How long will your reputation last if you don’t do what you say you’ll do?

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Most of us reading this blog are in business. We are all aware of how annoying or exasperating it is to work with someone who doesn’t do what they say they will do. It is so basic and so elementary to know that you should keep your word. Yet many of us in business don’t for one reason or the other. Some are too busy to do what they promised. Others forget or just don’t care. Some are frauds and intentionally don’t deliver on promises.

This applies to threats too. If you run a business and have rules for conduct and someone breaks the rules, do you keep your promise to penalize them? If someone pays you late and you have a $25 late fee do you wave the late fee? If you do, nobody will take your policy seriously. I run a directory and threaten to take people offline if they don’t login regularly. I keep my threat now, but I didn’t use to. The minute I kept my promise, people started logging in religiously.

It is busy running a business, and sometimes we forget about very basic things like keeping in touch with critical people and keeping our promises all the time every time. If you don’t, people will lose faith in you and then you will not have a business for long!

If Google ran a hotel, what would it be like?

Categories: Of Interest | Tagged | Leave a comment

If Google ran a hotel, I can picture people parking in a faraway parking lot and being shuttled in some futuristic type of a shuttle through a long expanse of grass, unusual trees, and bizarre animals. There would be indescribable technical appraratus beside the road that nobody would be able to make sense of. It would be like being on an alien planet without leaving planet earth — perhaps.

Advanced Check In
When you got to the hotel instead of regular check in, I can imagine that guests might swipe their credit card and scan their ID. Then, a choice of rooms would be visable from a computer screen, and you could choose rooms and get your smart-key. Upon arrival at your futuristic room, you would then choose your breakfast from yet another virtual computer screen that uses touch technology. Do you want bacon, eggs, granola, or yoplait? There might be many choices, and you could also choose the delivery time.

Virtual Systems in the Rooms
It would not surprise me if the beds were also computerized for softness preference. Rooms would probably have high speed wi-fi, but there might be an amazing business center on the main floor too with huge screen computers that run really fast. As a convenience, yet another virtual system would be there to help you choose activities, restaurants, and map them. Perhaps the instructions could be downloaded onto your i-phone in three seconds or less as well.

Room Service
Many hotels have you put your glasses and plates outside your door when you are done. This is dangerous and unsightly as people might trip on them. I get Google would have a small indentation in the wall for two feet where you could put your trays and then close a cabinet door. The staff would be electonically notified that there are contents in your cabinet. And at check out time, the staff wouldn’t knock on the door until a computer system had been notified that you have left. Perhaps the door would input a record that it had been closed with aheat sensor to verify that you were actually outside the door when you closed it. Or perhaps the front desk would have a place where you could swipe your card one last time to get a printout of your receipt upon leaving. Many hotels put a receipt under the door the night before guests leave, so at express check out, perhaps the only printout would be an acknowledgment of departure. In either case, the entire procedure would be very streamlined and smart!

Other Features
Since noise and smoking are such a problem at many hotels, I’m sure a Google hotel would have sensors to immediately detect if someone had been bad by lighting up a cigarette. Additionally, if people were slamming doors or talking too loudly in the hall, noise sensors would be programmed to alert the front desk. Day time noise limits would be a little more flexible than at night, but there would be strict guidelines for peace and quiet so that guests could enjoy themselves.

Breakfast Downstairs?
Not everyone wants breakfast in their room. Some people prefer to go downstairs. It is nice to have the option. I can imagine futuristic carts carrying coffee dispensing machines, pastries, and other goodies. I can picture more touch screens asking you if you want latte, cappuccino, or mocha. There might be humans manning these cards, or perhaps they would be multilingual robotic carts.

More Robotic Carts
It would be a huge convenience if a robotic cart helped you lug your luggage from your car or from the shuttle to your room. But, if it could move on its own and know where it was supposed to go, that would provide a nice hands-off experience for the guests. But, what if the cart would also make small talk too? Disney has this technology now, and Google might too!

