Can You Define Good Management Technique?
With due respect to some of the great thinkers who have, I don’t understand how anybody even tries to define, teach, or even predict good management technique.
Even if it’s just one manager and one person being managed, there are already three huge factors: the manager, the other person, and the situation. Both the people involved have their strengths and weaknesses and all that. And the situation itself, what’s going on, is an entire additional set of factors. Then there’s baggage from the past, and, well, it becomes an infinite problem. Higher math. Condemned to infinite case-by-case analysis.
Is this technology, you know, or prevent you to action?
As small business owners and solo-technology is wonderful tool for us to run our business with little effort (of the house if you want) to automate many tedious tasks and allows to reach thousands of people in our market. However, I often see people slow down because of the technology:
• Fear of technology and learning skills they need
• fear of starting something out there on the Internet, unless they are convinced that it is perfect.
• the inability to safety in the event of major technical problem is to create,
If you click on every email you send your list, each Web page that you have set up dying, every tweet or social media message that you send to try if it is perfect? Or av
The Mysterious Case of The Shifty Salesman
Its still winter here in Michigan, as well as many other parts of the country. I also happen to live in a house that was built before people decided that insulation was quite handy when its cold outside.
Since my furnace likes to run constantly so that it can also heat up our yard and the rest of our neighborhood (sometimes I think I should open the window to make the process more efficient), it was time to get some insulation.
so I called this guy that had an OK web site with a little demo video. H
Water & Waste – Mexico – BECC to approve US$5mn Baja California sewerage work by June
The US-Mexico Border Environment Cooperation Commission (BECC) expects to submit two sewerage projects to its board of directors for approval in April, a BECC communications official told BNamericas.
The two projects, which are located in Baja California’s Tijuana city, will have a total cost of some US$4.85mn and are currently in the public consultation phase.
The approval process can take 30-60 days, so the initiative should be authorized by June, with financing from the North American Development Bank (NADB), the official said in an email.
The first project involves building a sewerage system in the Colonia Alcatraces district, some 13.5km from the US border.
