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    Investing on Your Business Cards
    Business cards are given after meeting a potential client to better know the nature of a business and a note on how to contact you. The usual size for a business card would be 2 x 3.5 and can be printed in gloss, with a softer gloss, UV with ultimate shine and matte with a smooth dull finish.Maximize the use of your business cards by using it as a promotional tool as well. Besides putting your name and your contact information in it, why don’t you use some of that space to write as well all the products or services you are offering?Your business card would be the one working for you even after you have met with your potential customer. This is the reason why you should not think twice about investing in business cards printing.Pay attention on the design for your business card and on the quality of paper you would be using in it. The impression that you have built on the meeting with your potential client might be reversed if you are to give out a home-made customized business card.Don’t give the impressio
    from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. D

    Graduate Insurance Jobs-Getting a Career in Insurance
    With a job as an insurance agency’s account handler, you become responsible for managing client accounts. It is your job to advise on how to manage risks and you will offer insurance solutions to their risk problems. You will learn to work with clients and underwriters, hopefully maintaining good relations with both. You will put together risk submissions for presentation to the underwriters, negotiate terms with them, and present those terms to your clients. Your duties will have you checking over policies to make sure that they will perform, and handling mid-term alterations to your clients’ policies as well as processing any claims that they have.From this position, you have the chance to move upward to account executive, with more duties and responsibilities as well as the pay to go with it. You would have the duty to visit the clients personally, as well as paying visits to prospective clients. You would be assessing the risks that the clients are exposed to and providing them with the best advice in dealing with th
    Use Time-based Competition as one of your most powerful strategic weapons! Drive down the time it takes to develop and deliver new products, dramatically reduce inventory and manufacturing time. Slash the cost of quality, and win back market share. This article tells you how top-flight companies are doing it.

    Substantial market share has been lost over years to foreign competitors. No industry is immune. The pressure is on to be the nothing less than the best. Reducing cycle times in your company is a new way of tackling the problem. It's a new world-class manufacturing strategy that is making companies fiercely competitive. Companies who are doing it are cutting out 50 percent of the time to develop and introduce new products. Some have already reduced factory throughput time by 98 percent.

    Time based competition is one of the most powerful strategic weapons to emerge in the last 20 years! It allows you to drive down the time it takes to develop and deliver new products, dramatically reduce inventory and manufacturing time, slash the cost of quality, and win back market share. Today, and for the next 10 years, speed kills the competition. Time compression can result in consistently producing happy customers: a great formula for success. Why? When given a situation where costs and quality are similar, customers will choose delivery as the deciding factor.

    Compressing time has a cascading affect on quality and cost. As cycle times are reduced, productivity increases proportionally. A fifty percent reduction in cycle time and a doubling in work-in-process inventory turns causes productivity to increase from 20-70 percent. As productivity increases, resource capacity is freed. Two things happen: costs decline, and the organization becomes capable of producing significantly more output with less resources: a winning combination

    Most manufacturing companies spend anywhere from 5-10 percent total time actually adding value to the product, i.e., transforming the part or moving it closer to the customer. The rest of the time is waste, resulting in higher costs occurring with loss of time.

    Inducing velocity throughout a business has a profound effect on time and cost. The need for nonvalue-adding functions disappears, and the functions designed to accommodate exceptional circumstances fall out. The organization chart becomes flatter. Following this is a dramatic reduction of overhead.

    How to Reduce Total Cycle Time

    Understanding the way an organization functions is key to the redesign for time-based competition. The structure dictates how labor is divided and how power is allocated. Physical proximity normally follows structure, both of which have a direct impact on ease of information sharing and time.

    In a traditional functional organization, communication walls begin to build as the organization grows. Over time, functional entities develop and become self-serving, losing sight of the mission of serving the customer.

    Sequential decision-making becomes prevalent, coupled with poor or non-existent communications. The organization develops functional empires, fraught with politics and narrow points of view. The result is an organization slow in decision-making, heavy with vertical layers of management, bureaucratic in nature, low in productivity, and generally ineffective.

    Every business has basic cycles that govern the way that paper is processed, product is manufactured, and decisions are made. They may be documented in the form of procedures or routings. Examples of business cycles are customer order, product development, production, and procurement.

    A customer order cycle begins with the placement of an order by a customer. It ends when you are finally paid for goods or services rendered. But there are activities in between the two events that consume time. Some add value, such as packing and shipping, and some are non-value adding and delay time, such as moving the order around the building from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. De

    Realistic Goals...How To Set Them and Why
    So many people want to start a business today and be rich tomorrow. Sorry, people it doesn't happen that way.  If it did, everyone would do it. There is no free lunch...it takes hard work, determination and realistic goal setting. Think about the businesses you have worked at, look at the businesses in your community.  I mean really look. When you go to the dry cleaners, how many other people are there also. Think about what it takes for that dry cleaner to open every day. How many people he needs to come in with their dry cleaning in order to make a profit. OK, dry cleaning doesn't excite you.  How about that specialty shop you want to open! You want to open a retail store that caters to people that buy Hummels, knick knacs, bric-a-brac. Will you only handle certain types? How many will you order of each type? What are the best sellers? How many will you have to sell to make money for yourself, and to also keep that shop open, or will you sell them by mail order only from your home? Want to do business on the web?
    ducts, dramatically reduce inventory and manufacturing time, slash the cost of quality, and win back market share. Today, and for the next 10 years, speed kills the competition. Time compression can result in consistently producing happy customers: a great formula for success. Why? When given a situation where costs and quality are similar, customers will choose delivery as the deciding factor.

