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    Options for Working Moms - Is it all or Nothing?
    Many working moms struggle with the day-to-day grind of the workweek. While many may enjoy their jobs, they may not enjoy the ritual of waking up early, getting the kids ready, only to drop them off at daycare. Oftentimes, a large portion of their paycheck goes straight to the people who are caring for their children during the day.If you’re a mom who is not happy with your situation, there are alternatives for you to explore. Not all of them are going to suit your needs but you might find a couple that you should investigate further.Part Time JobsWhile those who are on a tight budget might not be able to afford this option, others may want to question what their current employer offers. You also have to consider the type of job you’re in and if it lends itself to being a
    rtant to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.

    Why Paying For Traffic Is A Smart Form Of Advertising
    There are so many success stories you will hear about businesses making it good in the internet. The troubling thing is, there are maybe a tenfold or even a hundredfold of stories contradictory to theirs.Many have unsuccessfully launched a business enterprise that is internet based but only a handfulshall succeed.The Very BasicTraffic is “The #1”. Without traffic, all your effort would just go to waste. Every business needscustomers, without them you wouldn’t have anyone to sell your products to. In the internet world traffic is the walk in customer. The more traffic you have the more people would be able to sell your products to. But like any business that’s in every corner building or in the mall, not everyone that goes in will buy, but the greater of numbe
    When was the last time you felt excited, motivated and extremely keen to be at work? Chances are it was when you had a job or project that really interested you, you had control over what you did and the way you did it, and you didn’t have any worries about “over zealous boss” interference or lack of job security. It’s a great feeling and we can all probably relate stories of how and when we were most “motivated” at work.

    But as managers, do we consciously try to provide this same level of motivation for all of our employees? Or, are we merely fixated on striving to achieve the deadlines, budgets and targets that are set for us (and that seem to be getting tougher and tougher and placing more and more stress on us and our people), and forgetting what it was really like when we worked in an environment that was truly “motivational”.

    My challenge to practising managers, is to think back to when they were most motivated at work and identify the reasons why (list them on a sheet of paper as dot points). Then, set about implementing these same conditions for their own people. (Draw up your own list now and see how it compares with mine)

    I’ve issued this challenge to managers over the last 20 years in management development forums and invariably their “motivational conditions” they identify are:

    • Autonomy – the chance to take control over a complete project or unit of work in which I am really interested
    • Responsibility – for setting goals and targets and being accountable for achieving them
    • Recognition – for achieving meaningful results
    • Development – of my skills, knowledge and capabilities to their full potential

    I then ask them to identify the things that really irritate and annoy them and (often) change what could have been a motivating workplace into a drudgery. They are:

    • Bosses who do not recognise them for their efforts, or worse still, take the credit themselves
    • A lack of feeling of “team”, ie., “we are in this together”
    • Constant implied or implicit threats of demotion or dismissal
    • Insufficient salary (by comparison to others in the firm or in the industry)

    If these sound familiar, then you’re right! Frederick Herzberg in his classic HBR article “Once More, How do you Motivate Employees?” (harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu) came up with two similar sets of lists nearly forty years ago that he labelled “Motivators” and “Satisfiers”.

    Do they hold true today? Recent research into the turnover rates for young employees (20 – 30 yrs) shows that in some industries, the turnover rate of young employees is as high as 25% annually due to lack of perceived career development and training, and limited opportunities for involvement in other areas of the firm and their profession. These younger people, by comparison to their predecessors:
    • Are more opportunistic in taking new jobs.
    • Are more mobile.
    • Have greater expectations.
    • Are easily bored.
    Andrew Heathcote (www.brw.com.au/stories) in answer to this challenge suggests that managers need to:
    Communicate:
    • Be honest during interviews.
    • Be serious about performance reviews.
    • Do more career mapping.
    • Create a forum to develop a greater spirit of involvement.
    Tailor the workplace:
    • Provide more job rotation.
    • Arrange more rotation between offices.
    • Develop specific training.
    • Introduce variety.
    • Develop forums for social interaction.
    Be flexible:
    • Consider providing sabbaticals (so they can travel without resigning).
    • Increase the availability of unpaid leave.

    So today’s younger employee is not so different from the generation who manage them – maybe they want their motivation and satisfaction a little faster!

    By the way, notice that the majority of items on Andrew’s list are what Herzberg called “Motivators”. In fact the only two that could be termed real “Satisfiers” are the last two – sabbaticals and unpaid leave.

    But, to return to my initial question, does motivation equate with happiness? Richard Layard (www.pfd.co.uk/clients/layardr/b-aut.html) suggests that work plays a very important part in our happiness and that a lot of our happiness actually comes from the work we do. And the job that we do is affected by how we are allowed to do it. In addition, he found that in regard to the “Satisfiers”:
    • Not having a job when you should have one, is much worse than suffering a sudden drop in income
    • People who feel insecure about retaining their job, suffer a loss of happiness (relative to those who do feel secure) that is 50% greater than the loss of happiness suffered by people whose income drops by a third.

    Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick (www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/ staff/faculty/oswald/homejobs.pdf) confirms some of the importance of the “satisfiers”:

    • Having a lot of job security is important to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.C

    Understanding the Power of Your Power Network
    It is said that “it’s not what you know, but who you know that counts”. I believe that “it is what you know that will give your head start, who you know that will get you going, who knows you (and your products or services) that will help you succeed, but what you do with your knowledge and relationships that will make you succeed.”So, stop thinking that you can do it all. You can’t. There are not enough hours in the day for you to do everything. Stop thinking that you are irreplaceable or that no one can do nearly as good a job as you. After all, we are all mortal. As an over-achieving, overly energetic, obsessive-compulsive, competitive, I gotta-do-it-all, supermom-sister-wife-daughter-cousin-friend-colleague…I learned the hard way that it’s time to stop the madness.Just like women do
    ent forums and invariably their “motivational conditions” they identify are:

    • Autonomy – the chance to take control over a complete project or unit of work in which I am really interested
    • Responsibility – for setting goals and targets and being accountable for achieving them
    • Recognition – for achieving meaningful results
    • Development – of my skills, knowledge and capabilities to their full potential

    I then ask them to identify the things that really irritate and annoy them and (often) change what could have been a motivating workplace into a drudgery. They are:

    • Bosses who do not recognise them for their efforts, or worse still, take the credit themselves
    • A lack of feeling of “team”, ie., “we are in this together”
    • Constant implied or implicit threats of demotion or dismissal
    • Insufficient salary (by comparison to others in the firm or in the industry)

    If these sound familiar, then you’re right! Frederick Herzberg in his classic HBR article “Once More, How do you Motivate Employees?” (harvardbusinessonline.hbsp.harvard.edu) came up with two similar sets of lists nearly forty years ago that he labelled “Motivators” and “Satisfiers”.

    Do they hold true today? Recent research into the turnover rates for young employees (20 – 30 yrs) shows that in some industries, the turnover rate of young employees is as high as 25% annually due to lack of perceived career development and training, and limited opportunities for involvement in other areas of the firm and their profession. These younger people, by comparison to their predecessors:
    • Are more opportunistic in taking new jobs.
    • Are more mobile.
    • Have greater expectations.
    • Are easily bored.
    Andrew Heathcote (www.brw.com.au/stories) in answer to this challenge suggests that managers need to:
    Communicate:
    • Be honest during interviews.
    • Be serious about performance reviews.
    • Do more career mapping.
    • Create a forum to develop a greater spirit of involvement.
    Tailor the workplace:
    • Provide more job rotation.
    • Arrange more rotation between offices.
    • Develop specific training.
    • Introduce variety.
    • Develop forums for social interaction.
    Be flexible:
    • Consider providing sabbaticals (so they can travel without resigning).
    • Increase the availability of unpaid leave.

    So today’s younger employee is not so different from the generation who manage them – maybe they want their motivation and satisfaction a little faster!

    By the way, notice that the majority of items on Andrew’s list are what Herzberg called “Motivators”. In fact the only two that could be termed real “Satisfiers” are the last two – sabbaticals and unpaid leave.

    But, to return to my initial question, does motivation equate with happiness? Richard Layard (www.pfd.co.uk/clients/layardr/b-aut.html) suggests that work plays a very important part in our happiness and that a lot of our happiness actually comes from the work we do. And the job that we do is affected by how we are allowed to do it. In addition, he found that in regard to the “Satisfiers”:
    • Not having a job when you should have one, is much worse than suffering a sudden drop in income
    • People who feel insecure about retaining their job, suffer a loss of happiness (relative to those who do feel secure) that is 50% greater than the loss of happiness suffered by people whose income drops by a third.

    Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick (www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/ staff/faculty/oswald/homejobs.pdf) confirms some of the importance of the “satisfiers”:

    • Having a lot of job security is important to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.

    Jersey Bookkeepers Know Their Work
    Bookkeeping can be a tough thing to handle, if a person does not have the professional expertise to do the work. You must understand that every person who starts a business venture is not qualified to take care of all the different aspects that aspects related to the successful working of the business. Well, the main aim of any individual who start a business is to earn profit and for doing this in the correct way, you need to know all the nuances associated with it. If you happen to set up an office in Jersey, it will be best for you to hire the services of a bookkeeper who works in that city. Well, there is no point in hiring professional services from outside as this will be costly and sometime troublesome also.Jersey bookkeepers can be hired from several accounting firms that operate in th
    cent research into the turnover rates for young employees (20 – 30 yrs) shows that in some industries, the turnover rate of young employees is as high as 25% annually due to lack of perceived career development and training, and limited opportunities for involvement in other areas of the firm and their profession. These younger people, by comparison to their predecessors:
    • Are more opportunistic in taking new jobs.
    • Are more mobile.
    • Have greater expectations.
    • Are easily bored.
    Andrew Heathcote (www.brw.com.au/stories) in answer to this challenge suggests that managers need to:
    Communicate:
    • Be honest during interviews.
    • Be serious about performance reviews.
    • Do more career mapping.
    • Create a forum to develop a greater spirit of involvement.
    Tailor the workplace:
    • Provide more job rotation.
    • Arrange more rotation between offices.
    • Develop specific training.
    • Introduce variety.
    • Develop forums for social interaction.
    Be flexible:
    • Consider providing sabbaticals (so they can travel without resigning).
    • Increase the availability of unpaid leave.

