Author Archives: 123outsource

Google+ suspended me, but I learned something

Categories: Social Media | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Google+ has many members because gmail automatically gives you an account attached to your gmail account. So, the number of users on Google+ is deceivingly high if you look at this top-line analytic. The total amount of active members has also been manipulated. The total number of members who login several times a month might be low, and the total number of members with accounts with 1000+ followers would be a much better analytic for comparisons.

Google+ makes it hard to grow
It is hard to grow a business presence on Google+ by using Google+. If you put a G+ button on your already popular website, that is the easiest way to get followers if you already get big traffic. There are many people using Google+ in social media, travel, and programming. But, other industries have a very sparse presence. Basically, there are very few good accounts to follow. Additionally, Google+ limits the number of accounts you can follow in a day. On Twitter to gain followers, you follow lots of others and then they follow you back. On Google+, only 10% of the relevant people I follow, actually follow me back. It makes it very hard to grow.

Moderators can get you lynched
Posting on Google+ communities is a fast way to get clicks. I posted lots of relevant content in the programming, social media, and outsourcing communities. The content I posted was 100% relevant to each community and hand-picked. I published about 20 pieces per day, and was rejected by seven moderators in a period of a week. This was the biggest reason why I feel I was shut down. So, you can’t follow a lot of people without being stopped, you can’t post content without getting in trouble, what can you do?

The Google Gods can shut you down permanently
If you decide to use Google+, it has some nice features like circles. It is fun, and might make a difference for your SEO rank. But, if you invest heavily in your profile, beware! If you do something that the Google Gods don’t like, they can shut you down permanently. They will probably warn you and suspend you a few times first. But, they are the ones in control, not you. Your investment of hours of your time can be completely wiped out on a whim of the Gods! So, use caution.

I wasn’t informed of what I did wrong
I spent two hours on hold calling Google to try to figure out what I did wrong. Nobody answered and no information was furnished. I used the G+ help feature and got an answer from an answer-giver who didn’t sound like he worked for Google although he was knowledgeable. He said that he was once suspended too, and that they refuse to tell you what you did wrong because they don’t want you gaming the system. I was given a list of policies of what behavior they don’t allow — however, I didn’t feel that I broke any of their guidelines. My only crime was following too many people, and not being popular with a bunch of anal moderators.

How, can I plan my future with G+
I am still allowed to use the “+” feature and have gotten a few new followers using it. Maybe plussing is the way to get ahead on Google+, and not following or posting? It is all a big mystery to me. If you have a large following, then posting on your account will get you lots of exposure, but I only have 150 followers. What to do? I plan to share a lot less on communities. The communities I do share on will be ones that have never rejected a post in the past. I will look carefully and un-join any communities that have moderators that block my posts — ever! I will also post more on my own account since that is safe. I will probably do more plussing since that is also safe. I’m not sure how I will reach the magical 1000 mark where your SEO dreams supposedly come true. Maybe my new techniques will work. What I really want is to find an expert. I have been looking around, but with no luck.

A month after the fact: I have been reinstated on Google. I’m being a lot more careful now. I seldom post on groups as that was what got me in the most trouble (I think.) But, I posted a very helpful article from the best social media account on G+ on one a very relevant community page and the moderator removed it. I’m beginning to think that perhaps G+ makes it hard to grow until you get critical mass of around 1000 followers, and then they help your material get noticed a lot more. I guess I’ll find out. I’m at 200 members now.

Do you start emails with: “Dear respected sir?”

Categories: India | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Don’t do this!

People in India use archaic British English. They routinely omit the person’s name who they are addressing as they systematically don’t know who they are writing to or why. Don’t do this. If you write to someone, know why you are writing to them — specifically. Don’t write to them about “the job” or “the project.” Know which project or job you are writing about and make sure that job actually exists in real time (which means now.) I get 10 job applications for jobs that I am not offering every day. What a clueless waste of time. No wonder India is a 3rd world country. The labor that they do have is systematically either completely wasted or used ineffectively.

Do your research, and make quality interactions — not spamming people with nonsense job applications. And don’t say, “Dear Sir.” Use the person’s name or at least their job title so the reader will know if they are the one being addressed!

People who make the most serious clients want to chat, do you chat?