    Compressing time has a cascading affect on quality and cost. As cycle times are reduced, productivity increases proportionally. A fifty percent reduction in cycle time and a doubling in work-in-process inventory turns causes productivity to increase from 20-70 percent. As productivity increases, resource capacity is freed. Two things happen: costs decline, and the organization becomes capable of producing significantly more output with less resources: a winning combination

    Most manufacturing companies spend anywhere from 5-10 percent total time actually adding value to the product, i.e., transforming the part or moving it closer to the customer. The rest of the time is waste, resulting in higher costs occurring with loss of time.

    Inducing velocity throughout a business has a profound effect on time and cost. The need for nonvalue-adding functions disappears, and the functions designed to accommodate exceptional circumstances fall out. The organization chart becomes flatter. Following this is a dramatic reduction of overhead.

    How to Reduce Total Cycle Time

    Understanding the way an organization functions is key to the redesign for time-based competition. The structure dictates how labor is divided and how power is allocated. Physical proximity normally follows structure, both of which have a direct impact on ease of information sharing and time.

    In a traditional functional organization, communication walls begin to build as the organization grows. Over time, functional entities develop and become self-serving, losing sight of the mission of serving the customer.

    Sequential decision-making becomes prevalent, coupled with poor or non-existent communications. The organization develops functional empires, fraught with politics and narrow points of view. The result is an organization slow in decision-making, heavy with vertical layers of management, bureaucratic in nature, low in productivity, and generally ineffective.

    Every business has basic cycles that govern the way that paper is processed, product is manufactured, and decisions are made. They may be documented in the form of procedures or routings. Examples of business cycles are customer order, product development, production, and procurement.

    A customer order cycle begins with the placement of an order by a customer. It ends when you are finally paid for goods or services rendered. But there are activities in between the two events that consume time. Some add value, such as packing and shipping, and some are non-value adding and delay time, such as moving the order around the building from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. D

    The Sometimes Life Of The Early-Stage, Mid-Stage And Even Late-Stage Entrepreneur Can Be Scattered
    The word entrepreneur has become a catch all title for just about everyone and anyone who starts and or builds a business. I’ve always had a bit of trouble throwing that overused, imported moniker around because I believe it’s not always applied in the correct manner.Is an entrepreneur someone who takes the family business and keeps it going? Is it the person who builds a new division of the company where they’re employed? Or should it be reserved for only those who have put everything on the line in order to build their business? I’ll opt for the latter.I’ll never forget being at an area Chamber of Commerce awards dinner some years back when I was surprised to find that the recipient of the Entrepreneur of The Year award went to a gentleman whose father had started the business many years before and built it into quite a successful venture. By the time the son had arrived to run the company it was already a multi-million dollar operation! “Wait a minute”, I said to myself, “How can this guy be the entrepreneur of the y
    ming the part or moving it closer to the customer. The rest of the time is waste, resulting in higher costs occurring with loss of time.

    Inducing velocity throughout a business has a profound effect on time and cost. The need for nonvalue-adding functions disappears, and the functions designed to accommodate exceptional circumstances fall out. The organization chart becomes flatter. Following this is a dramatic reduction of overhead.

    How to Reduce Total Cycle Time

    Understanding the way an organization functions is key to the redesign for time-based competition. The structure dictates how labor is divided and how power is allocated. Physical proximity normally follows structure, both of which have a direct impact on ease of information sharing and time.

    In a traditional functional organization, communication walls begin to build as the organization grows. Over time, functional entities develop and become self-serving, losing sight of the mission of serving the customer.

    Sequential decision-making becomes prevalent, coupled with poor or non-existent communications. The organization develops functional empires, fraught with politics and narrow points of view. The result is an organization slow in decision-making, heavy with vertical layers of management, bureaucratic in nature, low in productivity, and generally ineffective.

    Every business has basic cycles that govern the way that paper is processed, product is manufactured, and decisions are made. They may be documented in the form of procedures or routings. Examples of business cycles are customer order, product development, production, and procurement.

