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    Growth
    Growth is vital to prosperity. Every person, every company, and every national economy must grow. Are you working for a company that is growing? Is it growing profitably and with no decline in velocity? What happens when the growth rate is low or even negative?If the company as a whole or your business unit lags behind competitors, your personal progress will suffer. If the company's sales are flat for five or six years, people will not have the opportunity to be promoted and move forward. Top managers will begin to cut costs, cut the number of employees, cut layers. They'll start reining in R&D and advertising, good people will leave, and eventually the company will go into a death spiral. People will suffer.In today's world, no growth means lagging behind in a world that grows every day. If you don't grow, competitors will eventually overtake you. Westinghouse, for example, used to be compared with GE. It lost its way, didn't focus on growth and productivity, and
    their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    <
    You Can Increase Your Profits Without Raising Your Prices
    This Article Is Based On Proven Real-Life Practice The ideas, concepts and strategies I advocate for adoption in this article are based on proven practice. In fact, the case study and specific analogies used are based on real-life activities that I personally partook in over a period of six years, as a manager in a large blue-chip multinational brewing company. Read my article titled "Use Custom Automation Of Your Spreadsheet Reports To Drive Down Costs And Increase Your Profits" for additional details of my experiences in this area, while in paid employment.What you learn from reading the above mentioned article, will hopefully encourage you to seriously explore ways to put the information provided in this article to good use for your business. The principles described below can be successfully adapted to virtually any business operation - be it service or production based.If you need any help with thinking up ways/means of putting them to use,
    Outsourcing seems to be the new-new thing and approximately 50% of our major corporations are doing it. What are the costs? The benefits? And what skills need to be managed in order to make it work optimally?

    Let’s get a clear understanding of what we mean by outsourcing: it’s the shifting of easily codified jobs - such as help desk support, call centers, system maintenance, and programming jobs – to countries that can manage them more cheaply.

    While this function is allegedly freeing up our people from some of the mundane tasks of our workplaces, it’s bringing with it an entirely new set of problems: how do we manage people across continents; how do we know our brand is being maintained when we have no direct control over managing foreign employees; how do we restructure our workspaces once our lower level jobs are farmed out.

    WHAT ARE THE COSTS OF OUTSOURCING?

    John Ribeiro in a recent article in Darwin, states: “According to the National Association of Software and Service Companies (NASSCOM)… outsourcing to India has saved the U.S. banking industry $6 billion to $8 billion.”

    Indeed, I’ve heard it said that the only reason American companies are outsourcing work is to save money. Let’s take a brief look at the pros and cons of the financials for a moment:

    Cost savings: mainly in the area of salaries and management time.

    Additional expenditures: vendor selection (legal, travel, time), exchange rates, training, time lag issues, client retention, management or techie retraining.

    One of the costs I’ve heard discussed is the human cost: that company employees get resentful when their job descriptions get changed, and have a period of time where they suffer resistance. Eventually, they do come ‘round to recognizing that they are being given higher-value tasks in place of their old work – assuming that they even desire new tasks and don’t end up quitting. There don’t seem to be any figures available on this cost.

    But there is an additional, unspoken cost. Our relationship with the end customer.

    We’ve all dealt with service people from India when we call to ask a question of a vendor. First there is the long, long delay before the phone gets answered. And then there is the accent.

    Are the service reps and techies smart? Yes, they are. Are they smarter than Americans? It depends on the person. But they are always cheaper. Do they do the job? Usually. Depends on how well they’ve been trained and managed. They certainly know what to say, how to say it, how to answer questions.

    But what about brand management? Do they give the identical service that the company espouses in-house (or, um, in-States)? The answer here is, generally, ‘no’ and deserves further discussion.

    HOW DO OUTSOURCED REPS DELIVER BRAND AMBASSADORSHIP Because lower-level jobs are being filled by people who speak English as a second language, AND who have not had the appreciation of ‘service’ instilled in them since birth, these foreign reps will, at best, do a technically good job. Say what you want: we Americans are raised understanding that we must serve customers and must be served by vendors. People in India are raised to believe they are a replenishable commodity.