The Hotel Restaurant
I can’t imagine the algorithm Google would use for it’s wine list, but it sounds intoxicating. I wonder what types of foods they would serve. Probably stuff nobody has ever heard of from medieval England and perhaps a few Tibettan delicacies as well as sandwiches. No doubt Google would probably have experimental dishes on the menu every week just to get analytics on how popular each dish was including commentary. That way the menu could be constantly optimized and might even change at different times of the day or week depending on what was popular at that time. I can’t imagine what people would eat there, but a Google restaurant is definitely something I would like to try!

Uber’s security record undermined from a Michigan driver!

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

Uber used to pay their drivers well. Then around a year or two ago, they suddenly slashed their prices and also what they gave the drivers. To me it was not fair, and didn’t seem like a reasonable business practice either. Businesses need to live in balance with the universe. Too cheap or too expensive can cause trouble. Too expensive and you lose your clients. Too cheap, and you encourage screw ups that could lead to lawsuits

A Michigan based Uber driver passed the background screening, and then after 100 Uber trips (or rides) he gunned down eight people. Uber was sued for $28,000,000. It seems like a much better policy to have drivers you can trust and pay them a fair market value rather than getting the cheapest drivers, having them quit, getting new drivers, and not knowing who they are.

Meanwhile in the StartupVerse, many ride sharing companies are sprouting up in urban areas. Although none are quite as large or famous (infamous perhaps) as Uber, they are catering to real needs in a safe way.

HopSkipDrive — caters to people who need rides.
Shuddle — in San Francisco caters to kids and seniors chauffeuring them around.
Kango — caters to babysitters and they help schedule babysitters

I am personally excited because I have been wishing that private industry or the goverment would wise up and create ride-share programs that are easy and don’t require driving to some parking lot in the middle of nowhere. My dream seems to be coming true. I hope that in the long run, none of us need to drive anywhere and we can rely solely on ride sharing programs and experience zero traffic in places like Los Angeles. Ride sharing companies are beginning to develop set routs and get very techno-saavy. I hope this trend becomes hot and continue.

Meanwhile in India, I had a dream nine years ago that they would have a line of pink rickshaws for women clients who wanted the safety of a female driver. Well, they have it now, but it is pink polka-dotted cars, not rickshaws. Am I psychic? Did I predict this or wish for it?

In any case, the world is becoming a much better and more interesting place because of technology. I just hope that there will be an app that will help me find people who actually want to talk to me and have similar interests. With my recent good luck in a few months we will…

Appointment Setting

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If you are looking for an Appointment Setting Call Center, try 123outsource.net. We have many call centers listed around the world that specialize in appointment setting. Our call center categories are divided into inbound, outbound, chat support, email support, technical support, lead generation, order taking, and more.

Most of the call centers listed with us are in Manila, Makati City, Cebu, or in various parts of India. So, if you are looking for a Manila Call Center, Makati City Call Center, Cebu Call Center or India Call Center, you have come to a place with a lot of hiqh quality and up to date selection.

Call center contracts for appointment setting can really vary from company to company. Some will allow you a one or two month contract while others demand a year. There are a few that will allow you to book services one day at a time as well if you prepay them. We recommend interviewing the actual call center agent before hiring any company. If possible, try them out on a small appointment setting project before committing to a long term call center contract.

The advantage of having a 3-hour lunch break

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Many companies want to cram in as much week as they can during a day. But, there are disadvantages to this too. Being in too much of a hurry and not breaking enough can lead to increased stress and distracted work behavior which is very detrimental to output.

Workers who take a quick lunch break and work almost eight hours straight become very distracted. Many of them surf the web at work, or are just in a state of mental chaos. Many articles about work behavior that I have read stress the importance of taking breaks. After 51 minutes of mentally intensive work you should take a break according to one article I read. For repetitive tasks, the breaking schedule might be less critical, however, repetitive tasks can dull your mind making you less capable when you have a thinking task.

Taking a lunch break is a great time for workers to catch up on Facebook, emails and other social media. If you don’t give them an opportunity to catch up, they will probably doing it on the clock which is bad for your work schedule.

