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Add You - Good Job Candidates on Paper Doesn't Always Translate to Good Employees
Payroll Service, Changing Providers -Chapter One: Reasons to Change Providers their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve.Why change your payroll provider? Service Stinks Cost too High Too many Errors No help with IRS Lost in the Shuffle Service Stinks. Payroll service is all about service. If you don’t perceive that your business receives good service then you probably aren’t getting good service. Payroll service providers know that their level of service has to be extremely high. Are you getting what you were promised? Too often salespeople promise what production can’t deliver. Are your problems addressed, and more importantly solved, immediately. If your account has been overdrafted and you don’t get your money back in two business days or less you are not getting good service.Cost too High. Are you paying more than you should? How do you tell? Get some quotes. There are a number of free quote services on line. Google "Payroll quotes" and go from there. Many times your payroll company will negotiate with you if you feel the price is too high, but not always. Remember also that the major payroll companies have a revenue maximization process. They will quote you a price to get your business. There used to be right on the Paychex contr 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that Why Businesses Fail Horribly- Poor Or Inadequate Market Research Getting a great job has never been more difficult. For both the job seeker and the hiring company, the job search is often an exercise in wasted time and money.In this sharpshooting article, we help you take precise aim at your sales target.Market research is the process of systematic gathering, recording and analysing of data about customers, competitors and the market. It helps create a business plan, launch a new product or service, fine tune existing products and expand into new markets etc.It can be also be used to determine which portion of the population will purchase the product or service, based on age, gender, location and income level. It can be establish the characteristic of your target market.With proper market research, companies can make better business decisions about the development and marketing of new products. Market research represents the voice of the consumer in a company.This is vital to ensure that your business idea is viable.Lack of Adequate Market ResearchIn an effort to get a business plan together hastily, many business owners do not double-check and substantiate their claims.So it is your responsibility to ensure your research is accurate, up-to-date, and verifiable.A common misconception is that an entrepreneur who fails, lacks sufficient funding or did not put the right team in place.But,one of the leading causes of the colla With the advent of the computer, many people have become faceless in the business world. Technological advances like the cell phone, PDA, Blackberry, VOIP, instant messaging and blogging have removed the personality of the user behind the technology. Anyone who is single can tell you how difficult it is to “date” on-line because what you see is not what you get. On-line dating is populated with married people and with people pretending to be younger, smarter, richer, taller and more interesting. The same is true in the job hunt. How can you stand out as an individual when you literally can be anyone you want to be? Technology has removed the layer of “intuition” that has served human beings so well for millenniums. Intuition allowed human beings to assess true intentions and threat level as individuals. This anonymity has translated into an unforeseen problem for businesses. As businesses turn to more and more high-tech methods for weeding out risky employees, they are actually compounding their risk. No “data-based” determination (resume scanning, background check, psychological test, credit report, etc.) can determine a suitable fit or talent match like a good old face to face sit down with someone. The problem is we don’t do that much anymore. Like anything you only do occasionally, you get rusty at it. We’ve allowed technology to make our decisions on people we plan to work with every day. The old expression “he looks good on paper” is appropriate here. It has become very easy and convenient to manufacture yourself on “paper.” There simply is no substitute for personal assessment of potential employees early on in the game. The human brain can “see” and process things a computer cannot. Many extremely good job candidates are eliminated early on by machines simply because they did not use the right keywords in their resume. A human can see a potentially good fit where a computer cannot. Ultimately, we hire people because we like their personality traits, not what their resume tells us. Beyond a basic level of qualification, all candidates are the same until you spend a few minutes with them. Multitudes of companies are lamenting about the lack of “good” candidates. Jobs go vacant and companies turn to outsourcing in an attempt to find “suitable” people to do their work. Meanwhile, thousands and thousands of dynamite people are under or unemployed wondering why no one wants them. It’s time to shift our thinking to consider the “hidden” talent market out there. The ideal candidate doesn’t always come packaged quite the way hiring managers envision him or her. For lower level positions, consider training bright and eager candidates to take on the job regardless of employment history. Consider their personal strengths rather than past jobs. A great candidate for sales may have worked at a theme park herding and controlling people getting on rides. The most important skill they learned was to be patient with many different types of people while standing in the heat. A patient salesman is a blessing to any business because they won’t get easily frustrated. For upper level positions, consider taking candidates from other industries and those with “unusual” backgrounds. These people really have learned something just by working in a different area and many can bring a fresh perspective to your business. Some businesses have already discovered that hiring mid-managers from other industries allows them to tap into the best practices of those industries in addition to their own industries, essentially doubling their know-how and increasing their