    Unless trained to do so, the foreign workers will NOT carry the company standard, and in a problem situation, may run. I’ve had several people hang up on me when it became clear that my problem was more complex than they could manage.

    Do I shrug, and say, “Oh well. He was Indian. He didn’t know any better.” Or do I say, “Why isn’t ABC Company giving me the service they promise on their ads?”

    Every single person who works in a company – Every. Single. Person. – is a company’s Brand Ambassador. That means, those young Indian people living in Bangalore (I’ve been there. Outside of the pollution in the city, it’s lovely. Smells like sandalwood throughout the villages.) or wherever, must act exactly like the people you have in the States. If you don’t, you are not managing your brand appropriately.

    And therein lies the largest problem created by Outsourcing (other than taking jobs away from an already depleted workforce here in the States): how do American managers effectively communicate with the foreign providers who are answering our phones and doing our programming? How do we make sure that the way we treat customers here in the States is the same way we treat customers in Malaysia, or wherever?

    What is our brand? And how do we manage the brand over time and through space?

    We need to create a new way to transfer skills and beliefs across continents in order to ensure that our brand is represented effectively in every client interaction. Every client interaction.

    BELIEF AND SKILLS TRANSFER For some reason, some companies still think their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    <
    Open Door Policy? Open Mind Policy?
    I was giving a presentation on “ the Value of Recognition” to the office workers of a large Canadian City. The City Commissioner ended his welcome to those present with these words, “ I have an open door policy so I want to encourage you to come and talk to me when you have a concern.” When he left I heard a couple of people in the front row say with a hint of sarcasm, “ Yeah sure. He has an open door policy as long as what you have to say is flattering and doesn’t rock the boat.”We all have known leaders like this and we all have had similar reactions to them. It is quite apparent that many managers and supervisors don’t listen well and are easily threatened when a challenge or criticism is made by someone over whom they have authority.I recall having a supervisor ask me to schedule an appointment to see him. He wanted to tap my brain. I should have been suspicious right from the start because in over 20 years he had never once asked my opinion on anything.
    save money. Let’s take a brief look at the pros and cons of the financials for a moment:

    Cost savings: mainly in the area of salaries and management time.

    Additional expenditures: vendor selection (legal, travel, time), exchange rates, training, time lag issues, client retention, management or techie retraining.

    One of the costs I’ve heard discussed is the human cost: that company employees get resentful when their job descriptions get changed, and have a period of time where they suffer resistance. Eventually, they do come ‘round to recognizing that they are being given higher-value tasks in place of their old work – assuming that they even desire new tasks and don’t end up quitting. There don’t seem to be any figures available on this cost.

    But there is an additional, unspoken cost. Our relationship with the end customer.

    We’ve all dealt with service people from India when we call to ask a question of a vendor. First there is the long, long delay before the phone gets answered. And then there is the accent.

    Are the service reps and techies smart? Yes, they are. Are they smarter than Americans? It depends on the person. But they are always cheaper. Do they do the job? Usually. Depends on how well they’ve been trained and managed. They certainly know what to say, how to say it, how to answer questions.

    But what about brand management? Do they give the identical service that the company espouses in-house (or, um, in-States)? The answer here is, generally, ‘no’ and deserves further discussion.

    HOW DO OUTSOURCED REPS DELIVER BRAND AMBASSADORSHIP Because lower-level jobs are being filled by people who speak English as a second language, AND who have not had the appreciation of ‘service’ instilled in them since birth, these foreign reps will, at best, do a technically good job. Say what you want: we Americans are raised understanding that we must serve customers and must be served by vendors. People in India are raised to believe they are a replenishable commodity.

    Unless trained to do so, the foreign workers will NOT carry the company standard, and in a problem situation, may run. I’ve had several people hang up on me when it became clear that my problem was more complex than they could manage.

    Do I shrug, and say, “Oh well. He was Indian. He didn’t know any better.” Or do I say, “Why isn’t ABC Company giving me the service they promise on their ads?”

    Every single person who works in a company – Every. Single. Person. – is a company’s Brand Ambassador. That means, those young Indian people living in Bangalore (I’ve been there. Outside of the pollution in the city, it’s lovely. Smells like sandalwood throughout the villages.) or wherever, must act exactly like the people you have in the States. If you don’t, you are not managing your brand appropriately.