Categories: Marketing | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Are you too busy to chat? Big mistake. How many serious clients are you losing because you are so unfriendly. Higher level business is more about talking than doing. The lower level people do the doing, and you do the interacting. Got it? People who contact you who have more to say, and more to ask, and contact you the most often are also the ones who will spend the most money in the long run even if they are not the richest. This is valuable analytical knowledge that I am sharing with you. I have not seen other blogs with such practical information.

Additionally, others will do more for you if you “chat them up!” If you like someone, take them out to dinner. The closer you get, the tighter your business relationship gets. In business, you will have better luck with people you enjoy being with. They will do better work for you, and you will have a better experience. People who enjoy you want to chat! Do you chat?

If the answer is, sorry, I’m too busy! Then, you are too busy for new clients. If you want new clients, you might not get any. Be open, so that you can interact with critical people as they arise!

Tweet:
(1) People who contact you more often and have more to say are more likely to be the best clients in the long run! Pay Attention!
(2) Are you too busy to chat? How many serious clients did you lose because you were unfriendly?

Turkey BPO Outsourcing

Categories: Outsourcing Articles | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Turkey BPO Outsourcing
 
Turkey is trying to get into the international outsourcing market. 
 
One article stated that Turkey took advantage of its low labor costs and created forging factories.  They were able to compete well for price, but experience was a commodity that they were short of.  A large supply of engineering graduates was a positive factor that allowed Turkish outsourcing in forging to grow.  Location was one of the biggest benefits.  Turkey is accessible by road to Europe and the Middle East making it a strategic hub for shipping and perhaps in the future, even warehousing.
 
Turkish outsourcers also offer lower cost steele in large quantities.  Although China offers the lowest prices for steele, they sometimes add “hidden costs”, making them perhaps not the best buy in the industry.  Also, if a steele manufacturer doesn’t want its designs to be copied, it should not manufacture in China due to intellectual property rights infringement.  Indian steele manufacturers often have delivery issues due to the poor quality of India roads.  Turkey remains the highest recommended country for structured steele.
 
Turkish Call Centers didn’t start as an industry until 1996.  Today there are about 150 call centers in Turkey with a total of about 12,000 employees.  Most of the call centers service banks and mobile phone companies.  In the last several years, a dozen or so outsourcing companies have been created in Istanbul totaling roughly 2000 workstations.
 
Turkey has many advantages for providing outsourcing services.  Labor is low in cost, and many people speak German, French, and Dutch as Turks residing in Germany and other European countries frequently relocate back to their motherland.  Additionally, labor laws are flexible, transportation to Europe is fast, and its inexpensive to set up facilities.
 
Turkey is expected to grow as an outsourcing destination, especially with German companies.  Turkish outsourcing companies are welcome to get a free listing on 123outsource.net.  Just visit our contact us page!

Should oil companies create their own nations?

Categories: Of Interest | Tagged | Leave a comment

I always fantasize about having my own dictatorship somewhere. I could create a beautiful tiny country, have gardens everywhere and a booming economy. People from around the world would want to live in my country and obey my bizarre laws. I like order and safety, so my laws might be similar to those in Singapore or Dubai for example. The public would be safe, but drug dealers might get their heads chopped off faster than they can say “illegal transport”.

But, I am a simple guy with modest savings. I can’t afford land to build a country, let alone the military power to secure it in this crazy world. But, a multi-billion dollar oil conglomerate could easily buy their own turf — and why not?

Oil companies seem to have a heavy hand in manipulating the US government. We fight wars partly for our perceived national interests and partly to defend or secure the assets of these oil giants. It is true that the US wouldn’t function too well without oil, so there is a reason for this madness. But, what if these oil companies had their own countries and their own militaries?

Imagine if Mobil purchased some land off the coast of Canada or Washington State. Maybe they might prefer the Caribbean so their executives could live in style. If they looked around hard enough, for a few billion, they could get a comfy piece of land or a few nicely sized islands. They could spend some more and get some of the US’s cutting edge military hardware and might be able to lease some top special forces as well. Think of the possibilities. They could have a population of several hundred thousand. They would have their own tax base, based on income from selling oil worldwide. That tax money could be used to live in style, and have a nice military to let the Iraqis and Iranians know who is in charge! If the cost of defending their rigs got too expensive, they might seek greener pastures somewhere else and sell their property to someone else. The oil companies could have the power and freedom to solve their own problems without dragging the US into the equation! Wonderful — perhaps.

