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Added for You - So What is Ownership?
School Fundraising - Plan a Dance-a-Thon s operating costs by five per cent.The Dance-a-Thon is not an original idea, but using a dance fundraiser as one of your primary fundraisers might be. Kids love it, especially at the middle school and high school level. Whether your group holds many fundraisers throughout the year, or relies on one large fundraiser, this might be a good solution.A Dance-a-Thon is probably most suited to school fundraising, but it could also be adapted to other groups as well. If you are investigating a Dance-a-Thon for a school fundraiser, a word to the wise, do it early in the school year.That is, within the first three months of the school year. If you go too late in the year, apathy can set in not only with students, but with the volunteers you’ll need to pull it off.The main ex What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had change The History of the Market System Peter A Hunter, author of Breaking the Mould looks at the concept of ownership and argues his case for why change the British Airways way doesn’t always fly.This article is an authorized excerpt from Ryan's book, Zero to One MillionOne of the most important advances needed for the creation of a market system took place sometime between 12000 and 10000 B.C. with the advent of specialization and the start of the Neolithic Age. Instead of each tribe hunting and gathering their food, different persons within each tribe would become experts at a certain task such as hunting, gathering, cooking, tool making, shelter making, or clothes making. As methods of agriculture improved, the first towns and cities were seen. Dependable food supplies allowed people to build permanent houses and settle in one area. As settlements increased in size, new forms of society such as religious centers, courts, and m In order to create a performance improvement we have to do something different. If we don't how can we possibly expect to make a change? So our problem is finding out what it is that needs changing. Many management models have been tried all with varying levels of success, from Kaizen to Six Sigma, TQM and a host of others. These models are not wrong, but they all suffer from the same failing. Somewhere in each instruction book there is a phrase that equates to the following: “The key to the successful implementation of this model is ownership.” Then we turn the page and begin the new chapter without ever coming across the instruction that tells us how to create that ‘ownership’. Ownership is a concept that has been used and abused for years but very few people are able to give it any meaningful definition. Without understanding what it is, how is it possible to create the conditions to allow it to happen? I prefer to think of ownership as the way that we feel about something. If it is mine, I own it, I will take care of it. If it is not mine I won’t take care of it, why should I? I don’t own it! The problem we have just created is that we have just defined ownership as the ability to care about something. That concept may be very well in a soft, pink, cuddly way but it hardly has a place in a business conversation. We want to talk about percentage points, hard savings, value add and other assorted sexy business type words. Businessmen don’t want to talk about caring. But wait a minute! How many people ever wash a hire car? Not many. Why should they? If the hire car doesn’t belong to me, why should I care? And yet most of us take care of our own cars. They don’t come with washing instructions and nobody tells us to wash them, but we do and lovingly maintain and care for them because they are ours. After two years the hire car that we did not wash has a residual value of practically zero because nobody will buy a car that has been driven for two years by people who did not care for it. The hire car company has no option, the hire car is scrapped. Meanwhile and in the same time period your car has attained its own residual value. It is worth ten or twelve thousand pounds. You can realise that value by selling the car or you can continue to use it reliably for another ten years. Suddenly the care that we gave the car has paid off. We can now say that the value of that care is the cars residual value of ten or twelve thousand pounds. A residual value that the car we did not care for does not have. Now we have a solid measurable effect on the bottom line that is directly attributed to our ability to care. The suggestion at the beginning of this article is that we have to first understand what we have to change before we can figure out how to change it. I suggest that what we have to change is the way that people feel about their work. We have to allow them to start to care about what they do. The first reaction to the suggestion that we can change the way people feel about their work is that it is nonsense. How on earth can we change the way people feel and where is the profit in it? We have already seen where the profit is, and changing the way that people feel about their work is something that happens every day and is as often as not reported on the news, except that we don’t recognise it for what it is. Several years ago I watched an interview with Rod Eddington, the then Chairman of British Airways(BA). He was understandably complaining about the market share that he had lost to Ryanair, Easyjet and the other budget airlines. But he was also being quite bullish about it. He explained that in the previous three years he had reduced British Airways operating costs by five per