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    Seven Reasons To Consider Working At A Small CPA Firm
    Let me start by admitting that if you’re an accountant in training, you should definitely consider working for a large firm. Two or three (or more) years working for a large international or national firm give your resume an extra burnish. You will probably receive a higher salary and more training. Plus, your stint at a large firm can be another personal pedigree—equivalent to a degree from a well-known top-tier university.In spite of the big advantages that the big firms offer, however, let me suggest that you should also consider working at a small local firm. And I count at least seven, super-compelling reasons.Reason #1: Close to Home Work LocationMany small firms locate in
    rying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing

    How to Protect Children from Advertising?
    According to the product life-cycle theory, almost any product passes five stages during its existence regardless the desire of manufactures and customers. These stages are birth, growth, maturity, decay and atrophy. To prevent the last two stages marketologists suggest improving the product in the early stages of its development.The results of the expert statistics show that 90% of the world innovations are nothing more product developments. And only the remaining 10% mean launch of new products and technologies. The Japanese are considered to have achieved the remarkable results in constant product development. An outstanding expert Masaaki Imai has generated the concept of constant product develop
    Every time my firm conducts communication skills training, we know someone is going to object.

    “That doesn't work. Everybody's heard of active listening. You can't use that stuff anymore.”

    And we have to admit, there's a lot of truth in that. Everyone has heard of active listening. And it doesn't work for many people much of the time.

    But communication skills can work for your staff.

    The problem usually isn't the skills. It's the way people are trained to use them. Learn to use communication skills effectively, and they can create happy customers and higher income.

    There are two components to good communication skills: (a) the skills themselves, and (b) what you're trying to do (your intention) when you use them. Many employees learn communication skills from manuals. And many manuals emphasize either skills, or intention but not both. And so, much of what we think of as communication skills training fails.

    Here are a couple of examples:

    Example 1: How active listening gets a black eye: using good skills, but with the intention to fix or change a customer

    I was coaching a hospital social worker through a confrontation with a mother who was terribly frightened. The social worker was doing his best to demonstrate active listening.

    “OK, I get that you're upset. And you want to get out of here. And I want to help you. But you've got to go through this process before you can take your daughter home.”

    The mother didn't react at all the way he'd hoped. “I don't want to hear all this institutional talk,” she said. “You leave me alone. I'll sue if I have to!”

    This appears to be a failure of active listening. And it is, but the problem goes deeper than that. When I paused the encounter and asked the social worker how he thought the mother was feeling and what she needed, he said, “I don't really know. I was busy trying to get her to do what I wanted and think it was her idea.”

    Active listening skills are useful, but they're only tools. They serve the intentions of the person using them. And if you don't teach trainees useful intentions, most will fall back on trying to fix people or change them. So you'll be training your staff to be very effective at letting your customers know they need to be fixed or changed. And your customers will let you know how unpleasant an experience that is.

    Example 2: How “understand before you are understood” fails: having a useful intention but lacking the skills to communicate it

    I paused a training scenario just after an angry man blew up at a nurse. I was coaching the nurse through an encounter with a father who felt the staff was trying to hustle him and his son out of the hospital.

    He told her that he worked all day and came into the hospital all night. And where did she think he was going to get the time to go through training before he took his son home?

    When I asked her how she thought the man was feeling and what he needed, she suggested that he seemed overwhelmed and afraid, and that he might need some support.

    When I suggested she might ask the man if that's what he was experiencing, she turned to him and said, "You need an appointment with a social worker. I'll set something up for you."

    This is a classic failure that comes from understanding your customer, but lacking the skills to communicate it. The nurse could describe the source of the man's anger clearly to me. She had real empathy for him. But she couldn't put her words together in a way he recognized as compassionate.

    We'd taught her the words, of course. But like most people who learn new skills, she lacked the confidence to use them. So she, like the trainee above, fell back on trying to fix the customer. And he let her know how much he disliked being treated that way.

    It don't mean a thing if you ain't practicing

    Both of the examples above underscore a third important component of communication skills training, namely, the practice.

