Everything you wanted to know about parking but were too shy to ask . . . . . .

       



 
About Parking :
 
HOME
Domain Parking
Auto And Trucks

Business And Finance

Computers And Internet

Education

Family

Food And Drink

Gadgets And Gizmos

Health

Hobbies

Home Improvement

Humor

Kids And Teens

Legal

Marketing

Men

Music And Movies

Online Business

Parenting

Pets And Animals

Politics And Government

Recreation And Sports

Relationships

Religion

Self Improvement

Site Promotion

Travel And Leisure

Web Design

Women

Writing

Random Quotes
Best Websites
 
Great Websites :
 

Aesops Fables

Fun & Games

Advertise Here

Amusement

Best Baby Names

Christmas Jokes

College Humor

Complete Nonsense

Fairy Tales

Famous Poems

Famous Quotes

Flowers

Framed Posters

Free Diet Plans

Free Song Lyrics

Free View Webcams

Friendship Quotes

Funny Cat Pictures

Funny Cats

Funny Jokes

Funny Jokes Online

Funny Pictures

Funny Poems

Funny Quotes

Ghosts

Ghost Pictures

Ghost Stories

Glaswegian

Healthy Recipes

Humorous Scripts

Humor Posters

Inspirational Poems

Insult Generator

Jokes

Knock Knock Jokes

Lighthouses

Limerick Poems

Limericks

Love Poems

Fantasy Books

Mockery

Model Posters

Movie Posters

Names Meanings

Rabbie Burns

Not Mensa

Parking

Photographs

Poet

Poker Articles

Posters

Quotations Online

Random Words

Riddles

Riddles Online

Odd Jokes

Spam

Sports Posters

Duck Webcam

Strange Laws

Stupid Laws

Tongue Twisters

Top 100 Baby Names

Trophies

Vodka

Webmaster Articles

Weird Animals

Weird Facts

Weird Websites

Weird

Whisky

Wine

Work From Home

Worst City

Worst Jokes

Worst Killers

 
 
 
 
 
Parking.gs
 

Facts and Articles on Parking and Other Interesting Topics

TOPIC: Business And Finance

TITLE: Do You Make These Ten Management Mistakes?

Article:

Do You Make These Ten Management Mistakes? by: Chris Anderson

As a busy executive, you face some extremely difficult challenges like creating and dominating new markets or finding and keeping the best people. But then, like many executives, do you find yourself spending too much time solving everyday problems (that only you can solve, right?), which prevent you from growing your ideal business?

Most managers find themselves spending 80% or more of their time 'reacting' to business events and very little time in preventing those same events from occurring again. If this sounds familiar then you may be making some of these management mistakes:

Do you have a compelling vision for your company, that projects a remarkable future, but few of your employees have heard of it or could explain it if asked?

Do you have a company mission that addresses your customer needs yet your operations fail to measure your progress towards your mission?

Do your objectives focus on increasing revenue and profitability while your assets are performing poorly, generating negative cash flows, or encumbered by debt to create the profit?

Do you talk a lot about your employees (positive or negative) without noting what your employee turnover or performance metrics are for your industry?

Do you spend a lot of time working IN your business on tactics yet fail to spend a greater amount of time working ON your business to define your strategy, performance metrics, and real resource needs?

Do you have regular interactions with employees yet fail to communicate the status of objectives, financials, or metrics?

Do you make money available for training yet fail to measure how that training helps your company achieve its goals?

Do you constantly strive to improve your company's performance yet fail to compare your performance against external benchmarks for success?

Do you believe that your customers, employees, and vendors all love your company yet you have no process for measuring their satisfaction on an on-going basis?

Do you produce forecasts and budgets yet fail to achieve the agreed upon goals or learn from the experience to improve in the future.

Daily operational issues eat up much of a manager's time. Too much for most managers. But by reversing this trend, you will have the opportunity to correct those mistakes and build a superior organization that keeps your best people, increases revenue and increases margins.

Start by examining how to remove yourself from your business. Look at automating or outsourcing tasks you perform now. Any task that falls within the tactical operation of your business should be transferred to another person.

If automating or outsourcing is not an option then move the responsibility down the organization and train your employees to take over those tasks. Most employees are quite capable once they have been properly trained and given enough time to become proficient.

Continuous improvement beats delayed perfection.

The business is not about the founder, executive or management that has more experience, thinks they are the smartest or can do the best job. A business is about all of the people. In fact a business is the people.

Management's job is strategic. Manager's must focus on the vision, mission and objectives of the organization. Then deploy the resources to see the work gets done. Then measure, monitor and communicate the results so that everyone has the information they need to improve their performance.

Management job is to do the strategic work and not to do the tactical work or else who is doing the managers job? The workers cannot.

About The Author

Chris Anderson is founder and CEO of Bizmanualz, Inc. Since '1995

<-- Previous     |     Next -->

 

If you found "Do You Make These Ten Management Mistakes?" interesting then check out our other :

Parking Facts and Other Articles

 
Parking.gs
 
 
 
Interesting :
 

 
 
   
 
Website Design Copyright 2009 by Parking.gs