ability to adjust to changing conditions. While it may seem counterintuitive, an ideal candidate is someone who was laid-off in another industry that is now struggling. That manager can bring insight into what didn’t work and what went wrong that your company can leverage into an advantage over competitors in your own industry. But what’s a company to do when it posts a job and gets 12,000 resumes for a single job? No human wants to slog through all that. Which is why a change is needed in the way we recruit employees. The employment process should be both easier and harder. Use technology only as a rudimentary screening tool. 1. Screen resumes to meet the absolute minimum requirements of the job. If the job requires a bachelor’s degree screen out anyone without one but don’t screen for a nice to have master’s degree when a bachelor’s will do. Consider too that some of the best candidates are those who have been working for a living rather than going to school to get advanced degrees. Experience really does count more than education. Unless a position absolutely requires additional education, such as a medical degree for a physician, put more weight on experience. 2. Ask candidates to send in a short paragraph or two to summarize their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve. 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that Manufacturing Your Products In China For Your Home Based Business chological test, credit report, etc.) can determine a suitable fit or talent match like a good old face to face sit down with someone.Manufacturing products in China for the European and American markets have grown exponentially over the last few years. This is due to the cheap labor and cheap manufacturing costs in the country. It’s an amazing country with multitudes of companies bidding for whatever you want manufactured. I strongly encourage anyone who has a volume internet market to explore the avenue of manufacturing their products in China. You have absolutely nothing to loose.Start off by sending drawings or templates of the product that you are considering manufacturing. When they get back to you, they will insist on you ordering a minimum quantity to attain the price quoted. The competition over there is fierce. There should be no problem them sending you a sample of the product that they have manufactured free of charge.Send your drawings to at least 3 companies to attain 3 different quotes. This means you should get 3 samples back, one each from each company. Whatever the price (there won’t be much between them) pick the sample that is the best quality. It will so much pay off in the long run.Planning and organising are essential when dealing with Chinese companies. Shipping usually takes 6-8 weeks so you must plan ahead at all times. For the first few trans The problem is we don’t do that much anymore. Like anything you only do occasionally, you get rusty at it. We’ve allowed technology to make our decisions on people we plan to work with every day. The old expression “he looks good on paper” is appropriate here. It has become very easy and convenient to manufacture yourself on “paper.” There simply is no substitute for personal assessment of potential employees early on in the game. The human brain can “see” and process things a computer cannot. Many extremely good job candidates are eliminated early on by machines simply because they did not use the right keywords in their resume. A human can see a potentially good fit where a computer cannot. Ultimately, we hire people because we like their personality traits, not what their resume tells us. Beyond a basic level of qualification, all candidates are the same until you spend a few minutes with them. Multitudes of companies are lamenting about the lack of “good” candidates. Jobs go vacant and companies turn to outsourcing in an attempt to find “suitable” people to do their work. Meanwhile, thousands and thousands of dynamite people are under or unemployed wondering why no one wants them. It’s time to shift our thinking to consider the “hidden” talent market out there. The ideal candidate doesn’t always come packaged quite the way hiring managers envision him or her. For lower level positions, consider training bright and eager candidates to take on the job regardless of employment history. Consider their personal strengths rather than past jobs. A great candidate for sales may have worked at a theme park herding and controlling people getting on rides. The most important skill they learned was to be patient with many different types of people while standing in the heat. A patient salesman is a blessing to any business because they won’t get easily frustrated. For upper level positions, consider taking candidates from other industries and those with “unusual” backgrounds. These people really have learned something just by working in a different area and many can bring a fresh perspective to your business. Some businesses have already discovered that hiring mid-managers from other industries allows them to tap into the best practices of those industries in addition to their own industries, essentially doubling their know-how and increasing their ability to adjust to changing conditions. While it may seem counterintuitive, an ideal candidate is someone who was laid-off in another industry that is now struggling. That manager can bring insight into what didn’t work and what went wrong that your company can leverage into an advantage over competitors in your own industry. But what’s a company to do when it posts a job and gets 12,000 resumes for a single job? No human wants to slog through all that. Which is why a change is needed in the way we recruit employees. The employment process should be both easier and harder. Use technology only as a rudimentary screening tool. 1. Screen resumes to meet the absolute minimum requirements of the job. If the job requires a bachelor’s degree screen out anyone without one but don’t screen for a nice to have master’s degree when a bachelor’s will do. Consider too that some of the best candidates are those who have been working for a living rather than going to school to get advanced degrees. Experience really does count more than education. Unless a position absolutely requires additional education, such as a medical degree for a physician, put more weight on experience. 2. Ask candidates to send in a short paragraph or two to summarize their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve. 