| Added for You |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Management > Decisions, Decisions |
|
Added for You - Decisions, Decisions
Are You Satisfied With Your Business s well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group.Did you know that satisfaction is the number one emotion people want to experience about their life and business? Yes, fame and fortune are up there, but satisfaction is the key. Satisfaction is about contentment, gratitude and pure joy. Are you satisfied with your business and your life? If not, read on and see how you can transform your life in the simplest method possible.To be satisfied is to enjoy each step along the way, to be able to integrate the pract • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share Vending Machine Sales - Can Be Profitable Thirty years ago, Jerry Harvey, a professor at George Washington University told a true story about an incident that occurred when he and his wife visited his in-laws in Texas one summer. On a scorching August afternoon, they were enjoying a game of dominoes and cold lemonade on a shady porch when Professor Harvey’s father-in-law suggested that they drive to Abilene and have lunch in the cafeteria. Harvey later explained that he thought it was a crazy idea, but he didn’t want to spoil everyone’s fun, especially since his wife and mother-in-law wanted to go. The four of them climbed in an un-air-conditioned Buick and drove 53 miles to Abilene, with temperatures soaring to 104 degrees. After arriving at the cafeteria, they ate a mediocre lunch before heading home. Exhausted, hot and unhappy with the experience, they gratefully crawled into the chairs that dotted the porch.A lot of people are thinking that money is difficult to make in vending machines business sales or the profit is not high enough. Actually the sales of the machine greatly depends on its use and where you put it. You will need a business license or a permit in order to put your vending machine on the right location.The start up price for businesses such as in the vending machine field differs depending on the kind of vending machine that will be used. In most cases, Only after they returned home did they discover that none of them had actually wanted to go to Abilene. Harvey’s father-in-law was just making conversation, certain that no one would take him up on his offer. None of the others wanted to drive that far on dusty roads, but not one of them offered an objection. They each assumed that the others wanted to make the trip. Does anything about that story sound familiar? Do decisions sometimes get made in your office (or at home) because you make assumptions about what you think other people want? What kind of a decision maker are you? Have you taken corporate rabbit trails to Abilene? When you’re sitting in a meeting, do you fail to communicate your desires, your ideas, your beliefs? Do you make assumptions about what you think others want? Here are 5 tips for developing your decision making skills: • Gather as much information as you can. Too often we make decisions based on incomplete information. Take the time to really understand the problem or opportunity and be comfortable choosing from your options, or consider waiting. • Know yourself. Are you the type of person who focuses primarily on the task at hand, or is your focus on the people involved? If you know yourself, you can pull in people with strong points where you are weak. • Find out other people’s opinions.. Professor Harvey’s father-in-law could have been more direct by telling the group what he was thinking. He could also have checked what everyone else thought about the idea. • Question assumptions. Question your own assumptions as well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group. • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share Sea Freight - The Unsung Hero of the Transportation Industry ove 53 miles to Abilene, with temperatures soaring to 104 degrees. After arriving at the cafeteria, they ate a mediocre lunch before heading home. Exhausted, hot and unhappy with the experience, they gratefully crawled into the chairs that dotted the porch.Traditionally, road freight has dominated the UK transportation industry. However, according to industry experts, sea freight offers significant advantages over road transport. They believe that these advantages will gradually erode the industry’s reliance on the roads forcing it to re-evaluate the benefits of moving goods by waterIn the UK, around 2 billion tonnes of freight is transported annually. However, of this amount only 7% is transported by water whil Only after they returned home did they discover that none of them had actually wanted to go to Abilene. Harvey’s father-in-law was just making conversation, certain that no one would take him up on his offer. None of the others wanted to drive that far on dusty roads, but not one of them offered an objection. They each assumed that the others wanted to make the trip. Does anything about that story sound familiar? Do decisions sometimes get made in your office (or at home) because you make assumptions about what you think other people want? What kind of a decision maker are you? Have you taken corporate rabbit trails to Abilene? When you’re sitting in a meeting, do you fail to communicate your desires, your ideas, your beliefs? Do you make assumptions about what you think others want? Here are 5 tips for developing your decision making skills: • Gather as much information as you can. Too often we make decisions based on incomplete information. Take the time to really understand the problem or opportunity and be