    And therein lies the largest problem created by Outsourcing (other than taking jobs away from an already depleted workforce here in the States): how do American managers effectively communicate with the foreign providers who are answering our phones and doing our programming? How do we make sure that the way we treat customers here in the States is the same way we treat customers in Malaysia, or wherever?

    What is our brand? And how do we manage the brand over time and through space?

    We need to create a new way to transfer skills and beliefs across continents in order to ensure that our brand is represented effectively in every client interaction. Every client interaction.

    BELIEF AND SKILLS TRANSFER For some reason, some companies still think their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    <
    Safety In Confined Spaces
    Some examples of construction site confined spaces are sewers, trenches, pits, and storage tanks. Confined spaces generally have limited options for entry and exit as well as poor ventilation and air circulation, which is linked to hazardous atmospheres.The lack of natural ventilation and air movement stems from hazardous atmospheres, which is a major construction safety and health issue for workers in confined spaces. There are three major hazardous atmospheres that present a construction safety concern in confined spaces of which constructions must become aware: oxygen-deficient, toxic, and flammable. In order to determine if the atmosphere in a confined area is hazardous; and, if so, which type of hazard it represents, thorough testing of the entire confined area (the bottom, middle, and top) must be administered.Oxygen-deficient atmospheres in confined spaces have less than 19.5 percent available oxygen, which means no persons should ever enter without the appro
    they do the job? Usually. Depends on how well they’ve been trained and managed. They certainly know what to say, how to say it, how to answer questions.

    But what about brand management? Do they give the identical service that the company espouses in-house (or, um, in-States)? The answer here is, generally, ‘no’ and deserves further discussion.

    HOW DO OUTSOURCED REPS DELIVER BRAND AMBASSADORSHIP Because lower-level jobs are being filled by people who speak English as a second language, AND who have not had the appreciation of ‘service’ instilled in them since birth, these foreign reps will, at best, do a technically good job. Say what you want: we Americans are raised understanding that we must serve customers and must be served by vendors. People in India are raised to believe they are a replenishable commodity.

    Unless trained to do so, the foreign workers will NOT carry the company standard, and in a problem situation, may run. I’ve had several people hang up on me when it became clear that my problem was more complex than they could manage.

    Do I shrug, and say, “Oh well. He was Indian. He didn’t know any better.” Or do I say, “Why isn’t ABC Company giving me the service they promise on their ads?”

    Every single person who works in a company – Every. Single. Person. – is a company’s Brand Ambassador. That means, those young Indian people living in Bangalore (I’ve been there. Outside of the pollution in the city, it’s lovely. Smells like sandalwood throughout the villages.) or wherever, must act exactly like the people you have in the States. If you don’t, you are not managing your brand appropriately.

    And therein lies the largest problem created by Outsourcing (other than taking jobs away from an already depleted workforce here in the States): how do American managers effectively communicate with the foreign providers who are answering our phones and doing our programming? How do we make sure that the way we treat customers here in the States is the same way we treat customers in Malaysia, or wherever?

    What is our brand? And how do we manage the brand over time and through space?

    We need to create a new way to transfer skills and beliefs across continents in order to ensure that our brand is represented effectively in every client interaction. Every client interaction.

    BELIEF AND SKILLS TRANSFER For some reason, some companies still think their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    <
    Better Internal Proposals
    A colleague of mine has a problem. We belong to the same association and he's been trying for quite some time, without success, to get support for one of his proposals.His lack of results came to mind when a reader asked for ideas about making internal proposals more effective. As she noted in her message, it's necessary to make a business case for proposals, including costs and returns.She's right, and I agree wholeheartedly. In fact I just finished a proposal to an organization I work with and had it accepted on that sort of basis.But, I think all good proposals start where my colleague has trouble. They start with a clear and concise statement about the project: "This is what I recommend, this is the issue (problem or opportunity) it addresses, and these are the consequences (benefits) of doing what I recommend."I frequently come across situations where ideas don't fly because the person making the proposal hasn't prepared that kind of analysis and
    ey promise on their ads?”