Personally, I feel that the American work ethic is based on being in too much of a hurry, being too demanding, and not replenishing yourself. Additionally, American workers are very disengaged which exacerbates the situation making them even more distracted. A long lunch hour allows people to mingle with others, make new friends, try new restaurants, and refresh their brains while out of the office for an extended period of time. I feel that having a two or three hours lunch break is not a bad idea if you are willing to stay late and if you are not going to miss any critical phone calls or meetings.

However, what if you answer calls during lunch? What if you take your work with you? You are still replenishing since you are out of the office. You could still have that ten minute power discussion with your supplier. Most people would say, “Sorry, I can’t talk now because I’m at lunch.” Then, when you get them at work, “Sorry, she is on another call.” You might have to try six times to reach someone. What a pain. But, by being willing to take meaningful calls, you would afford yourself the opportunity to take long lunches and still be productive and available!

Long lunch breaks are common in France and other European countries. They add a sense of culture and meaning to life which Americans will never have. My personal habit is to have a very quick lunch, but a very lazy dinner. Perhaps, I should have a nice mid-day break. But, I’m always behind the eight-ball with work. Maybe I need to find a way to be ahead on work and then have a more flexible schedule…

I would write more, but it is time for my lengthy dinner break! After I return, I’m going to work until 1am!

A Call Center that offers technical support for defective cats

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There are all sorts of specialties in the call center business. Some do hard sales, others do incoming service while many do technical support for the latest computers and software packages. But, who do you call when your cat becomes defective? 1-800-333-meao! This call center is located in Makati City in the Philippines and specializes in helping cat owners with their various problems.

CALLER: Hi, my cat is acting weird and I don’t know what do.

AGENT: Well, what did your cat say?

CALLER: She seems to be asking a question. She sniffed my computer and said Meao with a rising tone as if she was asking a question.

AGENT: Hmm, what did her tail do when she was asking you this question?

CALLER: It was curled at the end, kind of like a question mark.

AGENT: I see. It seems that your cat is confused based on the shape of her tail. Cats say a lot with their tail and their body language. Did you try explaining what the computer is for and why you were using it?

CALLER: Oh, I never thought of that. Maybe it was the new software I downloaded.

AGENT: That is interesting because our last caller’s cat warned him that he downloaded a virus and needed to quarantine it, but he was too dumb to understand what his cat was saying.

CALLER: Well, I hope you have an animal psychic who can communicate with cats like a “cat whisperer.”

AGENT: We actually do, but he can only communicate with Filipino cats. The culture is too different for cats in the United States. The food, activities, and the kitty cat mentality — you understand.

CALLER: I understand exactly.In any case, I’ll explain to fluffy what I’m doing. Thanks for being there!

AGENT: My pleasure. If you have any other issues with your cat, just call 800-333-meao!

CALLER: I will

CAT: Meao!!!

Call Center Agent Hotline – For Emergencies Only!

Categories: Call Center | Leave a comment

I know — it sounds like job training for call center agents. This is their opportunity to learn to deal with the toughest clients. But, it’s not. This is a call center agent hotline. They discuss topics such as burnout, mean bosses, suicide, and their poor diet which consists of a lot of fried chicken and hard alcohol (at least according to the blog articles I read about the Philippines.)

AGENT: Hello, this is John, how may I help you?

ALBERT: Hi, this is Albert — and I’m sick of my call center job. I’m sick of my life. I just want to end it all.

AGENT: Try to think of it from an outside perspective looking in. Try to see your entire life as one long call to a call center. It begins when you pick up and ends when you hang up. In the end, it’s all very temporary.

ALBERT: Wow, that is so philosophical — so Buddhist. Too bad I’m Catholic, otherwise I might actually start thinking that way, myself.

AGENT: There is no law in Catholicism that forbids you to entertain deep Buddhist thoughts.

ALBERT: It reminds me of that pop song, “Things that make me say Ohm.” But, if I do commit suicide, I want to do it in a symbolic way, so people will know how I feel. I want to hang myself from a phone cord.

AGENT: Wow, that’s a little too symbolic, too on the nose. If you jumped off a tall call center building, that would be faster and wouldn’t hurt so much.