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that How To Dress For a Job Interview-6 Simple Tips For Success thousands of dynamite people are under or unemployed wondering why no one wants them. It’s time to shift our thinking to consider the “hidden” talent market out there. The ideal candidate doesn’t always come packaged quite the way hiring managers envision him or her.Appearance plays a big part in a job interview, possibly the biggest part. That first impression is most often the one that counts, and 90% of the time the first impression is made from what you are wearing. With that in mind, I’m going to show you exactly how to dress for a job interview!Wear a suit- Dark blue, grey or black. No prints or pinstripes, and make sure it is a conservative cut. Wear a white long sleeved blouse/shirt underneath it. The interviewer will be expecting all applicants to dress in this manner. If you don’t it will single you out in a very negative way!Make sure your hair is well groomed- A hairstyle can be a wildly subjective part of someone, so at the very least you had better make sure it is clean and tidy, with a minimum of product in use.Use minimal aftershave/perfume- Too much scent is a sure sign of someone who does not know how to dress for a job interview. Sure, you may love the smell of the latest CK scent, but what if the interviewer hates it? Worse still, what if they are allergic and talking to you brings them out in hives? Many interviewers find it very unprofessional to wear perfume etc to an interview, so even if they love the smell you may be downgrading yourself. You can avoid For lower level positions, consider training bright and eager candidates to take on the job regardless of employment history. Consider their personal strengths rather than past jobs. A great candidate for sales may have worked at a theme park herding and controlling people getting on rides. The most important skill they learned was to be patient with many different types of people while standing in the heat. A patient salesman is a blessing to any business because they won’t get easily frustrated. For upper level positions, consider taking candidates from other industries and those with “unusual” backgrounds. These people really have learned something just by working in a different area and many can bring a fresh perspective to your business. Some businesses have already discovered that hiring mid-managers from other industries allows them to tap into the best practices of those industries in addition to their own industries, essentially doubling their know-how and increasing their ability to adjust to changing conditions. While it may seem counterintuitive, an ideal candidate is someone who was laid-off in another industry that is now struggling. That manager can bring insight into what didn’t work and what went wrong that your company can leverage into an advantage over competitors in your own industry. But what’s a company to do when it posts a job and gets 12,000 resumes for a single job? No human wants to slog through all that. Which is why a change is needed in the way we recruit employees. The employment process should be both easier and harder. Use technology only as a rudimentary screening tool. 1. Screen resumes to meet the absolute minimum requirements of the job. If the job requires a bachelor’s degree screen out anyone without one but don’t screen for a nice to have master’s degree when a bachelor’s will do. Consider too that some of the best candidates are those who have been working for a living rather than going to school to get advanced degrees. Experience really does count more than education. Unless a position absolutely requires additional education, such as a medical degree for a physician, put more weight on experience. 2. Ask candidates to send in a short paragraph or two to summarize their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve. 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that Making Your Corporate Identity A Brand! heir ability to adjust to changing conditions. While it may seem counterintuitive, an ideal candidate is someone who was laid-off in another industry that is now struggling. That manager can bring insight into what didn’t work and what went wrong that your company can leverage into an advantage over competitors in your own industry.Corporate branding!! Have you ever given a prime thought to what corporate branding means does? If not try it, Branding means process by which true character and purpose of the company or organization is communicated. And it starts with corporate logo. Corporate logo makes a mark on customers. A well designed logo gives any company or organization a higher edge against the competitor.Brand identity guru Wally olins says "Brands are the tools with which companies seek to build and retain customer loyalty. Because that often requires expensive advertising and good marketing, a strong brand can raise both prices and barriers to entry."Designing may seems very easy task but designing a brand is very creative, thoughtful and logical approach for any business houses. Implementing the core values and company purpose in a symbol takes a lot and it makes a vast difference if your corporate logo says everything about your business.What do you need to know while designing a brand?When you are thinking of brand it’s a symbol, name, term, design, punch line, services and combination of all. Brand means giving your company a edge.Describing brand design in detail, Paul Barlow says, " But what’s a company to do when it posts a job and gets 12,000 resumes for a single job? No human wants to slog through all that. Which is why a change is needed in the way we recruit employees. The employment process should be both easier and harder. Use technology only as a rudimentary screening tool. 1. Screen resumes to meet the absolute minimum requirements of the job. If the job requires a bachelor’s degree screen out anyone without one but don’t screen for a nice to have master’s degree when a bachelor’s will do. Consider too that some of the best candidates are those who have been working for a living rather than going to school to get advanced degrees. Experience really does count more than education. Unless a position absolutely requires additional education, such as a medical degree for a physician, put more weight on experience. 2. Ask candidates to send in a short paragraph or two to summarize their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve. 