comfortable choosing from your options, or consider waiting. • Know yourself. Are you the type of person who focuses primarily on the task at hand, or is your focus on the people involved? If you know yourself, you can pull in people with strong points where you are weak. • Find out other people’s opinions.. Professor Harvey’s father-in-law could have been more direct by telling the group what he was thinking. He could also have checked what everyone else thought about the idea. • Question assumptions. Question your own assumptions as well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group. • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share Staying Motivated In A Struggling Economy he trip.Fear is a very powerful emotion. When we live in fear, even of the unknown, there is a tendency to isolate, exert control and be on the defensive. It drains our energy and creates exhaustion. The majority of coaching conversations I am having these days are about this fear generated by a struggling economy. Worry over business progress, finding a job, salary and bonus eliminations, increased job performance expectations have taken over people’s mindsets thus d Does anything about that story sound familiar? Do decisions sometimes get made in your office (or at home) because you make assumptions about what you think other people want? What kind of a decision maker are you? Have you taken corporate rabbit trails to Abilene? When you’re sitting in a meeting, do you fail to communicate your desires, your ideas, your beliefs? Do you make assumptions about what you think others want? Here are 5 tips for developing your decision making skills: • Gather as much information as you can. Too often we make decisions based on incomplete information. Take the time to really understand the problem or opportunity and be comfortable choosing from your options, or consider waiting. • Know yourself. Are you the type of person who focuses primarily on the task at hand, or is your focus on the people involved? If you know yourself, you can pull in people with strong points where you are weak. • Find out other people’s opinions.. Professor Harvey’s father-in-law could have been more direct by telling the group what he was thinking. He could also have checked what everyone else thought about the idea. • Question assumptions. Question your own assumptions as well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group. • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share Interior Redesign Career - Get The Facts ke the time to really understand the problem or opportunity and be comfortable choosing from your options, or consider waiting.The field of interior decorating is fast changing as many traditional designers have been forced to add interior redesign to their services just to stay competitive. Hiring a decorator is no longer just for the rich and famous! Interior redesign is a credible and affordable service which has opened the decorating market for just about everyone.If you have dreamed of becoming an interior decorator consider entering the alternative decorating field of Interior Redesi • Know yourself. Are you the type of person who focuses primarily on the task at hand, or is your focus on the people involved? If you know yourself, you can pull in people with strong points where you are weak. • Find out other people’s opinions.. Professor Harvey’s father-in-law could have been more direct by telling the group what he was thinking. He could also have checked what everyone else thought about the idea. • Question assumptions. Question your own assumptions as well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group. • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share Upgrading Your IT Data Center Affordably s well as those of others. Ask yourself what assumptions you’re making about others in the group.Your IT data center is the heart and nervous system of your business. Almost every transaction depends on having reliable, supportable technology. Servers, storage devices, routers, switches, cabling, telecom systems, even the simple KVM switch all play important and mission critical roles in making sure your business can run like a well oiled machine.All businesses with data centers are constantly juggling the competing demands of price and functionality. How can • Learn from your mistakes. Don’t let past mistakes prevent you from being actively involved in making new decisions. Use your mistakes to help you learn more about the advantages and disadvantages of the decision you’re facing. In Peter Senge’s book The Fifth Discipline Fieldbook, he describes a protocol for making decisions mindfully. 1) Pay attention to your intentions. Ask yourself, “What do I want to happen?” 2) Balance advocacy with inquiry. Listen to each other’s positions as well as share your own ideas. 3) Build shared meanings of words. Words have different meanings for people. Check the meanings with one another so you don’t walk away with ambiguous understandings of who meant what and who will do what. 4) Use self-awareness as a resource. Ask yourself, “What am I thinking? What am I feeling? What do I want at this moment?” 5) Explore impasses. Ask, “What do we agree on and what do we disagree on?” Pinpoint the source of the disagreement. I hope these ideas will be helpful enough that you won’t take a metaphorical trip to corporate Abilene, but will instead make success your final destination. © 2005 Julane Borth
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Cultural Sensitivity in Business A Freelance Lifestyle - The Pros of Pursuing One Customer Service for Departments of Motor Vehicles
|