For those who say, “No blood for oil”, these oil companies could pay the market price for top notch mercenaries. How much is a human life worth? You could look online to get hourly bids for what people would accept in salaries to risk their life fighting for oil. It would all be much simpler — much more cut and dry. Can you think of a system that would be more honest than this?

It might be fun to live in such a nation too. Your income tax would likely be very low, and there would be lots of ex-patriots to keep you company.

Tweets:
(1) I always fantasize about having my own dictatorship somewhere! I want my own country!
(2)… the public would be safe, but drug dealers would get their heads chopped off…

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The safest city in the USA & the most dangerous city in Mexico
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/01/12/the-safest-city-in-the-usa-the-most-dangerous-city-in-mexico/

A stand up comedian at a stand up restaurant in India
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/01/05/stand-up-comedian-at-a-stand-up-restaurant-in-india/

Cebu Call Centers in the News

Categories: Call Center, Philippines | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Call Center Cebu News issues
 
Expanded Broadband for the Philippines
As PLDT completes its expansion of the domestic fiber optic network, Cebu’s potential as an outsourcing destination gets better and better.  Broadband costs could get lower too.  An increase in call center investments is expected to create many new jobs in the Philippines that will likely mean that the 60 BPO companies in Cebu could expand and that new Cebu call centers could arise.  The new network goes through eleven islands and underwater and is expected to ensure uninterrupted broadband coverage for the entire nation.
 
Asiatown IT Park
In addition to Cebu call centers, there is an Asiatown IT Park in Cebu which is the Philippines second largest concentration of IT industries employing an excess of 15,000 individuals.  
 
BPOs including Indian companies are outsourcing to Cebu!
Wipro, a Bangalore based company, set up a call center in Cebu in 2007.  eBusiness BPO is ready to hire 350 employees for its new headquarters in Cebu in December 2010.  Additionally, the Radisson Blu has opened a 400 room hotel in Cebu.  
 
Hoax bomb threat near Cebu Call Centers
There was a false bomb threat that lead to the vacating of a Cebu city Asiatown IT Park building.  An unidentified caller was the individual who made the threat.  Two K9 teams were unable to find any explosives.
 
To summarize, Cebu, in the Visayas region, is a major economic hub in the Philippines which caters to the call center and BPO industry. As time goes on, you can expect large businesses to be setting up branches in Cebu, especially if they need to have a high quality call center.

You might also like:

How to write a resume for a call center job

Mumbai Call Centers in the news!

India and China compete for outsourcing revenues

It is not comfortable moving up the food chain

Categories: Management | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

My business is growing very slowly. I prefer it that way, so I can keep my frame of reference. I don’t like huge and sudden changes in any case. Life is full of surprises and unexpected turns. Growing a BPO outsourcing business also has issues that come up, and growing pains are a huge one.

When you go from being a worker to a manager, it is completely different. I actually like doing grunt work. It is easy. You just have to do a good job and get it done on time. Managing others is much harder. YOU are responsible when they screw up, and it is not always easy to deal with unpredictable people. My strategy is to try people out on outsourcing projects that don’t matter, that way you can get to know them without having consequences other than the money you spent having them do a fake project!

For many years I operated with the same sales lady, the same programmers, and everything remained the same for the most part. We grew a little, and developed our skills in many facets slowly over time — particularly my SEO skills which I started acquiring in 2008 which saved my life. But, now I am confronted with interviewing dozens of people. I have lots of phone calls with companies I wish to hire for outsourcing as well. I have to test out blog writers, programmers, and assistants as well. This really tires me out.

I remember a day when I had two interviews in my county. One was an hour from my house. After that I went to the other meeting which was twenty-five minutes from the first interview. I had a light dinner, and then went to have wine at a nice hotel not far from my house. I was exhausted. The actual time I spent interviewing was only 90 minutes total in the entire day. It completely drained me out. I began to think that I am not cut out for this higher level type of work. I prefer to do my tasks myself and not do much hiring and firing.

