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    What Home Typing Jobs Have To Offer
    Through research I have found some home typing jobs that are a very good source of extra income for people around the globe. Actually some offer over 100 countries to be accepted in their program. There is no experience required for these types of jobs as this is considered to be a type of non-traditional data entry . Anyone from around the world can do this type of work, even if you are a newbie to the internet world. Non-traditional data entry offers a step by step training program to show you exactly how the average person can become financially successful without having any special skills or even a college degree.These companies provide lists of literally thousands of online businesses in their database that need
    hem late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an

    Career as a Franchise Trainer
    Franchising companies live and die on their abilities to expand into the market place and promote their brand name. A Career as a Franchise Trainer can be a rewarding career and is perfect for someone who likes to work with people and consult them; help them in realizing their American Dream to own their own company.There is a lot of CYA in franchising, document wars often erupt if there is a dispute down the road in the franchising relationship between the franchisee and the franchisor and a good trainer can nip this in the bud early on and prevent these things and thus it makes the franchisor trainer one of the most important positions in a franchise company.There are classes available you can take to better
    Just as military intelligence works to give armies and generals an upper hand on the battlefield, business intelligence (BI) seeks to give CEOs and CIOs a tactical advantage in the business arena. Business intelligence is fundamentally concerned with transforming your organization's operational data into an accessible store of high-value information (called a data warehouse) and distributing the right information in the right way to the right people at the right time.

    In both business and military operations, it's easy to see the correlation between the quality of intelligence and the success of operations: Those who comprehend and act quickly upon relevant facts have advantages over those who do not.

    For this reason, intelligence has value to the business organization. Naturally, tools and technologies to collect and distribute of information—or to improve its quality—-will be embraced and employed quickly.

    In this article, we'll take a look at some questions that BI can help answer, and we'll offer a few examples of how business intelligence is used.

    Two examples of business intelligence

    Some believe BI to be the magic differentiator between great and mediocre companies. Consider this example.

    The Big Bank had a target of acquiring 200,000 new accounts, a number that would require mailing offers to 10 million prospects using a 2 percent return rate, an expected rate for direct mail. Instead, the Big Bank used BI techniques to mail to a "refined" subset of all prospects yielding a response rate of 12 percent.

    Instead of mailing to the 10 million prospects, BI required the bank to send mail to about 2 million, which generated the required new accounts. In addition to reducing cost, the average profitability of an acquired customer was three times higher than usual because data mining had targeted the customers whose needs best matched The Big Bank's services.

    Here's another scenario.

    A quick-change oil company takes information from 2,500 stores and has information uploaded each night to servers at its headquarters. The chain's main office immediately analyzes key operational measures: cars serviced, costs, revenues, profits, and trends.

    By 5:30 A.M., performance data is available to the company's managers who can check current revenue, average ticket price, time required to do each job, and other performance measures. Franchisees with multiple locations can see consolidated views, as can the company's regional managers.

    Rate yourself

    Now that you've read these two examples, try to answer the following questions to see whether your information systems allow you to accomplish the following tasks quickly, easily, and directly. Answer "No" if you depend on others to procure information or if your business and performance measurements lag after the fact.

    Revenues and profitability

    1. I can identify the products, services, and channels driving my revenue and profit.

    2. I can rank customers and customer locations by profitability.

    3. I am automatically alerted when critical costs, such as non-billable overtime rates, fall out of control.

    4. I know when my sales reps/managers are on target, and I can intervene in time to make a difference.

    Customer relationship management

    1. I can identify low-value customers and try to improve their value or design them out of my business.

    2. I am able to spot customer relationship problems early by monitoring leading satisfaction indicators, such as product or service quality.

    Sales and marketing

    1. I'm able to target high-value customers in order to lower my marketing risk.

    2. I'm able to rank the success of product promotions to know what's effective by product and market segment.

    3. I know what's in my sales pipeline.

    Finance

    1. I can identify underutilized assets.

    2. I'm confident that I have the facts to make the right capital asset choices in next year's budget.

    3. My budgets are based on accurate histories and current trends, not on pie-in-the-sky figures, guesses, or sandbagged numbers.

