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Casual Articles - Do You Make These 10 Mistakes When Making Financial Decisions?
No More Debate it is Either Global Warming or Global Warming or You are Fired! ed.Recently a survey was done with Americans to ask them if they believed in global warming and the question was quite simple which do you believe; Global Warming or Global Warming? Surprisingly enough 90% of the people said global warming. A few people didn't understand the question because it did not sound like a choice and therefore they did not answer.Just because 90% of people believe something does not make it true and it is irrelevant to use a survey put on by the mass media hysteria asking the people who have been viewing their programming what they believe. Most people have surrendered their minds to the TV set and obviously they are going to answer exactly how they have been programmed.So 90% of the people say they believe in global warming and therefore global Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles Inside Sales Jobs: A Job Worth Seeking? When dealing with decisions using Cost Benefit techniques it is very important to follow the proven principles. The health of your company and your reputation depend on it. If these rules are not followed then your decisions could be flawed.Are you interested in inside sales as a career? Inside sales can be a very rewarding job if you so choose. What is the difference between inside and outside sales positions? If you think the difference is staying out of the sun, read on and discover if or why an inside sales job could be for you.With inside sales you will need to not only sale a product or service, but be a representative for it as well. You will most likely be required to be on call to serve your current or potential clients in the event they have a question or issue. You will need to study your product or service very hard, and be able to meet the needs of the customer on demand. You will most likely do very little traveling with inside sales so you will get to enjoy plenty of 1 on 1 time with your of Let's start, shall we? Mistake #1. Not exploring all options. It is human nature to want to think about the problem quickly, make a decision (instead of looking for the best decision) as soon as possible and move on. There are many tools available to assist in thinking creatively to ensure all possible options are canvassed PRIOR to the decision being made. For Example: If a decision is to be made regarding the company's business systems, close study would need to be given to ensure all feasible software providers were involved. Not only would you need to look at software providers but also hardware sources and bureau services. Also, will the future direction of the business mean that simply replacing “like with like” be suitable? Also is the ”do nothing” option viable? Mistake #2. Not assessing the options correctly. If you deal with Mistake #1 and generate many options, how are you going to know which options are worth pursuing? You need a recognised, tested and proven method to assess these options so that the best ones can be chosen for implementation. Cost Benefit Analysis is the proven, accepted method use to make these choices. The Cost Benefit method is easy to understand and implement. Cost Benefit Analysis is used around the world by big business and many governments when investment decisions and funding allocation questions need a resolution. Cost Benefit Analysis provides a clear, unambiguous method that shows which proposal will provide the best Benefit Cost Ratio and should be funded (all other things being equal). Mistake #3. Not funding the best option. Once the best option is decided upon then you need the confidence to fund that decision. Cost Benefit Analysis models clearly outline the assumptions, the costs, benefits, and the method of adjusting for changes in purchasing power over time. You can be confident in funding the decision if all the elements of the analysis are correct and agreed upon. The final answer from the model is the Benefit Cost Ratio. Benefit Cost Ratios of greater than 1 also translate into increased shareholder value - a must for successful companies. The opposite is also true. Benefit Cost Ratios of less than 1 will destroy shareholder value. You would not normally fund decisions with this result. Mistake #4. Not standardising this method across the company. There are many benefits to be gained by training appropriate staff and implementing this method across the company for all financial decisions. Some of these are listed below: - Shortens decision-making time - Reduces arguments in financial decision meetings - Subjectivity is reduced - Sign-off by responsible managers is made easier - More time available for CEO to plan and direct Mistake #5. Wasting time at meetings debating the method - not the proposal. Since Cost Benefit Analysis provides clear assumptions, costs, benefits and a final answer, the time taken discussing the method is reduced. This is especially marked if this method is agreed across the company BEFORE it is used. More time can then be applied to discussing the data and the assumptions, not the method, allowing managers to spend more time on other tasks. Mistake #6. Using methods that do not include ALL Cost Benefit components. There are certain elements to Cost Benefit Analysis that are critical to its success and confident decisions. These are listed below: - Net Present Value - Appropriate Discount Rates - Clear explanation of assumptions - Use of Benefit Cost Ratio - Thinking widely on all options including “do nothing” - Inclusion of non-financial benefits - "Cradle to Grave” view of costs and benefits If you are assessing other Cost Benefit texts or sites make sure all these items are included. Mistake #7. Not selling the final decision appropriately. Once the decision has been made to fund a particular proposal, it is important to sell this to the interested stakeholders. These stakeholders could be employees, unions, shareholders, the press, other executives, special interest groups or funding providers. Selling a decision that used Cost Benefit principles is easier. The method is clear, tested, proven and easy to understand. This makes it more likely to be accepted. Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles n How to Plan Fund Raising Events ow are you going to know which options are worth pursuing? You need a recognised, tested and proven method to assess these options so that the best ones can be chosen for implementation.Fund raising events are really a win-win situation, the public likes getting involved in activities that help others and worth causes or individuals benefit from the effort. There are loads of reasons to raise money just as there are as many types of fund raisers as well. Fund raising requires careful organizing and how to plan fund raising events are actually not that easy. However, with a clear plan, everything else including the money will follow.There are certain steps and key elements on how to plan fund raising events, and they should carefully be followed for it to be successful. Here is a guide on how to plan fund raising events:-Define the Cause. The very first step on how to plan fund raising events is to make clear the goals and decide who will get the m Cost Benefit Analysis is the proven, accepted method use to make these choices. The Cost Benefit method is easy to understand and implement. Cost Benefit Analysis is used around the world by big business and many governments when investment decisions and funding allocation questions need a resolution. Cost Benefit Analysis provides a clear, unambiguous method that shows which proposal will provide the best Benefit Cost Ratio and should be funded (all other things being equal). Mistake #3. Not funding the best option. Once the best option is decided upon then you need the confidence to fund that decision. Cost Benefit Analysis models clearly outline the assumptions, the costs, benefits, and the method of adjusting for changes in purchasing power over time. You can be confident in funding the decision if all the elements of the analysis are correct and agreed upon. The final answer from the model is the Benefit Cost Ratio. Benefit Cost Ratios of greater than 1 also translate into increased shareholder value - a must for successful companies. The opposite is also true. Benefit Cost Ratios of less than 1 will destroy shareholder value. You would not normally fund decisions with this result. Mistake #4. Not standardising this method across the company. There are many benefits to be gained by training appropriate staff and implementing this method across the company for all financial decisions. Some of these are listed below: - Shortens decision-making time - Reduces arguments in financial decision meetings - Subjectivity is reduced - Sign-off by responsible managers is made easier - More time available for CEO to plan and direct Mistake #5. Wasting time at meetings debating the method - not the proposal. Since Cost Benefit Analysis provides clear assumptions, costs, benefits and a final answer, the time taken discussing the method is reduced. This is especially marked if this method is agreed across the company BEFORE it is used. More time can then be applied to discussing the data and the assumptions, not the method, allowing managers to spend more time on other tasks. Mistake #6. Using methods that do not include ALL Cost Benefit components. There are certain elements to Cost Benefit Analysis that are critical to its success and confident decisions. These are listed below: - Net Present Value - Appropriate Discount Rates - Clear explanation of assumptions - Use of Benefit Cost Ratio - Thinking widely on all options including “do nothing” - Inclusion of non-financial benefits - "Cradle to Grave” view of costs and benefits If you are assessing other Cost Benefit texts or sites make sure all these items are included. Mistake #7. Not selling the final decision appropriately. Once the decision has been made to fund a particular proposal, it is important to sell this to the interested stakeholders. These stakeholders could be employees, unions, shareholders, the press, other executives, special interest groups or funding providers. Selling a decision that used Cost Benefit principles is easier. The method is clear, tested, proven and easy to understand. This makes it more likely to be accepted. Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles What is Private Franchising? It is Nothing Someone Made It Up Cost Ratios of greater than 1 also translate into increased shareholder value - a must for successful companies.The Federal Trade Commission has an obligation to the general public, their stated consumer education mission and to the over regulated franchising industry and the small business operators running Biz Ops to separate the two business models by way of legal definition. Any failure to completely separate them will trigger additional problems down the road and cause the current on-going process of rule review to continue, without any formalization for decades.This of course is good for attorneys who make money on these ambiguities for lawsuits and great for Federal Trade Commission tenure and job security. A few also realize it could allow for additional travel budgets of governmental employees during these rule making processes on the taxpayers money. It would also trigger mor The opposite is also true. Benefit Cost Ratios of less than 1 will destroy shareholder value. You would not normally fund decisions with this result. Mistake #4. Not standardising this method across the company. There are many benefits to be gained by training appropriate staff and implementing this method across the company for all financial decisions. Some of these are listed below: - Shortens decision-making time - Reduces arguments in financial decision meetings - Subjectivity is reduced - Sign-off by responsible managers is made easier - More