How to Find the Right Work at Home Business

Posted on March 8th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | 3 Comments »

The Case for Coaching (part Two)

There is now much more job movement than was once the case and I don’t just mean moving from one organization to another. Where once the workforce of offices, factories and shops could all be found in one building building, it is now typical to find staff dispersed across a number of locations. This may mean you managing teams with members in different parts of the country or even different parts of the world. You may have members of your team who have an entirely different work pattern to your own and whom you seldom see. You may have to manage people who work from home at the same time as people who sit at the desk opposite yours. Against this background we need an adaptable management style that relies on empowering people to use their initiative and make things happen rather than waiting for you, the boss, to call all the shots. In short, we need a coaching approach.

At the broadest level there are the massive changes being caused by globalization and world wide competition. We are doomed if we carry on relying on business models based purely on financial considerations. The deployment of an organization’s people is increasingly being seen as a vital part of its chances of success and there are moves for learning and development to be reported on in the annual report alongside profit and loss. Finally, there are the changes we have witnessed - and will continue to have to manage - from the relentless march of technology. The internet and the Web present a number of opportunities to be successful and change the way we work, but only if we’re prepared to recognize that we, as managers, cannot keep pace with our staff who are actually using the new technologies day-in and day-out. As the great business strategist Gary Hammel once said “In the knowledge economy those who live by the sword will be shot by those who don’t”

Against the background of these changes organizations have had to change their structures, processes and procedures. The days of fixed reporting lines seem gone forever; it is much more typical now to find people reporting to several managers. A lot of clerical work, to take one example, is now project based meaning over a period of time the same employee could be working for and accountable to several different managers. Similarly, somebody working in say IT may be involved in installation projects for a number of different departments and answerable to several different managers at once; each with their own requirements and management style and each convinced of course that theirs is the most important project and deserving of the highest priority. There are also people whose relationship with the organization as a whole is looser and far less formal than used to be the case. Go to any modern contact centre for example and you’ll find agency staff, full time staff and part time staff rubbing shoulders and handling customer calls. You’ll find interim managers and consultants occupying management roles, and freelance professionals peppered around the training, marketing and IT departments. This all makes the modern workplace a far more dynamic and interesting place to operate, but requires new ways of working.

Much has been written on the effect of these changes on the modern employee. We know that stress is on the rise, sickness absence at an all time high and the changing of jobs in search of something better much more common. But what of you the poor old manager? How can you cultivate the motivation and efforts of a group of people whom you really rely on but over whom you have no formal authority at all? How can you help a team focus on the key outcomes of your project when after each meeting they each return to their line managers who put them under pressure to concentrate on the ‘day job’? You can’t operate any kind of ‘command and control’ type approach when you have no mandate to do so and when you can be constantly undermined by those that do. You need instead to assert your moral authority; to engage with your people as equals and to operate as a manager who is able to get people focused, help them to manage possibly conflicting priorities and provide the learning opportunities that are becoming so highly prized. You need, in other words, to become a coach.

“Our people are our greatest asset”, drones the average executive at the annual general meeting, whilst announcing an inflation busting pay rise for the board and a pay freeze for the staff. But actually it’s true, all other aspects of a business model are replicable in a short space of time, but an ability to really galvanize a workforce puts you alongside the likes of Virgin and Toyota. It is reckoned that the average manager has a team of eight people. If we say that the cost to the organization of employing each person is about £20 000 then the average manager is presiding over assets of £160,000. It’s time we esnured that we look after these assets properly and equip managers with the coaching skills to generate the maximum return on such a level of investment.

Matt Somers
http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/the-case-for-coaching-part-two-714161.html

Posted on March 6th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | 2 Comments »

Be as Healthy as the Wealthy

Posted on March 2nd, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | 7 Comments »

Outsourcing – Your Employment Goldmine

Posted on February 28th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »

Outsourcing – Your Employment Goldmine

Posted on February 26th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »

Outsourcing – Your Employment Goldmine

Posted on February 21st, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »

Online Jobs

Lots of web sites try to convince users there are hundreds of online jobs available, but the truth is that choice possibility is not by far that rich. Nevertheless, the opportunities for online jobs are widely advertised by other online businesses that depend on their marketing campaigns to make money. How can the average web surfer find online jobs and make the best of them?

The types of sites mentioned above promise you to reveal the secret of how to make money on the Internet for a small fee. When the money gets into their account you get access to the list of services for which online jobs are needed. Afterwards, it is up to you whether you get one job or another. If you’ve been tricked once by the commercial blah blah, you won’t make the same mistake twice, as the number of such intermediary web services is very large.

The online jobs that are really interesting and well paid are sales, scheduling, writing, telemarketing, customer and recruiting services and all sorts of other professions that allow one to conduct all the activity on the Internet with maximum flexibility. Very often, a virtual assistant can be more useful in terms of clerical and secretarial support than an employee you work with office-to-desk.

Other relevant examples of online jobs are transcribers that usually edit recorded files or online tutors who collaborate with schools and all sorts of companies that organize all sorts of distance learning programs. Tutoring is actually considered very rewarding as a profession, not only because of the financial retribution but also because of the comfort of the teaching process as such.

Many of the online jobs are for freelancers with work experience in different activity sectors. The only thing with freelancing is that you would be in search of the next project or position all the time. Presently, one has the chance to find well paid online jobs through the intermediary of some good professional sites that work with freelancers only.

All in all, online jobs make international jobs in the majority of cases and they require a very good mastery of the English language since most of the terms, conditions and contracts are dealt with in English.

Jack Symes
http://www.articlesbase.com/home-business-articles/online-jobs-743446.html

Posted on February 19th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | 5 Comments »

A New Type of Professional Clerical Jobs is Emerging

Posted on February 18th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »

Online Copyediting Proofreading Jobs

http://www.FamilyTimeProfits.com Online Copyediting Proofreading Jobs

Duration : 1 min 35 sec

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Posted on January 28th, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »

How To Find Freelance Writing Jobs

http://www.100freelancemarkets.com/
Freelance writing jobs are fun and a great way to make a living. Discover the easy way to keep yourself busy with freelance work.

Duration : 45 sec

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Posted on January 22nd, 2010 by admin and filed under clerical jobs | No Comments »
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