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that What is The Secret to Flipping Real Estate their work experience in lieu of resumes. This one change can eliminate 95% of the resumes that are fired off by job seekers applying to every job he or she sees rather than to the ones they are truly qualified for. Ask a specific and relevant question to assess professional knowledge and to insure the candidates aren’t using a shotgun approach on your job posting. Technology can easily screen out those not complying with specific instructions. This is also a great way for the candidate to assert their personality and show how they think and problem solve.Flipping real estate has become the rage all over the United States and real estate investors software can give you the edge you need. It makes no difference where you live, chances are that there are people in your town who are flipping real estate. But with so many people in this niche of the real estate industry, how do they make money time and time again? Even though there is a lot of money to be had by flipping real estate, you are not guaranteed to make any money by doing so. Just like any other investment there are risks involved.But before you get started flipping real estate you may want find a good real estate investors software. The good thing is that you can find this online, and a good place to look is Ebay. Real estate investors software will make your job easier thanks to all of the information that is available on flipping real estate. As long as you keep an open mind, and search high and low, finding real estate investors software will be an easy task. This is the computer age...not the pen and paper age of the past.One secret to using real estate investors software is that you should not expect to make a million dollars with each property. Many people get into flipping real estate because they think that it is any ea 3. Get personal and professional references earlier in the interview process. Ask for references before you conduct personal interviews. A quick phone call can eliminate a costly on-site visit and can give you a more intimate look at a candidate who may not be “ideal” on paper but is a winner in the workplace. 4. Review the resumes by hand. This may sound old-fashioned but the human eye and brain can screen in candidates that a technology screen might screen out. Some of the best people have gaps in employment, have short tenures on jobs or lack the paper credentials that may eliminate them from the process. Keep in mind that good people still get laid off, have personal situations that cause employment gaps, go to work for companies that close their doors, get sick, fail at their own business, and return to the workforce after raising children or caring for sick relatives. A human being can discern a great potential employee at a glance where a computer can only screen for what it’s been told to look for. Think about your own career history (or your spouse’s, friend’s, co-worker’s, etc.) and ask yourself if you could pass a computer’s rigid standard of qualification. Probably not. A human is who believed in you and hired you. And ultimately, is whom you’ll work with, even if you work with computers. 5. Don’t use formalized HR processes to interview. Have a conversation instead of conducting Human Resource driven interviews. HR driven interviews tend to reduce candidates to the lowest common denominator, resulting in canned answers and unimaginative problem solving. Nothing reveals the true character of a person like sitting down and having a casual conversation with them. This allows you to see what the candidate is like in their natural state, not a rehearsed state where the best candidates can’t really shine with their wit, charisma and intelligence. The candidates who “act” the best tend to do well in standardized and HR driven interviews. The most creative and versatile candidates get bored during the interview process and tend to come across as less competent or less serious. 6. Use task driven versus HR driven interviews. If your company insists on using an interview process that allows the candidates to be compared to one another in some kind of systematic way, consider using a task driven evaluation rather than a question and answer type format. Assign candidates real world tasks that will allow the real stars to shine. But don’t make the task so difficult the candidate feels like they are being set up for failure. The task should be a medium level assignment requiring the use of 80% of the skill set required for the position. Remember not to include industry specific, or worse yet, company specific information in the evaluation, including abbreviations or other company lingo. The candidate should also be given the opportunity after completing the task to give the hiring manager (not the HR manager) feedback to assure that the task was properly understood and to allow the hiring manager insights into the candidate's thought processes. Sometimes the thought process is more important than getting the answer “right.” 7. Use psychological testing to gain insight, not to eliminate candidates. Some companies feel they need to use psychological testing to determine if a candidate is a good fit in the company. Unless you are hiring astronauts, air traffic controllers or some other highly stressful job where the person hired needs to be very calm, skip the mental testing. Oddballs often make very good employees if the fit between their work and their area of interest is high. It’s more important to understand the candidate than to try to eliminate all but a few personality types. When you eliminate people who are “different” or whom you think don’t fit your company culture, you also eliminate the most creative and innovative components from your workforce. Conversely, if you only screen for highly creative people, you’ll have no one to keep the rest of your people grounded in reality when it comes to day to day operations like accounting and facility management. Embrace and work with people of all different proclivities. Using a human centered approach to hiring makes sense. We have to work with people every day but more importantly, your customer base includes a wide variety of people. Don’t ever forget that people like to do business with people like themselves and that covers a lot of ground. Don’t limit your business by just hiring people like yourself.
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