ALBERT: Thanks. Wait a second, aren’t you supposed to talk me out of killing myself?

AGENT: Okay, for your sake, I hope you’re on a cordless. Actually, we’re just supposed to talk to you. It’s your decision whether to jump or hang. Just one thing, if you do commit suicide, don’t do it while you’re on the phone with me, or I’ll feel like you left me hanging.

ALBERT: Stop, you’re killing me.

AGENT: If you let me know who your boss is, I can arrange for someone to play a dirty trick on him.

ALBERT: You would do that for me?

AGENT: It depends how bad he is.

ALBERT: Who says he’s a he?

AGENT: I have twelve years experience in the business and know how to do anything without even being detected.

ALBERT: Makes sense. I haven’t detected much compassion. Honestly, you were sounding a lot more spiritual a few minutes ago.

AGENT: It’s still there but you can’t detect it.

ALBERT: Wow. You’re good.

How good are you at mediating?

Categories: Leadership | Leave a comment

When you started your business, you were thinking about offering a service. You were thinking about having a room filled with productive workers and managing them. But, were you thinking about conflict resolution? In real life, when you have a bunch of different personalities in a room, there will be conflicts. The key is learning how to resolve them early so they don’t get out of hand. Or, just fire the person causing the conflict!

One of the issues with conflict management in the workplace is that business owners are not trained in this art. In many companies, employees are often not satisfied with how managers resolved their conflicts. It may just not be a priority, or perhaps the managers were not trained. It might make sense to call in some professional help. Hire a consultant. It is that important. How will your team function as a team in the long run if you continue to have arguments and personality clashes going on?

In many cases, certain personalities just cannot get along with other particular people no matter what managers do. It is important to understand the personalities on your team, so you can quickly figure out how to solve any personality clashes they get themselves into. It might make sense to test your employees out. Have them work in conjunction with other employees and then rotate them. That way you can get some practice seeing who gets along with whom and how to resolve the various conflicts that arise. Other than that, read more articles on the topic and hire an expert!

Catching people fast when they slide in your business

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As a business person, you need to hire all types of people to do all types of tasks. Many people think that there are “perfect” people to hire for particular tasks and spend a lot of time thinking about who is perfect. The reality is that hiring is more of a moving target! Yes, there are people who are well suited for particular jobs based on their aptitude, and skill set. There are others who are well suited for a job because they are excited about doing that task during that part of their life.

Many people are good travelers in their twenties as people are more excited to see the world at that age while in their forties they might focus more on work. Some people get interested in math at a particular age and then prefer studying languages at another age. The truth about hiring is that people gain and lose interest fairly quickly — especially if they are young.

You can’t really hire someone without a track record. Some business models allow for performance based salaries or commissions which is not a bad idea. But, if you pay a fixed amount per week, and someone loses interest — they will start slacking off soon after. Another pitfall of hiring is that people’s performance usually correlates to their relationship with the person who hired them. If they are communicating regularly with their boss, they will normally work more. If the worker chooses not to communicate as much or at all, that means they are going to slack off — by definition in my experience.

It’s probably easier if you use graph paper, or online graphs and track employee performance. If you see a glitch in their performance, you can analyze it. Sometimes monthly reviews are not enough. You might need to look at a daily or weekly graph. Is their performance down because of the economy, an unexpected health issue, a few trips to the dentist, or because they lost interest? One common mistake bosses make is to omit reviewing their worker’s performance, or not do it as much as necessary.

Most of the people I hired had cycles. Some people are excited when you first hire them and work harder. Then, they lose interest or begin to dislike you. These cycles are more dramatic with women and younger people. I have been working with two older guys who are above sixty, and they seem to have only one cycle which is to churn out regular work with a smile. The main thing is to be in touch with the cycle of your workers. The minute you lose touch, you will be paying for non-performance and losing time and money.