    The trainee in the first example was a compassionate man with a degree in social work. I'm sure he'd had ample exposure to good communication skills. It had never gelled for him before.

    Once we put him in a scenario, coached him through the skills, and alerted him to the fact that he was struggling because he was trying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing t

    Exploring A Sales Career
    A career in sales may sound fascinating and lucrative to many. However, you must analyze it from all the important aspects before deciding to pursue sales as your profession. Exploring several opportunities is necessary as you might get to know about better options available and feel interested in a particular sector of sales.Job ProfileSales primarily revolves around the main intention of making money, deriving huge benefits and increasing customer satisfaction as well as loyalty. It includes several activities including converting various opportunities into orders along with negotiating, propositioning, presentation and deal closing. It even envelops imparting knowledge regarding marketing l
    fix or change a customer

    I was coaching a hospital social worker through a confrontation with a mother who was terribly frightened. The social worker was doing his best to demonstrate active listening.

    “OK, I get that you're upset. And you want to get out of here. And I want to help you. But you've got to go through this process before you can take your daughter home.”

    The mother didn't react at all the way he'd hoped. “I don't want to hear all this institutional talk,” she said. “You leave me alone. I'll sue if I have to!”

    This appears to be a failure of active listening. And it is, but the problem goes deeper than that. When I paused the encounter and asked the social worker how he thought the mother was feeling and what she needed, he said, “I don't really know. I was busy trying to get her to do what I wanted and think it was her idea.”

    Active listening skills are useful, but they're only tools. They serve the intentions of the person using them. And if you don't teach trainees useful intentions, most will fall back on trying to fix people or change them. So you'll be training your staff to be very effective at letting your customers know they need to be fixed or changed. And your customers will let you know how unpleasant an experience that is.

    Example 2: How “understand before you are understood” fails: having a useful intention but lacking the skills to communicate it

    I paused a training scenario just after an angry man blew up at a nurse. I was coaching the nurse through an encounter with a father who felt the staff was trying to hustle him and his son out of the hospital.

    He told her that he worked all day and came into the hospital all night. And where did she think he was going to get the time to go through training before he took his son home?

    When I asked her how she thought the man was feeling and what he needed, she suggested that he seemed overwhelmed and afraid, and that he might need some support.

    When I suggested she might ask the man if that's what he was experiencing, she turned to him and said, "You need an appointment with a social worker. I'll set something up for you."

    This is a classic failure that comes from understanding your customer, but lacking the skills to communicate it. The nurse could describe the source of the man's anger clearly to me. She had real empathy for him. But she couldn't put her words together in a way he recognized as compassionate.

    We'd taught her the words, of course. But like most people who learn new skills, she lacked the confidence to use them. So she, like the trainee above, fell back on trying to fix the customer. And he let her know how much he disliked being treated that way.

    It don't mean a thing if you ain't practicing

    Both of the examples above underscore a third important component of communication skills training, namely, the practice.

    The trainee in the first example was a compassionate man with a degree in social work. I'm sure he'd had ample exposure to good communication skills. It had never gelled for him before.

    Once we put him in a scenario, coached him through the skills, and alerted him to the fact that he was struggling because he was trying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing

    Developing Your School Brand
    A school brand can start off as an intangible positive image that attracts the public to enrol their children there. An example is the perceived high teaching standards or an impressive list of sporting achievements. Many school administrators do not take a structured approach in developing the school brand and assume that through word of mouth, the school brand will prevail.This view is erroneous and arrogant. This article will provide relevant tips about developing a school brand.Alumni FeedbackThe best way to start is to conduct a feedback session with the Alumni who are presumed to have experienced the unique culture of the school for a number of years. They can be asked about what
    ople or change them. So you'll be training your staff to be very effective at letting your customers know they need to be fixed or changed. And your customers will let you know how unpleasant an experience that is.

    Example 2: How “understand before you are understood” fails: having a useful intention but lacking the skills to communicate it

    I paused a training scenario just after an angry man blew up at a nurse. I was coaching the nurse through an encounter with a father who felt the staff was trying to hustle him and his son out of the hospital.