    Supply chain

    1. I can easily identify how much I'm spending with each supplier and use that information to negotiate lower costs.

    2. I know which carriers are most often damaging my shipments (and on which routes) and/or delivering them late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an

    Let's Talk About Trust
    I agree with Brooker T. Washington, "Few things help an individual more than to place responsibility upon him, and to let him know that you trust him." I agree with Mr. Washington because I've experienced trust. I've been on both the giving and receiving side of the equation, and I know first hand the power of trust.That's what trust is. It's power. Power to transform an ordinary, everyday, OK place to work, into an environment where people are almost unstoppable. Power to unleash creativity, commitment, enthusiasm, and fun. Power to bring out the energy, talents and gifts of individuals, to build teams, to achieve amazing results.Look around your organization. There's some division or department or work unit o
    s of business intelligence

    Some believe BI to be the magic differentiator between great and mediocre companies. Consider this example.

    The Big Bank had a target of acquiring 200,000 new accounts, a number that would require mailing offers to 10 million prospects using a 2 percent return rate, an expected rate for direct mail. Instead, the Big Bank used BI techniques to mail to a "refined" subset of all prospects yielding a response rate of 12 percent.

    Instead of mailing to the 10 million prospects, BI required the bank to send mail to about 2 million, which generated the required new accounts. In addition to reducing cost, the average profitability of an acquired customer was three times higher than usual because data mining had targeted the customers whose needs best matched The Big Bank's services.

    Here's another scenario.

    A quick-change oil company takes information from 2,500 stores and has information uploaded each night to servers at its headquarters. The chain's main office immediately analyzes key operational measures: cars serviced, costs, revenues, profits, and trends.

    By 5:30 A.M., performance data is available to the company's managers who can check current revenue, average ticket price, time required to do each job, and other performance measures. Franchisees with multiple locations can see consolidated views, as can the company's regional managers.

    Rate yourself

    Now that you've read these two examples, try to answer the following questions to see whether your information systems allow you to accomplish the following tasks quickly, easily, and directly. Answer "No" if you depend on others to procure information or if your business and performance measurements lag after the fact.

    Revenues and profitability

    1. I can identify the products, services, and channels driving my revenue and profit.

    2. I can rank customers and customer locations by profitability.

    3. I am automatically alerted when critical costs, such as non-billable overtime rates, fall out of control.

    4. I know when my sales reps/managers are on target, and I can intervene in time to make a difference.

    Customer relationship management

    1. I can identify low-value customers and try to improve their value or design them out of my business.

    2. I am able to spot customer relationship problems early by monitoring leading satisfaction indicators, such as product or service quality.

    Sales and marketing

    1. I'm able to target high-value customers in order to lower my marketing risk.

    2. I'm able to rank the success of product promotions to know what's effective by product and market segment.

    3. I know what's in my sales pipeline.

    Finance

    1. I can identify underutilized assets.

    2. I'm confident that I have the facts to make the right capital asset choices in next year's budget.

    3. My budgets are based on accurate histories and current trends, not on pie-in-the-sky figures, guesses, or sandbagged numbers.

    Supply chain

    1. I can easily identify how much I'm spending with each supplier and use that information to negotiate lower costs.

    2. I know which carriers are most often damaging my shipments (and on which routes) and/or delivering them late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an

    Buyer Beware the Extended Warranty – Deal or No Deal
    Experience is always life's best teacher. But ideally it is through somebody else's experience that you could learn a valuable lesson about extended warranties. What is the deal with extended warranties? Are they really an insurance against damage or malfunction? A seasoned salesperson knows just when to propose the extended warranty; especially, those electronic store sales representatives. When you are high on the purchase the salesperson poses the question, “ Would you like the extended warranty added to this purchase?”. Now they Do NOT review the extended warranty Terms and Conditions (T's & C's) outlining the things that ARE NOT covered by the extended warranty. In fact, some of them pu
    profits, and trends.

    By 5:30 A.M., performance data is available to the company's managers who can check current revenue, average ticket price, time required to do each job, and other performance measures. Franchisees with multiple locations can see consolidated views, as can the company's regional managers.

    Rate yourself

    Now that you've read these two examples, try to answer the following questions to see whether your information systems allow you to accomplish the following tasks quickly, easily, and directly. Answer "No" if you depend on others to procure information or if your business and performance measurements lag after the fact.