My advice is to either fire people when they lose interest, or come up with a thoughtful incentive plan. If you start people at a low salary and offer quarterly raises for good behavior, there is a huge incentive to perform. If you offer bonuses or commissions for achievement, there is also an incentive. If you offer a salary that never goes up, or only once a year, that is too long for most people to wait. Most people want to see advancement in their career and fast — particularly if they are young. So, offer them what excites them and keep your eye on what excites you — performance and performance graphs.

Spacing out your posts on Google+

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As with any other social media site, it is not considered a best practice to publish tons of content all at the same time. But, if you are like me and devote a particular amount of time each day to social media, you tend to want to do more during that special time because you might flake during the rest of the day. I understand! But…

If you post two articles in a row on Google+
You will suffer in the search results, particularly if those articles use the same tags. If you publish articles with different tags, you won’t be penalized so much, but if you have two articles with the same tags, you should wait two hours or more before publishing the second article.

Publishing too much in general
If you want your posts to get seen, you can’t publish too much. On the other hand, to get any results out of Google+, you need to publish a lot, and publish on a lot of groups. I have been banned from groups for publishing content from my blogs which was purely informational and not self-promotion. They don’t care, and they often just enjoy banning people who they don’t like. I also got into trouble by having too much of my material removed from communities on Google+. If you publish too much, the material that you publish will also get buried by your newly published content. So, what is the solution? I publish from three separate groups. My main group gets my really juicy material. My #2 group gets extra content that might get me some clicks, but that I don’t want showing up on my main feed. My #3 group is for blog posts from a different blog and overflow that I don’t have room for on my main feed. Basically, I have a main feed, and two backups.

Risky Communities?
If you have had content removed from a particular community on Google+, you might think about publishing on that group from a different account. That way if your #2 account gets banned from Google+ for two weeks, or forever, you won’t lose much. Taking risks is not a bad thing so long as you don’t risk something that is expensive to replace! In general, I would not publish on more than two groups per day, and only safe groups as well. The minute you get a post removed from a community, remove that community from your main account and add it to your supplementary accounts.

Retweeting your own content
If you have multiple Google+ accounts, it is easy to republish your content on all sorts of groups without the content showing up multiple times on your main feed. On your supplementary accounts, it doesn’t matter if a post shows up three times in a row, but on your main feed that gets traffic it will look really unprofessional even to have a post show up twice! By retweeting your own content, your original Google+ profile ID still shows up on the post, and you can still attract followers to your main page. Tandem or tag-team social media techniques are a good idea. I have six Twitter accounts. If something does well on one account, I often retweet it on my other accounts (depending on how relevant it is to those accounts.)

Google+ is fun to use and can get you a lot of traffic if you use it right. But, they are tricky too, and you can get into a lot of trouble if you take liberties. So, be careful, and think outside the plus!

Hiring programmers is like dating a guy if you’re a straight guy!

Categories: Semi-Popular, Software Development | Tagged | Leave a comment

What a bizarre title!
But, it’s kind of true. After working with different programmers who were all men (there was one woman, but she didn’t return my calls) I came to this ghastly realization. I began to feel sorry for women as a gender for having to put up with us. Men are rough, gruff, uncommunicative, make decisions without consulting others, don’t get back to you on time, do whatever they want, and don’t always care much if at all about your general welfare.

As a straight guy…
I never thought about what it would be like to date a guy. I don’t date much, but if I do, I assure you it would be with a female member of my species. For a woman or a male client of programmers it is hard. You are completely at the mercy of this guy who does whatever he wants and doesn’t care about your opinion. If they screw up, modules of your site could be dysfunctional, unusable, or just entirely down. I began to think like a woman after a few failed relationships with programmers. (BTW, I have nice programmers now [2014] who do not cause trouble)

Why can’t they just LISTEN?
First of all, the main complain that women have about men, is that we don’t listen. I don’t necessarily need these programmers to make suggestions — I just want them to listen. Many programmers take offense if you have an opinion, because after all, what could YOU possibly know about programming. The answer is that I don’t know anything. However, I do know what the long term consequences to my business are for programming strategies that are not sound. If a programmer does too much on a huge project without letting me check anything step by step, for all I know, they could be handing me a pile of useless broken code. I like to go step by step and make sure everything is working before moving on. I want my opinions to be considered — and I am happy to hear the opinion of the programmer too, so long as my comfort level oriented considerations are integrated into the project without a fuss.