cent. What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had changed Why Corporate Identity is a Very Powerful Communication Branding Tools tion.The world of business is a very competitive one with each executive competing with the other to get the best of sales, profits and customers for their business. This means that all businesses interested in becoming successful have to concentrate in developing their corporate image and identity to improve in their business. Corporate identity is actually the image or identity by which the business wants to be perceived by their customers or the physical manifestation of the brand.Corporate identity is very much achieved by the brand building and marketing strategies of the company. So how actually is a brand built? It is done through the help of branding tools like logo designs, business cards and brochures. Brochures and advertisements are the Without understanding what it is, how is it possible to create the conditions to allow it to happen? I prefer to think of ownership as the way that we feel about something. If it is mine, I own it, I will take care of it. If it is not mine I won’t take care of it, why should I? I don’t own it! The problem we have just created is that we have just defined ownership as the ability to care about something. That concept may be very well in a soft, pink, cuddly way but it hardly has a place in a business conversation. We want to talk about percentage points, hard savings, value add and other assorted sexy business type words. Businessmen don’t want to talk about caring. But wait a minute! How many people ever wash a hire car? Not many. Why should they? If the hire car doesn’t belong to me, why should I care? And yet most of us take care of our own cars. They don’t come with washing instructions and nobody tells us to wash them, but we do and lovingly maintain and care for them because they are ours. After two years the hire car that we did not wash has a residual value of practically zero because nobody will buy a car that has been driven for two years by people who did not care for it. The hire car company has no option, the hire car is scrapped. Meanwhile and in the same time period your car has attained its own residual value. It is worth ten or twelve thousand pounds. You can realise that value by selling the car or you can continue to use it reliably for another ten years. Suddenly the care that we gave the car has paid off. We can now say that the value of that care is the cars residual value of ten or twelve thousand pounds. A residual value that the car we did not care for does not have. Now we have a solid measurable effect on the bottom line that is directly attributed to our ability to care. The suggestion at the beginning of this article is that we have to first understand what we have to change before we can figure out how to change it. I suggest that what we have to change is the way that people feel about their work. We have to allow them to start to care about what they do. The first reaction to the suggestion that we can change the way people feel about their work is that it is nonsense. How on earth can we change the way people feel and where is the profit in it? We have already seen where the profit is, and changing the way that people feel about their work is something that happens every day and is as often as not reported on the news, except that we don’t recognise it for what it is. Several years ago I watched an interview with Rod Eddington, the then Chairman of British Airways(BA). He was understandably complaining about the market share that he had lost to Ryanair, Easyjet and the other budget airlines. But he was also being quite bullish about it. He explained that in the previous three years he had reduced British Airways operating costs by five per cent. What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had change A Quick Guide To Online Directories maintain and care for them because they are ours.Business directories are an excellent platform to both advertise and find useful contacts, resources and supplies. Since the millennium the internet has become filled with directories to the point that at times they have swamped the search engines, Google and Yahoo for example. Such directories come in a many forms. The aim here is to discuss the differing directory types, their use on the internet and to offer tips on embarking one of the many paid for services.First off, we have the business to consumer directories, some of these are excellent and some not so good, yell.com probably standing out as the largest amongst them. Then we have the Business to Business directories, Applegate, Businessmagnet and Kellysearch being among the most well k After two years the hire car that we did not wash has a residual value of practically zero because nobody will buy a car that has been driven for two years by people who did not care for it. The hire car company has no option, the hire car is scrapped. Meanwhile and in the same time period your car has attained its own residual value. It is worth ten or twelve thousand pounds. You can realise that value by selling the car or you can continue to use it reliably for another ten years. Suddenly the care that we gave the car has paid off. We can now say that the value of that care is the cars residual value of ten or twelve thousand pounds. A residual value that the car we did not care for does not have. Now we have a solid measurable effect on the bottom line that is directly attributed to our ability to care. The suggestion at the beginning of this article is that we have to first understand what we have to change before