    He told her that he worked all day and came into the hospital all night. And where did she think he was going to get the time to go through training before he took his son home?

    When I asked her how she thought the man was feeling and what he needed, she suggested that he seemed overwhelmed and afraid, and that he might need some support.

    When I suggested she might ask the man if that's what he was experiencing, she turned to him and said, "You need an appointment with a social worker. I'll set something up for you."

    This is a classic failure that comes from understanding your customer, but lacking the skills to communicate it. The nurse could describe the source of the man's anger clearly to me. She had real empathy for him. But she couldn't put her words together in a way he recognized as compassionate.

    We'd taught her the words, of course. But like most people who learn new skills, she lacked the confidence to use them. So she, like the trainee above, fell back on trying to fix the customer. And he let her know how much he disliked being treated that way.

    It don't mean a thing if you ain't practicing

    Both of the examples above underscore a third important component of communication skills training, namely, the practice.

    The trainee in the first example was a compassionate man with a degree in social work. I'm sure he'd had ample exposure to good communication skills. It had never gelled for him before.

    Once we put him in a scenario, coached him through the skills, and alerted him to the fact that he was struggling because he was trying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing

    Tricky Pharmaceutical Sales Interview Questions: Question #1 of 7, How to Identify and Answer
    Pharmaceutical sales interview questions that are negative in nature are designed to make the candidate reveal the “worst” part of themselves to interviewers. I’ll teach you how to recognize these damaging questions BEFORE your pharmaceutical sales interview, and how to answer them in a controlled and confident manner…proving that you’re the best person for the job!What’s the trickiest question you could encounter in a pharmaceutical sales interview, or any interview?Hands down, it’s any question about your past or current managers. This type of question is designed to bring out any negative issues you may have about past or current managers, and authority in general.Firs
    g up for you."

    This is a classic failure that comes from understanding your customer, but lacking the skills to communicate it. The nurse could describe the source of the man's anger clearly to me. She had real empathy for him. But she couldn't put her words together in a way he recognized as compassionate.

    We'd taught her the words, of course. But like most people who learn new skills, she lacked the confidence to use them. So she, like the trainee above, fell back on trying to fix the customer. And he let her know how much he disliked being treated that way.

    It don't mean a thing if you ain't practicing

    Both of the examples above underscore a third important component of communication skills training, namely, the practice.

    The trainee in the first example was a compassionate man with a degree in social work. I'm sure he'd had ample exposure to good communication skills. It had never gelled for him before.

    Once we put him in a scenario, coached him through the skills, and alerted him to the fact that he was struggling because he was trying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing

    The Power of Graphic Design
    Basically, we can find anything that has ‘graphic design’ (in term of composition on a surface) in our daily basis. For example, take a look at your shirt, you can see the composition on it (buttons, pocket(s), motifs, color(s)). Or try to find any other items, let say… your television, it consist of composition as well (the screen, the button(s), etc.). It also happens to any other items (clocks/watches, magazines, signage, any apparel, households, etc.)When you buy something (well.., almost anything), what is the most get your attention? I bet it must be the design (in term of composition of any element on it). In the contrary, if you choose to buy specific items (cellular phone in this case) for c
    rying to fix his customer instead of connecting with her (that's the intention we teach), he developed skills rapidly. He even returned to training weeks later to report that he'd created a real difference in his life using the skills at home. He quickly became a valued mentor to others in his work group.

    Communication skills are deceptively challenging. It takes no great intellect or dexterity to utter the words. What is terribly demanding is all the processing: keeping your focus on the other person despite your own discomfort, listening for the needs beneath complaints and accusations, drumming up the nerve to suggest to an outraged man that he might value some support.

    What gets you through tough interactions is your confidence in your own intention and skills. And you learn confidence through practice.

    In my experience, those are the keys to effective communication skills:

    1. holding a useful intention like understanding the other person or connecting with them,

    2. employing skills that communicate your intention, and

    3. practicing the skills and intentions so you have them at hand, even when interactions get intense, especially when they do.

    Find training that will provide you all three, and you'll have communication skills that will please your customers and increase your income.

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