    So today’s younger employee is not so different from the generation who manage them – maybe they want their motivation and satisfaction a little faster!

    By the way, notice that the majority of items on Andrew’s list are what Herzberg called “Motivators”. In fact the only two that could be termed real “Satisfiers” are the last two – sabbaticals and unpaid leave.

    But, to return to my initial question, does motivation equate with happiness? Richard Layard (www.pfd.co.uk/clients/layardr/b-aut.html) suggests that work plays a very important part in our happiness and that a lot of our happiness actually comes from the work we do. And the job that we do is affected by how we are allowed to do it. In addition, he found that in regard to the “Satisfiers”:
    • Not having a job when you should have one, is much worse than suffering a sudden drop in income
    • People who feel insecure about retaining their job, suffer a loss of happiness (relative to those who do feel secure) that is 50% greater than the loss of happiness suffered by people whose income drops by a third.

    Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick (www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/ staff/faculty/oswald/homejobs.pdf) confirms some of the importance of the “satisfiers”:

    • Having a lot of job security is important to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.

    Factoring Consultants
    The ultimate goal of factoring consultants is to maximize the wealth of the shareholders. This is represented by the market value of the shares of the factoring companies. Wealth is defined as the net present worth of the company, i.e., the present value of all future returns. This is determined by capitalizing the net income after taxes, which is achieved by discounting the return expected by the investors - also known as cost of equity.Though the wealth maximization seems superior to profit maximization objective, it is to be noted that the former is based upon the latter. The market price of shares, which is the indicator of the wealth of the firm, is based on the long-term returns of the firm. The returns that accrue to the investor would be a function of the earnings of the company. In ad
    tion who manage them – maybe they want their motivation and satisfaction a little faster!

    By the way, notice that the majority of items on Andrew’s list are what Herzberg called “Motivators”. In fact the only two that could be termed real “Satisfiers” are the last two – sabbaticals and unpaid leave.

    But, to return to my initial question, does motivation equate with happiness? Richard Layard (www.pfd.co.uk/clients/layardr/b-aut.html) suggests that work plays a very important part in our happiness and that a lot of our happiness actually comes from the work we do. And the job that we do is affected by how we are allowed to do it. In addition, he found that in regard to the “Satisfiers”:
    • Not having a job when you should have one, is much worse than suffering a sudden drop in income
    • People who feel insecure about retaining their job, suffer a loss of happiness (relative to those who do feel secure) that is 50% greater than the loss of happiness suffered by people whose income drops by a third.

    Andrew Oswald of the University of Warwick (www2.warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/economics/ staff/faculty/oswald/homejobs.pdf) confirms some of the importance of the “satisfiers”:

    • Having a lot of job security is important to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.

    How To Put A Winning Website Together
    The layout of your website and how it is designed will be critical for your success as a coach.Here are some quick tips of how to design your site to ensure that it is the best it can be:A Good Looking Site Is Not Good EnoughIt is all well and good having a flashy website but your main aim of the site is to convert browsers into clients.Keep gizmos to the bare minimum and when designing your site put yourself in your ideal clients shoes and ask yourself:"What would I want to see on this site?"What colours?""Pictures? personal pictures or business?"Get this type of thing wrong and it will cost you dearly as you only get 5 seconds to grab the visitors attentionAttention Grabbing HeadlineWhat is the main benefit of your servi
    rtant to feeling a high degree of satisfaction with your job
    • People with relatively high incomes or university degrees tend to get more satisfaction
    • Women tend to be more satisfied than men
    • The self-employed tend to be more satisfied
    • People who work in a small workplace tend to be more satisfied than those who work for large employers
    • Working at home tends to lead to higher satisfaction
    • A job that involves dealing with people tends to bring higher satisfaction

    Herzberg would be very pleased with the results of the amazing amount of today’s research that confirms his contention that it is important for managers to concentrate on both the “Motivators” and the “Satisfiers” if one is to have happy and motivated employees.

    The message? Managers, revisit your own list of “Motivators” Start working on implementing the things on that list of your’s with your employees today!

    If you would like to find out how motivated and satisfied your people are, you can do so with a simple feedback profile such as CHECKpoint™ (nationallearning.com.au/index_files/EmployeeFeedbackandMotivation.htm). CHECKpoint™ has been developed on the work of Herzberg and another great social psychologist, D.C. McLelland. It not only provides feedback on employee motivation and satisfaction, but also how to maintain these and address any problematic issues.

    Copyright 2006 The National Learning Institute

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