Can’t they be a little more like James Bond?
Most girls want a guy who is like James Bond. He dresses well, smells good, always is confident and has perfect manners. In real life, guys are not like this, especially not programmers who are more like inverse-James un-Bond. How they dress is a smaller consideration. But, how they are often unwilling to interact, be friendly or personable makes me uncomfortable. In my experience workers who don’t like to communicate like to avoid their clients and never do very good work simply because they don’t like you and they don’t care. How people answer the phone is another indication of professional behavior. If people answer saying, “Hello,” or have an answering machine which doesn’t state their name or company name, that makes me very uncomfortable. For girls it is more about the image of a James Bond type guy that they like. For me it is more about the indication of a seasoned professional who will be helpful and trustworthy in all actions — which is a purely practical concern. After all, I am not a girl even if I have learned to think like one.

How can I manipulate guys like girls do.
I am a guy. For me when I see other guys, I chat with them. I am not intimidated by them if they are huge and muscular, or if they are way out of my class and drive a Bentley. For me guys are guys, and unless they are outwardly hostile or offensive, I feel comfortable with guys from any culture, class or background. I am less conscious of them in terms of their “level” as I don’t size them up like women do. Women know how to size up a guy, know what his strengths and flaws are before he opens his mouth, and they know how to manipulate them too. If you hire programmers, you need to know how to keep them under control, because they have a way of going their own direction the minute you are not watching them. Girls are experts at this. Why can’t I learn to be a professional at thinking like a girl? Do you kill them with kindness? Do you flatter them and bat your eyelashes? They you threaten them and make demands? Or do you simply act polite, tell them what you want, and tolerate exactly the right amount of nonsense. After all everyone will give you some amount of nonsense, the key is to know how much is too much!

Summary
To make it short, if you are in a profession that involves hiring others who are more powerful than you are — and by more powerful I do not mean richer, smarter, or more powerful in general — I mean more powerful in how critical they are to your project, then you need to learn to think like a girl. They are in this position their entire lives having their means for survival dependent on the guy they date or marry (unless they have a considerable income on their own merits.) Having a relationship with a programmer is the closest a straight guy will ever come to anything that resembles dating a guy.

Jokes
To end a software development relationship, you could use the Seinfeld approach or these other crazy lines:

“It’s not you, it’s me”
“The commenting in the code didn’t let me comment back. Are my comments not important too?”
“Why can’t your style of coding be more like Andy’s — his is so efficient with all of those multicolored lines!”
“I think we should see other developers.”
“I love you, it’s just that I need a PHP developer who understands me better.”

Our Linked In seedling became a jungle!

Categories: Semi-Popular, Social Media | Leave a comment

We started an outsourcing Linked In group over half a year ago. It was ignored, didn’t get posted on, and we had so much trouble attracting members. Then, I put a new staff member on the assignment and instructed her to get lots of “active” members who posted interesting content or responded to content on other networks. The girl in charge of this task is a very high energy gung-ho person. I knew she would get amazing results, but even I was surprised at how well the group did.

With only 600 members, participation is off the hook!
Our Linked In discussion group with less than 600 members was getting more discussions and interaction than groups over 10,000 strong. Amazing. I was so pleased. I had not looked at the group in over two months when we were only getting a handful of discussions. The quantity of content (it was quality content about interesting business issues) was so baffling, I couldn’t even find content that we had posted four days ago without scrolling for several minutes.

Our other Linked In group is getting us boatloads of clicks!
The same girl is also running our Linked In for notaries. That group unfortunately didn’t grow that much, but the quantity of high quality clicks from articles she submitted was baffling. She was only posting four posts a week, but we were getting more than 400 quality clicks per month! Another jungle in the making!

Summary
So, overall, my experience on Linked In has been good. It takes a while to figure out how to play the game the optimal way. But, once you figure out how to use Linked In effectively, it is very powerful if you want to attract a business oriented network!