    Revenues and profitability

    1. I can identify the products, services, and channels driving my revenue and profit.

    2. I can rank customers and customer locations by profitability.

    3. I am automatically alerted when critical costs, such as non-billable overtime rates, fall out of control.

    4. I know when my sales reps/managers are on target, and I can intervene in time to make a difference.

    Customer relationship management

    1. I can identify low-value customers and try to improve their value or design them out of my business.

    2. I am able to spot customer relationship problems early by monitoring leading satisfaction indicators, such as product or service quality.

    Sales and marketing

    1. I'm able to target high-value customers in order to lower my marketing risk.

    2. I'm able to rank the success of product promotions to know what's effective by product and market segment.

    3. I know what's in my sales pipeline.

    Finance

    1. I can identify underutilized assets.

    2. I'm confident that I have the facts to make the right capital asset choices in next year's budget.

    3. My budgets are based on accurate histories and current trends, not on pie-in-the-sky figures, guesses, or sandbagged numbers.

    Supply chain

    1. I can easily identify how much I'm spending with each supplier and use that information to negotiate lower costs.

    2. I know which carriers are most often damaging my shipments (and on which routes) and/or delivering them late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an

    Buying MLM Motivational Audio CDs Will Send You To The Poor House
    Sure, these motivational CDs will give you a quick adrenaline rush to get out there and get those prospects! After all, how can it get more motivational than listening another testimonial rags to riches story?The stories are motivational alright and the upline will tell you that you need to keep on buying these tapes because it is food for your mind that will keep you going on with the business. What they forgot to tell you is that they are profiting BIG from you buying those useless tapes or CDs!Think about it, if one of the biggest distributors in your company has about 5,000 downline in his team and each and every week you buy another stupid motivational tape for $7 a pop, how much money did he just make?
    tionship management

    1. I can identify low-value customers and try to improve their value or design them out of my business.

    2. I am able to spot customer relationship problems early by monitoring leading satisfaction indicators, such as product or service quality.

    Sales and marketing

    1. I'm able to target high-value customers in order to lower my marketing risk.

    2. I'm able to rank the success of product promotions to know what's effective by product and market segment.

    3. I know what's in my sales pipeline.

    Finance

    1. I can identify underutilized assets.

    2. I'm confident that I have the facts to make the right capital asset choices in next year's budget.

    3. My budgets are based on accurate histories and current trends, not on pie-in-the-sky figures, guesses, or sandbagged numbers.

    Supply chain

    1. I can easily identify how much I'm spending with each supplier and use that information to negotiate lower costs.

    2. I know which carriers are most often damaging my shipments (and on which routes) and/or delivering them late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an

    Think the Unthinkable
    What the people in business think they know about customer and market is more likely to be wrong than right. There is only one person who really knows: the customer. In his book “Managing for results” Peter F Drucker has pinpoint very justifiable who is the king of market. Brand managers and owner think themselves the leader of market. They let them think that they decide the fate of market and they can carry their leadership in one segment to another segment easily with there brand name. Many have jump into this rat race.When Xerox saw a big opportunity in PC market they planned to jump into this market with the brand name ‘Xerox’. They let themselves in thinking that both are of same kind of product. Customer will b
    hem late to my customers.

    3. I'm able to predict product demand and trade that information for more cash and less inventory.

    Strategy management

    1. My employees view individualized key performance indicators, aligning them with the corporate strategy.

    2. My employees have instant access to a knowledge base of information that helps them to do their job.

    Human resources

    1. I'm able to use leading indicators to preempt health and safety incidents.

    2. I have the leading information required to measure and manage employee satisfaction and increase employee retention.

    What could you do?

    If you answered "No" to many or most of these questions (or similar questions), your business processes may move too slowly in the technology-driven Internet age. You'll likely have increasing difficulty maintaining a grip on your customers, prices, profitability, and employees as more-enterprising companies leverage technology, improve their processes, and capture market share.

    But if you answered "Yes" to many of these questions, yours is likely an intelligent organization. You possess superior intelligence regarding your employees, customers, partners, and operations. People at all levels can manage their own affairs, have intimate knowledge of your organization's strategy, and know where to find information needed for further analysis quickly and directly.

    Prabir Sen,
    M.Sc Engg (London)

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