time available for CEO to plan and direct Mistake #5. Wasting time at meetings debating the method - not the proposal. Since Cost Benefit Analysis provides clear assumptions, costs, benefits and a final answer, the time taken discussing the method is reduced. This is especially marked if this method is agreed across the company BEFORE it is used. More time can then be applied to discussing the data and the assumptions, not the method, allowing managers to spend more time on other tasks. Mistake #6. Using methods that do not include ALL Cost Benefit components. There are certain elements to Cost Benefit Analysis that are critical to its success and confident decisions. These are listed below: - Net Present Value - Appropriate Discount Rates - Clear explanation of assumptions - Use of Benefit Cost Ratio - Thinking widely on all options including “do nothing” - Inclusion of non-financial benefits - "Cradle to Grave” view of costs and benefits If you are assessing other Cost Benefit texts or sites make sure all these items are included. Mistake #7. Not selling the final decision appropriately. Once the decision has been made to fund a particular proposal, it is important to sell this to the interested stakeholders. These stakeholders could be employees, unions, shareholders, the press, other executives, special interest groups or funding providers. Selling a decision that used Cost Benefit principles is easier. The method is clear, tested, proven and easy to understand. This makes it more likely to be accepted. Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles Why Everyone That Provides A Service Should Sell A Product d, allowing managers to spend more time on other tasks.That is a pretty powerful statement I made in that headline. Everyone in the service industry should have something tangible to sell to go with it. That something tangible could be a process or formula that they claim as their own.You may be a copywriter and thinking Kelly has gone totally nuts; or a physician thinking Kelly has no clue about what I do or why.Let me give you some examples of what I'm talking about with this. Let's start with a copywriter or graphic designer that is providing a service.I've talked before about how you, as providers of a service, can't make any money if you're not working. If you become sick or take a vacation there is no money coming in. Long term I don't think that's a place any of us want to be.Having something to sell b Mistake #6. Using methods that do not include ALL Cost Benefit components. There are certain elements to Cost Benefit Analysis that are critical to its success and confident decisions. These are listed below: - Net Present Value - Appropriate Discount Rates - Clear explanation of assumptions - Use of Benefit Cost Ratio - Thinking widely on all options including “do nothing” - Inclusion of non-financial benefits - "Cradle to Grave” view of costs and benefits If you are assessing other Cost Benefit texts or sites make sure all these items are included. Mistake #7. Not selling the final decision appropriately. Once the decision has been made to fund a particular proposal, it is important to sell this to the interested stakeholders. These stakeholders could be employees, unions, shareholders, the press, other executives, special interest groups or funding providers. Selling a decision that used Cost Benefit principles is easier. The method is clear, tested, proven and easy to understand. This makes it more likely to be accepted. Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles Top 7 Steps to Protect your Computer from Hurricanes ed.Having lived in West Central Florida for the past 15 years, I’ve been given some insight into the sometimes scary reality of Mother Nature. This past summer I’ve had the displeasure of meeting four characters, first hand...Charley, Frances, Jeanne and Ivan. Yes, I’m talking about Hurricanes.For all the advantages one has with personal computers or a high-tech home office setup, there are huge disadvantages to being plugged in during the approach of a serious storm: the loss of data can be devastating. While it's simple enough to log off, shut down and unplug at the first warning signs, you might want to take a few extra steps to preserve information that is vital to a business or the family archives. In the best of circumstances an ounce of prevention will result in countles Mistake #8. Not reviewing the decision once it is implemented. The decision has been made and the proposal funded; it has been sold to the stakeholders and it has been implemented. It has been operating for at least a year. Now what? It is time to review the decision, its implementation, the model's assumptions and the decision process. These aspects are made easier since all the critical aspects of the proposal were included in the initial deliberations. This review can take into the following items to see if lessons can be learned so the same mistakes (if there are any) are not made on the next proposal: - Did the proposed costs and benefits actually occur? - Were the original model assumptions correct? - Could the decision process be improved? - Could others have assisted in the decision process? - What lessons can we learn? Mistake #9. Not learning from the past mistakes. Had this method been implemented for past decisions then lessons learnt from past mistakes could be applied to the decisions at hand. It is important for the health of the business to implement these principles now - before other mistakes and sub-optimal decisions are made. Mistake #10. Not training all potential decision-makers in the correct method. It is important to ensure that all potential decision-makers are trained in the same method. It will only cause friction if these are differing ideas of the correct method. I have found that it works best if the CEO can be convinced then he/she sells/directs it to the other decision-makers as the only way to present proposals in future.
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