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Casual Articles - Are Your Employees Aligned With Your Brand?
The Point of Commercials is to Get You To Do Something? routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise.In business the point of an advertisement or a commercial on the radio or TV is to teach you to do something; either to get you to buy a product or make a decision. If you make a decision then we all know that psychologically in human nature is to reinforce that decision. Therefore the media and commercials can be a very valuable tool for getting someone to make a decision or convincing you of something.This is why most political figures who win elections have the most airtight on TV and the media knows this and also knows that costs a lot of money and this is how they can make huge revenues during political season. It also doesn't matter if it is a large or small market it still works the same way for politicians.In local markets a politician can advertise on the cable TV channel and expect to get a large number of votes from people who sit by the television set during certain peak hours and watch their TV. It works and this is why politicians do it.Of course it also works to get you interested or committed to buy a certain product and this is why the businesses Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior man Guidelines For Georgia Incorporation Do your employees behave toward your customers the way you would expect them to? Is the culture of your senior executive team consistent with the culture of your lowest level line workers in the field? Do you really know what your company’s culture is? Why is employee culture important?Incorporation in Georgia is a fairly easy process, and you can do it by yourself or hire an attorney or make use of the services of firms that specialize in helping people incorporate for a reasonable fee. People have begun to realize the benefits of incorporation, which are many and have begun to incorporate without hesitation.Incorporating In Georgia: 1. Make sure which legal structure to opt for your new venture and proceed carefully making sure all conditions are met.2. A name has to be selected and registered after making sure that it is no copy of any existing registered business name or that it is not one that has been reserved. The name has to be appropriate for the nature of your business and not be obscene and must not exceed 80 characters including any punctuation or space used. It has to end in the words or their abbreviation “Incorporated,” “Corporation,” “Company,” or “Limited.”3. There has to be a minimum of one or more incorporators, and they have to file the articles of incorporation with the Secretary of State of Georgia. A fee of $100 is charged, Your company’s culture can include: If the basic behaviors and tendencies of your employee population are aligned with your mission, or brand promise, then they will produce consistent results and customer experiences. Empowered people must believe in their leaders, in their team members, in their purpose and mission, and in their ability to deliver results to delight the customer. If they cannot feel any cultural affinity with their leaders or their team members, they will narrowly act in ways that conform to the business goals you have laid out for them. They will make decisions that fit those goals within the strict confines of their own specific work domains and personal spheres of influence. They will not risk a confrontation (i.e., collaboration) with other people who may choose a different approach to addressing the same decision. If you have an environment where your workers are managing demanding processes and working heads-down for hours on end, you may be successful in spite of the lack of cultural affinity across your population. However, even then a predominant culture of fear is likely to emerge as employees focus on meeting the letter of their performance requirements and not acting in the best interests of your customer or your company. Your first step should be to assess your existing culture across every employee group or segment in your company, and from top to bottom. Using modern internet based survey and analysis techniques, in conjunction with experts on such matters as employee culture, organization development, and employee satisfaction can produce rapid and affordable insights. Consider experts who can provide a benchmark for your company to understand how your culture compares to others in your category, and the correlation between culture gaps and business performance. Once you have this research and reporting in hand, your next step will be to develop a roadmap for planning and implementing the changes to your employee culture. Be prepared for a long term process that can easily take up to two years to realize the full benefits of the changes. In addition to the experience in delivering effective surveys and analyses, a consultant offers a very important factor: the independent objective observer. If your company has a disjointed, unbalanced, or even a toxic culture, then a report on employee behaviors and attitudes may be best delivered and received by everyone – perhaps executives in particular – from a neutral independent party that has no stake in the outcome, no internal agenda, and no historical political “baggage”. If your employees see that the executive team are taking the proposals seriously, agreeing to make the changes personally, and acting as champions for the new culture, then the chances for a successful transition are far greater. Three other important tools can be very useful in affecting change in employee culture and their understanding of their role in accomplishing and delivering on the brand promise of the company. They are: learning and development, reward and recognition, and performance management processes. When new employees join your company, or when they are promoted or transferred internally to new positions, do you offer any training to orient them with the company and their new role? Such training can be immensely useful in clarifying your purpose, objectives, culture, values, and tools that are available to the employee to help them become productive quickly. The messages and personality of your culture can be embedded from the start of the employee’s engagement, assuring they start off in the right direction. Perhaps you offer skills based and technical training programs to customer support and sales staff. Do you use that training to make sure that the brand promise and culture of your company is communicated clearly and boldly to those audiences? Do you routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise. Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior mana Winn Dixie Not Long For This World ity with their leaders or their team members, they will narrowly act in ways that conform to the business goals you have laid out for them. They will make decisions that fit those goals within the strict confines of their own specific work domains and personal spheres of influence. They will not risk a confrontation (i.e., collaboration) with other people who may choose a different approach to addressing the same decision. If you have an environment where your workers are managing demanding processes and working heads-down for hours on end, you may be successful in spite of the lack of cultural affinity across your population. However, even then a predominant culture of fear is likely to emerge as employees focus on meeting the letter of their performance requirements and not acting in the best interests of your customer or your company.Winn Dixie Supermarket Chain is in bankruptcy (yet recording another huge loss in their 2005 fiscal year) after a 51 million dollar loss in fiscal year 2004. Now they report a 622 million dollar loss and some are fretting the worse may be inevitable as it looks as if emerging from bankruptcy may not be possible.They have closed stores and warehouses to cut costs, yet were hurt also from the Hurricanes, especially Katrina. In fact some stores in fiscal year 2005 showed a 4% same store decline. Yet some of that is due to the advancement of Wal-Mart Super Center competition and the other main regional chain Publix. Winn-Dixie is closing 326 stores and three distribution centers in all and may now be forced to close more. Hurricane Wilma comes in to play in their 2006 fiscal year, which is already raising eyebrows with investors. Hurricane Katrina caused property damage and inventory loss in 110 of its stores in the effected area.Unfortunately the only one winning in their current situation are the lawyers racking up huge bills of over 23-million dollars to help file the neces Your first step should be to assess your existing culture across every employee group or segment in your company, and from top to bottom. Using modern internet based survey and analysis techniques, in conjunction with experts on such matters as employee culture, organization development, and employee satisfaction can produce rapid and affordable insights. Consider experts who can provide a benchmark for your company to understand how your culture compares to others in your category, and the correlation between culture gaps and business performance. Once you have this research and reporting in hand, your next step will be to develop a roadmap for planning and implementing the changes to your employee culture. Be prepared for a long term process that can easily take up to two years to realize the full benefits of the changes. In addition to the experience in delivering effective surveys and analyses, a consultant offers a very important factor: the independent objective observer. If your company has a disjointed, unbalanced, or even a toxic culture, then a report on employee behaviors and attitudes may be best delivered and received by everyone – perhaps executives in particular – from a neutral independent party that has no stake in the outcome, no internal agenda, and no historical political “baggage”. If your employees see that the executive team are taking the proposals seriously, agreeing to make the changes personally, and acting as champions for the new culture, then the chances for a successful transition are far greater. Three other important tools can be very useful in affecting change in employee culture and their understanding of their role in accomplishing and delivering on the brand promise of the company. They are: learning and development, reward and recognition, and performance management processes. When new employees join your company, or when they are promoted or transferred internally to new positions, do you offer any training to orient them with the company and their new role? Such training can be immensely useful in clarifying your purpose, objectives, culture, values, and tools that are available to the employee to help them become productive quickly. The messages and personality of your culture can be embedded from the start of the employee’s engagement, assuring they start off in the right direction. Perhaps you offer skills based and technical training programs to customer support and sales staff. Do you use that training to make sure that the brand promise and culture of your company is communicated clearly and boldly to those audiences? Do you routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise. Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior man Getting into One Legitimate California Private Investigator faction can produce rapid and affordable insights. Consider experts who can provide a benchmark for your company to understand how your culture compares to others in your category, and the correlation between culture gaps and business performance. Once you have this research and reporting in hand, your next step will be to develop a roadmap for planning and implementing the changes to your employee culture. Be prepared for a long term process that can easily take up to two years to realize the full benefits of the changes.California abounds in gold and wide range agriculture that makes it the highest economy-wealthy state in the U.S. Notwithstanding the fact Hollywood serves as a large contributory revenue asset from its movie industry, ushered by infamous tinsel actors in the entertainment world.California on the other hand is a melting pot, pulling together migrants from Asia, Mexico, Latin America, and along its borders due its mild climatic balanced temperature for comfortable living conditions. With all types of people merged in this state of "honey," it becomes a target many underground movements making California a place prone to life's notorious drawback, "crime exposure"The DCA (Department of Consumers Affairs) handles all the licensing of the entire private agencies and private investigators and all related agencies, like patrol agencies, repossessions, locksmith, that turns in jurisdiction to the Bureau of Security and Investigation Services (BSIS), on hand to evaluate operators, standard facilities, qualified instructors, and employees all passing criminal background checks, q In addition to the experience in delivering effective surveys and analyses, a consultant offers a very important factor: the independent objective observer. If your company has a disjointed, unbalanced, or even a toxic culture, then a report on employee behaviors and attitudes may be best delivered and received by everyone – perhaps executives in particular – from a neutral independent party that has no stake in the outcome, no internal agenda, and no historical political “baggage”. If your employees see that the executive team are taking the proposals seriously, agreeing to make the changes personally, and acting as champions for the new culture, then the chances for a successful transition are far greater. Three other important tools can be very useful in affecting change in employee culture and their understanding of their role in accomplishing and delivering on the brand promise of the company. They are: learning and development, reward and recognition, and performance management processes. When new employees join your company, or when they are promoted or transferred internally to new positions, do you offer any training to orient them with the company and their new role? Such training can be immensely useful in clarifying your purpose, objectives, culture, values, and tools that are available to the employee to help them become productive quickly. The messages and personality of your culture can be embedded from the start of the employee’s engagement, assuring they start off in the right direction. Perhaps you offer skills based and technical training programs to customer support and sales staff. Do you use that training to make sure that the brand promise and culture of your company is communicated clearly and boldly to those audiences? Do you routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise. Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior man The Power of Positive Thinking and Your Business ampions for the new culture, then the chances for a successful transition are far greater. Three other important tools can be very useful in affecting change in employee culture and their understanding of their role in accomplishing and delivering on the brand promise of the company. They are: learning and development, reward and recognition, and performance management processes.You may not realize this but your thoughts and thought processes have an impact on how you run your business and its inherent success. The way you think has an effect on your business and thinking positively or negatively may make or break you. How does a person's thought processes affect a business? What is the correlation between the way your mind works and how successful your business is and will be?The way a person's mind works is so intricate that digging deep into it to figure it out may be a pretty tough call, however, there is evidence that proves how positive thinking often brings positive results. This positive thinking equals positive results phenomenon is brought about by the possible solutions one can come up with when faced with a problem.Every now and then, when a problem arises within your business organization, how you deal with the problem can either help your company move forward or backward. With the positive results that can be had with positive thinking, you will do well to make your mind run on that path. An example of such positive thinking would be When new employees join your company, or when they are promoted or transferred internally to new positions, do you offer any training to orient them with the company and their new role? Such training can be immensely useful in clarifying your purpose, objectives, culture, values, and tools that are available to the employee to help them become productive quickly. The messages and personality of your culture can be embedded from the start of the employee’s engagement, assuring they start off in the right direction. Perhaps you offer skills based and technical training programs to customer support and sales staff. Do you use that training to make sure that the brand promise and culture of your company is communicated clearly and boldly to those audiences? Do you routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise. Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior man To All Managers: How Does ADD Affect Your Workplace? routinely have senior executives participate in those training sessions to welcome new employees and to provide their own perspectives on the company and its purpose and culture? If your training courses are computerized and self-paced, appropriate messages can be integrated from top management to provide the executive endorsement and personal connection with the employees involved. People generally come to training courses with an open mind, expecting to learn something new – take advantage of that open minded attitude and fill them with positive reinforcement of your brand promise.Tent caterpillars create a cocoon for an entire colony. Within one colony there are two types of caterpillar. One type, pioneers, weave long threads forming the skeleton of the tent. The others, the workers, weave cross threads filling in the structure. If there are too many pioneers, the tent is too big and collapses. If there are not enough pioneers, the tent is too dense and the colony suffocates. Viva la difference.Within the colony of human beings we can find similar differences. Some are explorers, entrepreneurs extending the boundaries of our environment in art, science, or business. The rest fill in the details as accountants or managers.As a manager you know that creativity is the quality which enables your company to expand and improve products, services and processes. The best salespeople, strategic planners and inventors are creative people who generate a steady flow of ideas. However, creativity may come with other features which are not so desirable such as impulsiveness, lack of organization of ideas, paper, and time, and social problems in communication an Do you recognize employees for outstanding contributions? Are those contributions the ones you’d like to be recognized? How do you stimulate more positive behaviors that are consistent with your brand? I recently worked with a company that had a multi-tiered recognition system. It started with a quarterly award for which individuals could be nominated by other employees for an action or support they have provided to others that was considered to be outstanding, - perhaps even above and beyond the call of duty. The winners were selected at their senior manager’s discretion. Those who earned the most nominations in a year were eligible to participate in the annual President’s Club trip – which included only the top five percent of the employee population. This program was very popular with some departments and the company literally spent thousands of dollars each quarter on cash and desktop mementos for this program. Unfortunately, they missed a significant opportunity to align this recognition system with their brand promise. Some departments even selected President’s Club winners by a raffle-style lottery. An executive drew numbers out of a hat! Regardless of their performance or behaviors some employees got to enjoy the special recognition with the other “top” performers in the company. What a terrible waste of money and a serious loss of opportunity to reinforce the value of high performance and dedication to their brand promise. If this company had simply applied a set of criteria as a filter on their nomination forms and in the senior management selection process, the company could have easily made a huge impact on their employee culture. Imagine if their employees were constantly recognizing each other for actual performance against standards that define the desired behaviors and outcomes to exemplify the brand promise. Then add to that management’s routine selection of award winners against the same factors. Successful award winners would be a remarkable positive reinforcement to communicate the desired aspects of change far more effectively than could the individual managers. Does your company recognize employees through awards and exclusive trips? Have you clearly assessed how employees are selected and what messages are being delivered to employees through that process? Another important form of reward and recognition comes from salary and bonus payments made to employees – this is the “putting your money where your mouth is” statement to your employees. Many companies successfully tie salary planning and bonus allocations to the employee’s performance, in addition to the company’s performance. If, for example, your company emphasizes teamwork and collaboration as a core value and aspect of your culture, then you should reward those employees who have demonstrated high performance by exemplifying that team and collaborative spirit. To make this a truly effective tool in influencing employee behavior and aligning performance with your brand promise, you need to ensure that performance objectives, expected outcomes, measurement criteria, appraisal reviews, and the recognized behaviors that are all part of an employee performance management process are all aligned with your brand promise, purpose, mission, and desired employee culture. Getting your employees aligned with your brand will empower them to make continuous improvements and innovations that will benefit your company as it strives to deliver that unique and best-in-class customer experience.
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