“Will I ever make it up the food chain?”
But, then I thought that if I am ever going to make it up the food chain to higher management, I need to be a pro at hiring and firing. On a more comforting thought, when I talk to others in business, I realize that they are not really any better than I am at hiring and firing even if their organization is much larger than mine. Hiring is a skill that requires mastery, and mastery takes a lot of hard work, thought and refinement. I’m having growing pains slowly moving up the food chain, but I think I’ll make it. I’m not sure how long it will take until I’m comfortable doing a higher percentage of management rather than grunt work. Maybe I will be a full fledged manager in a year. When you work for yourself there are no promotions. You do what is necessary for the company to run, so this promotion is one that evolves or doesn’t evolve. We’ll see what happens!

If you are having similar growing pains growing your outsourcing company, you are not alone. Learn to master the art of delegation to the point of it being a science!

You might also like:

Should you have slack in your schedule as a manager?
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/10/07/should-you-have-slack-in-your-schedule-as-a-manager/

6 ways to be more in control of your business
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/09/25/6-ways-to-be-more-in-control-of-your-business/

Tags on Google+ cannot be used the way they are on Twitter

Categories: Social Media | Leave a comment

Twitter and Google+ are both fun, but can’t really be used the same way. Twitter posts are limited to 140 characters while Google is more flexible. Google+ will let you write posts much longer than 140 characters, but will only show the first 400 or so characters before you need to click the “see more” link. I think Google’s attitude about letting you post longer posts adds a lot of flexibility to their social media venue. If only they had the volume of active users that Twitter does (technically they have more active users that Twitter, but it seems like they only have 10% if you look at active members of groups or people who post regularly).

Google+ rewards you more for the words at the top of your post.
This is actually very smart. I give Google points of intelligence. I learned that in Google+’s search results they reward you more for words closer to the beginning of the post. So, if you want to stress one or more particular tags, put them in the first line. I noticed that words near the bottom of my opening paragraph did help me show up on search results, but several notches down — to the point where you needed to scroll a bit to see them. I’m not sure if the necessity to scroll hurts you a lot or a little, but it could hurt you a lot, so keep this in mind!

Google+ tags don’t do much good unless…
If you tag a post with a keyword that doesn’t appear in your verbiage, you might not show up at all on keyword searches. If you have a popular account with many followers, or you pick a very unpopular tag, you might still show up. But, for the rest of us, you need to make sure your keyword shows up in your text, no matter how awkward it is to fit it in there.

Twitter just lets you tag and show up
Twitter lets you write about anything, and put any tag you like. If someone retweets you, especially if it is a retweet from that particular keyword’s tag feed, then you might show up better under that tag. But, the flexibility is much greater with tags on Twitter even though you are limited to very few characters.

What really matters in the end?
I’ve retweeted popular content on Google+ with really mainstream keywords. However, these prominent retweets didn’t get any plusses despite the fact that they were from excellent sources. I retweeted content from Harvard Business Review and many of the prominent players in the social media arena. It seems that proper tagging on Google+ might get you a little bit of popularity, if that. What seems to matter is having people who come regularly to your page, and share your content. What also matters is having high quality original content that people really like.

I gasp as see my Twitter clicks go from 2 a month to 42

Categories: Analytics, Social Media | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Twitter is a very simple, yet complicated social media platform. It is easy to tweet. Any idiot can tweet, but the problem is that most of the people who do tweet — are idiots. I looked at my analytics for previous months and years on Twitter. As I see my evolution unfold, I am painfully reminded of how I used to not have a clue of how to effectively use Twitter. Effective use of Twitter is like an art form. You get gradually better at it over time, but nothing happens all of a sudden.

Many novices are fooled by the top line number. They think that having lots of followers is a good thing. More followers is not bad, but it doesn’t translate into any SEO realities either. The key in Twitter is to have good tweets going to good content that your audience likes! Our worst several months we were getting only about two clicks a month. After I started really taking Twitter more seriously and spending more time creating more artful tweets, my click rate went up a bit. But, after I hired a professional comedy writer, that is where I saw the real results. We peaked at 42 clicks a month and had over a dozen different people retweet us.

I used to count straight retweets, but now I am more interested in how many different people retweet us. I retweet myself from my various accounts, but that means very little to me, and even less to you. I take pride when strangers retweet my content at least once a month. If the same guy keeps retweeting me, but nobody else does, then I lose interest.

