Showing posts with label Importance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Importance. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Importance of Business Services Is Second to None


What are the various business services that I should consider?

Business services include a whole host of services including client refreshments, postal services, copy services, meeting rooms and training rooms, telephone handsets and call packages, wireless internet access, purchasing discounts and others.

The decision to opt for services are governed by your business needs. The trade-off is between engaging your own resources versus seasoned professionals of the service providers. The decision is between taking a longer time to get started versus getting started right away with the available and well oiled administrative services.

Can business services be customized as per my needs?

The range of customization of business services offered depends upon the service office provider. It could be an off-the-shelf package that offers little or no customization or it could be pick-and-choose from the boutique of services provided.

At a short notice the service options can be individually scaled to your changing needs and expanded to include the items and services that are most important to you.

As an example, the services of a business centre can be tailored to very specific needs. As an alternative to the full-service office, various combinations of services can be provided as well. In addition, they offer a variety of standard services: copier and fax machine, access to meeting rooms with state-of-the-art conference technology, etc. Professional staff answer calls in the company name; welcome visitors and handle clerical or secretarial work. The advantage to the clients is that all services are offered on a pay-as-you-go basis. In other words, they only pay for services and facilities they are actually using.

How much do I pay for it?

There are multiple different payment models for availing the business services. It could range anywhere from a completely variable option on a pay-as-you-go-basis, being partially variable or a fixed service with monthly, quarterly or annual payment options.

How can a business centre support you?

Serviced office provider such as Avanta offer an attractive business service package with NO hidden costs, which give its customers a clear advantage above the competition. Their goal is to provide you with the business services you need when you need them.

Business services for entrepreneurs or small businesses can be bundled with your physical office or virtual office membership at Avanta, and clients can purchase "Business Services on Demand" as needed. Avanta's virtual receptionist will answer calls using your company's customized greeting and route each call per your instructions. Each office at Avanta comes equipped with a full-service, IP-based PBX phone system featuring call routing, voicemail and low-cost long distance rates.

Why don't you combine various business services such as internet connectivity, client refreshments and postal services into a simple, monthly package? This gives you the ability to forecast and plan their total cost when taking using a business centre in Delhi.

Listed below are some of the business services offered by Avanta India;

- Client refreshments

- Postal services

- Copy services

- Meeting rooms and training rooms

- FREE high speed wireless & internet access in communal areas

- Business support & purchasing

- Bandwidth & telecom packages including free local and intra-circle calls

- Telephony services

- Internet connectivity




Author: Nitin Namdeo
Online Marketing Manager at Avanta http://www.avanta.co.in
Avanta Business centres India offers highly flexible, unbranded cost effective serviced office space, Meeting rooms and Virtual offices in New Delhi.





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Monday, 15 August 2011

Housekeeping Services - Business Aspects and Importance


Housekeeping services are procedures to maintain neatness and cleanliness at different property types. Corporate houses hire professional providers to get their office spotless and create a nice working environment. Besides, housekeeping service providers offer services for houses, estates, hospitals and other establishments.

The emergence of housekeeping services India has witnessed in the recent times is worth taking a note. Many professional companies all over the country are involved in providing general and advanced house cleaning services. Go through the following discussion to learn the type of services expected from housekeeping professionals.

Floor Cleaning

Professional housekeeping services offer cleaning services for all types of floors, including concrete floors marble floors, wooden floors and tiled floors. Corridors, entrance areas and stairways are also cleaned by these professionals. Cleaning of floor includes services like sweeping and mopping.

Carpet Cleaning

Keeping the carpet clean is one of the challenges faced by home and office owners. Professional housekeeping offers carpet cleaning as a part of their package. These cleaning professionals remove sand, dirt, foreign matter and other things from the carpet. Carpet shampooing and vacuum cleaning are the services offered by these professionals.

Waste Disposal Services

Housekeeping services are helpful in getting the waste from house or office disposed easily without facing any inconvenience. Most of the home and office owners find it frustrating to dispose off the garbage and other types of wastes. Getting the garbage disposed off with professional services is a practical solution.

Furniture and Upholstery Cleaning

Furniture items like couches catch dust and dirt with the passage of time, but cleaning them is a big challenge. You can relay on professional services like house keeping to keep these items clean. These services are applicable to upholstery and various equipments as well.

Odor and Pest Control

Anther task performed by the professional housekeeping service providers are controlling bad odors that might result from different sources. Leakage of water and flood water are some of the causes for bad odors. This services can also be hired for pest control at homes, offices and estates. Rats, rodents, lizards, cockroaches and many types of insects pose a great problem for the property owners. Getting them terminated using professionals is a good solution.

Glass Cleaning

Housekeeping services also involve professional glass cleaning services, especially for corporate houses with huge glasses installed in their premises. Glass cleaning needs to be efficient to keep the glass surface spotless. At the same time, this must be done with great safety. Professional cleaning services are recommended for the same.

Building Maintenance

Building maintenance involves inspecting different parts of the building regularly. Checking electric faults, water leakage and other types of repair work are other tasks performed by the hired housekeeping professionals.

