions have led to high performance. ' What traditions do other organizations have that speed up progress, improve the results, and effectively reduce costs? ' Which of these traditions are consistent with your organization's values? ' How could the traditions be made more consistent with and supportive of your organization's values? ' Which aspects of these traditions are exciting and fun for people in your organization? Establish New or Amended Traditions What aspects of your organization do you want to have operating on automatic pilot for all employees? One of the best examples of automatic response is a tradition at Ritz-Carlton hotels. Whenever an employee notices or is told by a guest about a problem, the employee has the responsibility to fix the problem immediately. That tradition ensures that guests receive quick, courteous solutions while feeling encouraged to bring problems to the staff's attention. Higher guest satisfaction and loyalty usually follow from that tradition. To create or change traditions in your organization, ask the following questions: ' What are the three most useful traditions your organization could have? ' How can the new traditions be established so that everyone will be delighted? ' How can you combine elements of existing traditions with useful elements of these new traditions? ' What has been the best way that your organization has previously launched traditions? Copyright 2007 Donald W. Mitchell, All Rights Reserved
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