Honestly, my twitter analytics for the outsourcing site are very poor. I often question whether it is worth it to even continue with such small numbers. I want hundreds of clicks and hundreds of retweets, not a dozen new people retweeting me on a good month. My Notary Twitter on the other hand is getting thousands of clicks using the PPC program. What works for one account doesn’t necessarily work for the other. So, I’m going to have to strategize here about what to do.

My gut feeling is that it makes more sense to create more content and let Google do the work rather than slaving away trying to create great Tweets and wondering why the retweet rate is so low!

Tweets:
(1) Effective use of Twitter is like an art form. You get gradually better at it over time.
(2) The key in Twitter is to have good tweets going to good content that your audience likes!

You might also like:

Social Media Optimization: Checking the effectiveness of each of your campaigns
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/12/20/social-media-optimization-checking-the-effectiveness-of-each-of-your-campaigns/

Your last four tweets count the most
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/12/09/your-last-four-tweets-count-the-most/

How to find call center clients — being pushy

Categories: Call Center | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Finding call center clients could be easy or hard, but having good technique is what you should be worried about at this point. You can contact larger companies and see if they need extra call center resources. Or, you can market yourself on the web and in directories and wait for the calls to come in. The main point is to attract the people you come into contact with. Many companies have not mastered this point.

Many call centers lack basic phone skills when you call them. They often don’t even answer their own phone, and many don’t even answer professionally. Often times, you can not get someone trained in sales to help you without really pulling teeth. So, master your phone skills before going on to the next step.

Don’t be pushy
Many businesses that do outsourcing of any type can be pushy about contracts and terms. If you are a smaller company trying to make it in the big world, you will feel tempted to copy what bigger companies do. This is a mistake. Don’t copy big companies. Big companies might have rigid contracts, formal looking offices, formal suits, receptionists, etc. You don’t need any of this. Contracts are restrictive and scare people away. Sure, you need to protect yourself from not getting paid. However, trying lock in a complete stranger to a contract will scare them away. Your phone is NOT ringing off the hook. So, if your phone does ring with a prospective client, your strategy should be to NOT scare them away no matter what. Lure them in by being nice, helpful and flexible.

The 70% rule
When I go shopping for companies, I have to turn down 70% of them because they have rigid terms and because they try to push me into a contract. Do you want to lose 70% of prospective clients? Most companies behave as if they don’t care if they get new clients — those companies get far fewer than they could if they changed their attitude. Does your company have this “Don’t care” attitude?

The long run
If you care about the long run of your business, you will quickly realize that catching a new client can turn into a snowball effect. That new client will stay with you for years if they like you. They can also give you more business volume if they like you. Additionally, they can tell their rich friends how great you are — if they like you. However, if you alienate your prospects at the point of sale — they will not try you out — and they will never know if they like you — because you were too pushy. So, DON’T BE PUSHY. Learn your lesson now.

Your employees are depressed…

Categories: Management | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Your Employees are Depressed: Why Business Isn’t Booming–And What You Can Do About It

Depression: A Major U.S. Export?
In the United States and elsewhere, many people are just tired of all the economic ups and downs—and just don’t believe in the system anymore. Mental health in the workplace is at an all-time low, and workers don’t feel secure about the future. Even those fortunate few workers who believe they have stable jobs and good bosses may suffer from work-related depression. Psychologist Robert Ostermann, an expert on workplace stress, pointed out that, at the outset of the 21st century, in countries that emulated “the American model” (Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore) there was more stress. As outsourcing continues to be a solution made-in-America, stress continues to escalate in call centers in India, IT companies in India and China, electronics manufacturing companies in Asia, the Philippines, and South America, and all across the globe.

After Sept 11, 2001, outsourcing to call centers in India, for example, increased dramatically as a way American corporations could pay out less and have callers on the phone at hours when U.S. call center workers were sleeping. Along the way, America also outsourced its customer service problems and its stress: Americans expected their calls to be handled by people who spoke good English, understood their accents and their concerns, and could offer clear solutions. When customer service issues were handled by call centers in India, the U.S. company that hired the call center was often criticized and held to higher standards by critical customers who then became suspicious of the company they believed they were doing business with in the first place. For most call centers in India, with the jobs and income came the stress of having a call center that was up to U.S. standards.

How Many Depressed Workers Are There?