we can figure out how to change it. I suggest that what we have to change is the way that people feel about their work. We have to allow them to start to care about what they do. The first reaction to the suggestion that we can change the way people feel about their work is that it is nonsense. How on earth can we change the way people feel and where is the profit in it? We have already seen where the profit is, and changing the way that people feel about their work is something that happens every day and is as often as not reported on the news, except that we don’t recognise it for what it is. Several years ago I watched an interview with Rod Eddington, the then Chairman of British Airways(BA). He was understandably complaining about the market share that he had lost to Ryanair, Easyjet and the other budget airlines. But he was also being quite bullish about it. He explained that in the previous three years he had reduced British Airways operating costs by five per cent. What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had change Getting Indecisive Prospects to Become Paying Clients ve to change before we can figure out how to change it.Imagine you’ve worked hard to market your services; you’ve attracted a prospective client, set up a “sales conversation” and gone through the whole sales process. Great job, but sometimes, no matter how hard we try, prospects don’t always sign up on the spot.Sometimes, a prospect needs some time to make the decision on whether or when they’d like to start working with you. What I’ve noticed over the years is that when this happens, most always, the sale never happens, probably because life gets in the way and what’s out of sight is out of mind.Often, this means you’ve lost them for good. UNLESS you use the proven method to get indecisive prospects to slide right into your practice, instead of slipping through your fi I suggest that what we have to change is the way that people feel about their work. We have to allow them to start to care about what they do. The first reaction to the suggestion that we can change the way people feel about their work is that it is nonsense. How on earth can we change the way people feel and where is the profit in it? We have already seen where the profit is, and changing the way that people feel about their work is something that happens every day and is as often as not reported on the news, except that we don’t recognise it for what it is. Several years ago I watched an interview with Rod Eddington, the then Chairman of British Airways(BA). He was understandably complaining about the market share that he had lost to Ryanair, Easyjet and the other budget airlines. But he was also being quite bullish about it. He explained that in the previous three years he had reduced British Airways operating costs by five per cent. What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had change The Market for Executives s operating costs by five per cent.Despite increased demand for high-caliber leadership in all segments of the technology community, it wasn’t until fairly recently that we saw the migration of top information technology executives between the federal and corporate sectors.Hank Philcox went from the Internal Revenue Service to become chief information officer at DynCorp, and Renny DiPentima moved from the Social Security Administration to SRA International Inc., where he became president of SRA Federal. It has quickly become clear that federal IT leadership experience laid the foundation for their success.As far back as the late 1970s, there were some non-political appointments into federal IT leadership roles. And in the late 1980s, Janet Barnes moved from MCI to become What he didn’t admit to was in those same three years he had also made sixteen thousand of his staff redundant. So how did the remaining British Airways staff feel when they found out that 16,000 of their colleagues had been made redundant? Did they feel good about it? Did it make them feel secure? Did it increase their trust in BA? I don’t think so. But think back a few years to the time before the redundancies. What sort of person used to work for a company like BA? Well they were the types that had dreamt about being a pilot since a young age or the stewardess whose flippant answer to the question: “Where are you going for the weekend?” was truthfully and smugly, “Barbados”. British Airways staff were people who competed for their jobs and having won, were living their dreams and getting paid for it. They were proud, motivated, and they cared about what they did. Three years later and the redundancies had changed the way they felt about their ‘dream’ jobs. This is the sort of change that occurs with monotonous regularity in industry. A caring and productive workforce is changed by what is done to them by their managers into one that turns up for the pay check and has no other interest in being there. British Airways changed the way their staff felt about their jobs. But they changed in the wrong direction. They are not the only organisation to have done so. To create a sustained performance improvement we need to change the way people feel, but we have to do it in the right direction. We have to allow staff to start to care about what they do. If this sounds difficult, consider, most people want to do a good job, they want to care about what they do. The only thing that stops them from caring is what is done to them in the work place. To make the change all we have to do is to find out what is stopping the workforce from caring, then stop doing it to them.
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