    Every single person who works in a company – Every. Single. Person. – is a company’s Brand Ambassador. That means, those young Indian people living in Bangalore (I’ve been there. Outside of the pollution in the city, it’s lovely. Smells like sandalwood throughout the villages.) or wherever, must act exactly like the people you have in the States. If you don’t, you are not managing your brand appropriately.

    And therein lies the largest problem created by Outsourcing (other than taking jobs away from an already depleted workforce here in the States): how do American managers effectively communicate with the foreign providers who are answering our phones and doing our programming? How do we make sure that the way we treat customers here in the States is the same way we treat customers in Malaysia, or wherever?

    What is our brand? And how do we manage the brand over time and through space?

    We need to create a new way to transfer skills and beliefs across continents in order to ensure that our brand is represented effectively in every client interaction. Every client interaction.

    BELIEF AND SKILLS TRANSFER For some reason, some companies still think their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    <
    Year-End Fundraising Letter Appeals: 10 Tips to Give Them a Boost at Christmas
    If your non-profit organization is like many others, you receive half or more or your contributed income at the end of the year as part of what used to be called the "Christmas Appeal." In recent years it has come to be known as, in politically correct North America at least, the "Year-End Appeal" or "Seasonal Appeal."Which means your year-end appeal letter can make or break your year, financially speaking. Here are some tips on how to craft a winning year-end fundraising letter appeal package.1. Keep it simple One non-profit ministry that I shall not name mailed their year-end appeal letter in a poly bag along with their donor newsletter. They had been late in getting their newsletter in the mail and so, to save on postage, they mailed it along with the seasonal appeal letter. The campaign bombed, and bombed big. Donors, as far as we could tell, read the full-colour newsletter and ignored the letter that came with it. So my advice is this:
    their ‘brand’ is a visual logo rather than a complete relationship and story. Our brand is the story we tell about ourselves to our customers (defined as employees, vendors, and purchasers of our products) and the relationship we have with all of them. Think about Harley Davidson: somehow they manage to get people tattooing the brand on their bodies! Think about Apple: they’ve taken their IPOD and created fabulous ads that make us get more atuned (ahem… sorry) to what their brand is: cutting edge, different, funky, creative, and funfunfun. Not to mention that the ad itself makes me want to dance – and then dance to a store and buy a new MAC. (Note: their website does NOT maintain their brand, however.)

    OK. So we’ve got this story and this customer experience in our States-side company, but we don’t have the way forward to ensure we duplicate this with our Outsourced employees.

    I recently met with a new client team as they were incorporating an Indian vendor’s offering into their roles. They had spent 4 days together, aligning their outcomes, working relationships, communications, and jobs. Their mission statement was the same, their company vision. They had me in to do a final check.

    I began by asking the new vendor what his job was: to hire the best techies around. Good. What else? Well, what else is there?

    “How do you plan on managing Company X’s brand?” “What do you mean? All I have to do is hire the right people. After that, they’re on their own.” “Really! And how are they going to be managed daily? How will you ensure that the service they offer in the States will be the same service you offer from here?” “John (the tech manager) will manage it.” “John, do you recognize that as one of your new jobs?” ”Um, I guess I hadn’t. “How will the customer’s specs be delivered? Will the Indian tech folks speak with the customers directly?” “No.” “So, how will the information be transferred across the sea?”

    You get the point here. They hadn’t thought through all of the daily dynamics. Within an hour, no one knew their jobs or their roles, people were switching job descriptions on one hand, and recognizing new, unspoken, aspects of their jobs on the other.

    This is a small company. It’s highly likely that larger, more experienced companies, know how to ask all of the right questions to get it right from the start. But how many don’t?

    Have your internal and outsourced teams design communication systems that will make it viable to ensure all aspects of your brand get carried through from one country to the other. Make sure it’s seamless – that all customers get treated exactly the same, regardless of where your support staff sit. Make sure that the folks who are giving work up to the outsourced people will take responsibility for it, and be happy with the new work they’ll be undertaking.

    It’s not ok just to manage the vendor by choosing wisely. It’s imperative you have a hands-on relationship with each employee, regardless of where they sit. Remember: they are all your customers.

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