According to surveys described in The Times of India (Feb 19, 2013), 66% of employees in India suffer from stress and admit they have trouble focusing at work because of stress. Whether it is caused by the very real demands of multi-tasking or by the unreasonable requirements of an unsympathetic and harsh work environment, lack of focus is a major symptom of depression. At call centers in India, where poor management and stress are legend, stress is extreme; yet in 2013, stress is part of every job, every industry, and every country. As of 2011, a quarter of the world’s workforce admitted to suffering from depression, and 92% assert that their depression is job-related http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/11/nearly-quarter-of-global-workforce-depressed_n_1088785.html .

According to a 2013 article in The International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, “Depression in the workplace is a global concern.” Michael Mazaar, author of Global Trends 2005, points out that “Depression is now…the world’s second most insidious illness” (after heart disease). Workers in call centers in India, the Philippines, and the U.S. are greatly at risk because customer service work on the phone is so stressful, but all types of jobs that involve multitasking and the potential for misunderstandings put workers at risk for depression. In the U.S. in 2001, job stress cost industry over $300 billion a year; what are the costs in 2013—if stress in the workplace has doubled or tripled? What are the current costs in the workplace–globally—because of stress due to outsourcing, national debt, mortgage interest rates, global warming, earthquakes and tsunamis, terrorism, global political meltdowns, and the threat of constant war? Human beings are aware of these issues, even if they do not consciously think about them or discuss them. These issues are real, and cannot be easily dispelled by talking about them…which may explain the current focus on medications: according to CNN, use of anti-depressant medications has gone up 400% since the late 1980’s.

Tip: If you think you are depressed: Spending time in nature (gardening, hiking, walking), exercise, and proper diet will bring you most of the benefits of the chemicals in medication. Also, studies demonstrate that just choosing to focus on the positive increases your serotonin levels.

Am I Depressed? Are Workers in my Office Depressed? How Can I Tell?

If you work in a call center or an office job in India, the U.S., or the Philippines, you may have noticed workers who are
· more and more forgetful
· often late
· prone to error and missed deadlines
· easily distracted
· exhausted
· confused
· withdrawn
· gaining or losing weight
· emotionless
· hostile
· preoccupied
· fond of alcohol

These are common symptoms of depression, a product of stress, and may be observable in your workplace. “Stress comes from bad managers,” says Robert Hogan, PhD, an expert on personality in the workplace. If you are a manager in a call center in India, the Philippines, the U.S.—or a manager in any office—you are in a position to help your employees and your company by finding out about employees suffering from depression.
According to Forbes, 65% of Americans surveyed said in 2012 that they would rather have a good boss than more money. Call centers in India are notorious for bad managers…but managers in the U.S. or anywhere else can be just as bad. A 2009 Harvard Business Review survey reported that “the majority of people say they trust a stranger more than they trust their boss.”

So What should I Do?

If You Are a Manager or a Boss:

1. Having healthy employees is good for business: According to an MIT study, depression costs “tens of billions of dollars” each year in terms of loss of productivity, time off from work, and health care or costs for treatment. Hire, train, and keep employees who are healthy and have a healthy way of relating to others—in person and on the phone.

2. Screen employee responses as you train workers. Give employees clear directions, realistic goals, rewards, and consequences. Talk in a pleasant and rational manner. Make employees feel safe. Let healthy employees mentor those who are on edge.

3. Observe employees at work. Don’t ignore any symptoms you observe. Be on the lookout for bullying or other behaviors that create stress. Ask questions and have employees see a company doctor if needed.

If You Are an Employee:

1. Manage yourself. Be aware of how you feel and how you react to others. If you are not happy at work, figure out why and make a plan to correct the situation.

2. Don’t just let the situation keep on the way it is. If you need more direction or different tasks and hours, speak up. Ask for help at the beginning, and follow directions.

3. Do your job. If you know the workplace environment is bad for you, find another job with a better work environment. If you can’t find another job, do everything to function better—including medication, if you need it.

Few workers feel the workplace is a friendly environment they can trust or feel comfortable in. Are workers at call centers in India and the Philippines taking the heat from U.S. business problems? According to Forbes, “The United States is a nation in decline” and the U.S. has slipped to 12th place in the list of the world’s happiest (read: most prosperous and stable) countries http://www.forbes.com/sites/christopherhelman/2013/01/09/the-worlds-happiest-and-saddest-countries-2/ .