    A customer order cycle begins with the placement of an order by a customer. It ends when you are finally paid for goods or services rendered. But there are activities in between the two events that consume time. Some add value, such as packing and shipping, and some are non-value adding and delay time, such as moving the order around the building from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. D

    Can You Fight City Hall - How Far Should We Go to be a Maverick
    Can you fight city hall? The answer is yes and no. That's right, you have to pick your battles. For example, and of you who have read successfulbarbarian.com know that I am still dealing with a few issues from my 'previous life'. The issues deal with the IRS. That's right your truly is a grade A first class tax pro-test-er, or at least that is what the IRS would tell you. So how can a person with my history say you can't fight city hall. Well because of the story of one of the lawspeakers of Iceland. Iceland was surrounded by countries that had converted to Christianity. These countries were threatening economic restrictions as well as war if Iceland did not convert. Iceland had its 'congress' meet and some of the folks wanted to convert and some did not. All agreed to abide by the decree of the Law Speaker. He decided, after much contemplation, that Iceland should change to a Christian country, but the people could still do what they wanted behind closed doors.I can hear you know,'What in the heck does that have t

    Sequential decision-making becomes prevalent, coupled with poor or non-existent communications. The organization develops functional empires, fraught with politics and narrow points of view. The result is an organization slow in decision-making, heavy with vertical layers of management, bureaucratic in nature, low in productivity, and generally ineffective.

    Every business has basic cycles that govern the way that paper is processed, product is manufactured, and decisions are made. They may be documented in the form of procedures or routings. Examples of business cycles are customer order, product development, production, and procurement.

    A customer order cycle begins with the placement of an order by a customer. It ends when you are finally paid for goods or services rendered. But there are activities in between the two events that consume time. Some add value, such as packing and shipping, and some are non-value adding and delay time, such as moving the order around the building from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. D

    Why You Need to Know Your Customers Better
    When was the last time you took a customer out for coffee?I know. You're busy. You might have trouble remembering when you last had a real lunch break. You're managing a store, and there is always something that needs to be done yesterday.If you are not regularly spending time with customers, you're missing the boat. And I don't mean just helping customers on the sales floor. I mean getting to know them better and asking for feedback about your store.Independent retailers, like you, have the advantage of being close to the consumer. Often you know many of your customers personally. One of the most important things you can do to attract more customers, is to build on this strength.Work to improve your relationships with your existing customers. You will learn more about what your customers need, and they will start to tell their friends about you.Knowing who your customers are and what they are passionate about is crucial to getting more shoppers in the door. Too often I speak to
    from mailbox to mailbox, sitting on a desk, or repetitive motions.

    When a cycle ends, a lot of non-value adding time has been consumed that may constitute 90-95 percent of total time. Some of the time is lost in travel, some is lost in the processing backlog, and some may be lost diverting a customer's order to a credit department for release. If you can identify the non-value added time in the cycle, you can devise ways to eliminate the causes.

    Long sequential strings of cycles make up the mainstream order flow and contribute to long throughput times. Poor physical logistics worsen the time delays; i.e. when distribution is physically separated from the main assembly plant, or engineering is separated from sales, etc. Component plants located overseas add even more to the overall throughput time of the service chain of events.

    Mainstream value-add activities are identified on flow process charts. Flow process charts are analyzed for activities that delay mainstream activities. Delays can be moves, slow operations, inspections, as well as waiting time. Cutting cycle times fifty percent per established period of time is a good goal. The process is continuous.

    It is not uncommon for the manufacturing time to only consume 40 percent of the total time a customer has to wait. Yet the value-add time in the plant is generally 5-8 percent of the manufacturing throughput time. The way to identify the activities is to use process mapping.

    Mapping process flow is a fundamental step in reducing total cycle times. Mapping the flow and tracking time for each of the events provides a basis for analysis. The process is not difficult, however it is time consuming. It provides a step by step image of work flow, systems, procedures, and volumes. It reveals the relationships between the tasks.

    A process is any series or combination of tasks or activities which produce a result. The result could be a machined part, a drawing, or a requisition for materials. Cycles are sequences of recurring successions of processes or events. The cycle time is the time from the beginning of the first step of the process until the beginning of the first step of the next process. Processes can be decomposed into smaller activities. Traditionally those activities may be performed in a sequential manner. In this situation each step is completed before the next one begins.

    Once cycles are mapped, the opportunities to compress time can be pursued. The goal in compressing time is not to devise the best way to perform a task, but rather to either eliminate the task altogether or perform it parallel with other tasks so that the overall system response time is reduced. A basic premise of reducing total cycle times is to separate activities between in-line and off-line.

    Extending this approach to the entire supply chain and focusing in on the mainstream activities that add value is key. Each of the steps can be further decomposed into smaller activities. By providing the output, such as transferring information, from smaller activities much sooner to the subsequent smaller activities, time can be compressed.

    No sacred cows exist. Functions, tasks, jobs, and parts of organizations that stand in the way of value-add are removed from the mainstream to off-line positions. Off-line functions and positions perform preparatory work for in-line activities. Examples of off-line work are pre-engineering, pricing, credit-checks, and purchasing negotiations for just-in-time supplier contracts. Credit and accounting are not allowed to delay orders.

    Summary

    Time-based competition is a powerful strategic weapon to counter stiff foreign and domestic competition. Reducing cycle times throughout your company can makes you fast, flexible and a fierce competitor. Its implementation requires an attack on the basic company infrastructure. Focusing on streamlining physical flow of parts and information and compressing time in the basic business cycles can make it happen.

    It gives you the capability to get ideas off the drawing board and into the market place faster. It enables you to move parts through your plants with turbo velocity. It gives you the means of becoming world class, and provides a new approach to competing globally in the next century.

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