Let’s face facts: terrible workplaces and poor job security are everywhere. In India and China, for example, only 40% of people surveyed in 2013 believe it is a good time to find a job. On the surface, these countries seem to be doing better than the U.S., but workers in India, China, and even the Philippines exhibit their own symptoms of depression. Labor issues, the high cost of food, worker safety, long hours, and poor wages are real: it’s not just about having a job, but the quality of the job and the work environment, too.

The Moral of the Story?

Despite the reports we hear of a boom elsewhere, there is no place where workers feel life is safe and the future is rosy enough to keep on working as usual. Whether you work in a call center in India or an office in the Philippines or the U.S., there is stress. In the workplace, do something good for others, and it will come back to you in increased productivity and focus.
Looking for the perfect country to do business with is like the old story of the house with the golden windows at sunset: a girl has always seen a house with golden windows. When she travels there one evening at sunset, the windows are not golden, and the boy of that house points out that the house with the golden windows is at the other side of the valley: he turns and points to her own house.

Perhaps the moral is still to look to your own house, your own country—instead of pointing at other countries’ productivity and bemoaning the fate or the lack of productivity of your own. We need not abandon outsourcing or doing business with those far-off countries that seem to have the golden windows, but we can try to strengthen our own nation. That means addressing problems that lead to stress and depression. It means not allowing our lives to be overtaken by the trivialities and frustrations brought about by a world that doesn’t seem to care anymore. Find the workplace that is the best for you, create a work environment that is positive, and reward the few people around you who care. Give good managers your best effort. But keep on looking.

Tweets:
(1) Americans are exporting depression as workers feel unsure about the future.
(2) Depression makes you forgetful, late, and distracted. Not good in the workplace!

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What is a microvacation?

Categories: Of Interest | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

What is a microvacation and why you should take one.

There are various types of vacations that a person could take. You could stay at home, go to a resort, go

to a foreign country, or just camp by a lake. These days there are more innovative types of breaks called “Workations,” “Twittercations,” and now there are “Microvacations” (not to be confused with Nanovacations.

It is hard for busy working people to get away.
You can’t take a one week or two week break whenever you feel like it. You need to be all done with your work and your meetings before you can seriously take time off. But, what if your work load just doesn’t end? There needs to be a system for dealing with that. Stress can pile up, and the stress doesn’t care if you have time for a break or not. You need a microvacation.

What is a microvacation?
A regular vacation could be a week or more, generally in a far away and hopefully relaxing or rejuvinating place. Or, it might be an interesting place with lots of sightseeing which could be refreshing albeit tiring. But, a microvacation is something that lasts only a few hours. It is not even as long as a mini-vacation or day trip. No, a microvacation is only a few hours at best.

Recommendations for quality microvacations?
The beauty of a microvacation is that they are low in cost. You don’t need to book hotels, and you don’t need to pay for expensive cabs, or airfare. Since a microvacation is so short, they are by definition nearby where you live. By my personal definition, a microvacation could be taken anywhere from thirty minutes to three hours from where you live. You simply drive to your destination, and then enjoy your activity. The point of a microvacation is to take you away from your regular stressful environment into a refreshing place. What you actually do is secondary providing that it rejuvinates you. Natural places are what I would recommend for a microvacation.

Where do I go for my microvacations?
I like the coast at sunset. I’ll often go for an hour or two. I will read blogs on my i-phone, or enjoy a quick meal at a coastal restaurant. The ocean vibration refreshes my mind and body, so that when I go back to work, I can function better with less stress. Sometimes I’ll visit the desert for a few hours as well. That is a longer drive, but it does miracles to boost my energy. Or, I’ll visit a local forest that relaxes me and boosts my energy. Use caution, because not all natural places will have the same effect on you. Choose places that you notice a definitive change in your mood or energy after you go there. Take notes on how you feel before and after each place, and go more than once to document your average net boost in energy or lowering of stress.

How often should I take a microvacation?
I would recommend a microvacation two or three times a week if you want to be able to work at optimal performance at your job. The weekend can be used for a longer microvacation that might require eight hours away from home. Shorter trips can be done after work during the week.