Housekeeping services can be hired for commercial buildings like shopping malls and departmental stores. Hospitals and health care clinics are also among the establishments that can take advantage of these services. Housekeeping service providers make use of authorized cleaning products and solutions, latest cleaning equipments and safe and efficient techniques to deliver most desirable cleaning services.




Author has wide knowledge of B2B Marketplace and Products Directory. For housekeeping services and other related service industry catalog in India, visit Catalogs.indiaMART.com





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Sunday, 14 August 2011

The Importance of Courier Services


Courier services, or specialized delivery services for documents and other sensitive materials, are a critical service area for Dallas delivery service companies. A courier service is different than regular mail delivery services because couriers provide features like security, tracking, and proof of delivery. Courier services provide better speed and confidentiality when you need to know you can count on sensitive documents and packages being delivered reliably.

A company's reputation can be bench marked in part by its ability to provide reliable, comprehensive courier services. When looking for a Dallas delivery service to meet your courier needs, there are several components of the service you should consider. One of the most important considerations when choosing a courier is the level of support the Dallas delivery service can offer.

In order to determine which Dallas delivery service can meet your needs is to first identify what needs that you have for a courier. When looking for a courier service, you should choose a Dallas delivery service that allows you 24-hour access to your account online from any web portal so that you can schedule pickups and deliveries at your convenience. The service should also have state-of-the-art technology that allows you to track your packages and receive immediate confirmation of delivery (including scanned signature verification) when needed.

Other considerations when choosing the right courier service is the customer service you receive from the company. Is the company responsive to your specialized needs? Is it easy to reach the customer service department when you have questions or problems? Is customer service available at your convenience, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week? Are issues resolved quickly and satisfactorily? Do they offer visibility that allows you to track your package easily? Can you insure your packages when needed for additional protection against loss or damage? Does the courier service deliver to the locations you need?

Can the service you choose meet your other shipping and packaging needs that allow you to have better efficiency in your operation? Does the company make an effort to be eco-friendly by using bicycles for delivery when possible and choosing other economical means of transportation to help keep costs down?

Finding the right courier service allows you an affordable, convenient, and secure option for local delivery. The benefits to your company of having a premier Dallas delivery service handling your courier needs is the increased efficiency and decreased labor costs you will have to handle your delivery needs. By having access to online scheduling, you reduce the amount of time your employees are required to spend managing courier services. With scheduled service, the entire process can be managed by the company you choose, freeing your employees to focus on more profitable efforts.

Shipping is a time-consuming and sometimes costly component of your business, but having the right delivery service to help meet your courier needs can alleviate some of the burden and improve your level of service to your own clients and business partners.




Hotline Delivery Systems provides a variety of services, including on-demand delivery, warehouse/distribution, facilities management, scheduled delivery, and priority overnight delivery services. Based in Dallas, TX & founded in 1986, they have a reputation built around flexibility & quality of service with a focus on how to best fulfill the clients needs.

For more information you can check out the website at: www.hotlinedeliverysystems.com





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Friday, 22 July 2011

The Importance of Business Acumen Training For Managers and Employees


The message to CLOs is becoming clearer and clearer. Company leaders want them to align educational offerings with the organization's strategic objectives.

That's not an easy challenge. They must ensure that education and communication initiatives reinforce the company's goals. They must help employees understand these goals and develop the skills and motivation to contribute to them.

And at the most basic level of alignment, they must make sure that every employee understands how the company makes money. That includes understanding how profitability is driven, how assets are used, how cash is generated and how day-to-day actions and decisions, including their own, impact success.

Developing business acumen is fundamental to business alignment. Consider Southwest Airlines, which was founded in 1971. With 33 straight years of profitability, the airline has become widely recognized for the motivational culture it creates for employees and its extraordinary dedication to customer service.

Much of the industry has suffered during the years of Southwest's growth, including many airlines that have merged or declared bankruptcy. Southwest buys the same planes and the same jet fuel as other airlines, and pays its employees competitive wages and benefits. What's the difference?

Unlike some of its competitors, Southwest's management team involves employees in the company's financial results, explaining what the numbers mean and, more important, helping to link everyone's decisions and actions to the bottom line. The airline has an open culture, one of inclusion at all levels, and employees understand their roles in providing great service and keeping costs in line.

Certainly there are other factors that contribute to the success at Southwest, but it's difficult to ignore the positive impact of an approach that develops the business acumen of all employees and managers so that they can contribute to the airline's success.

An Educational Challenge

Unlike those at Southwest, individual contributors and managers in many organizations today have not been educated about the big picture of their businesses. They have a narrow focus on their own departments and job functions and aren't able to make the link between their actions and the company's success. Multiplied by hundreds or even thousands of employees, this lack of understanding - the lack of true business acumen - means that too many decisions are being made and too many actions are being taken that don't align with business objectives.

How can training help bridge this knowledge gap? For many companies like Southwest, implementing learning programs designed to develop a strong foundation of financial literacy and business acumen has made the communication of financial results to employees easier and more effective.

Business Acumen: A Definition

Very simply, business acumen is the understanding of what it takes for a business to make money. It involves financial literacy, which is an understanding of the numbers on financial statements, as well as an understanding of the strategies, decisions and actions that impact these numbers.

Someone with financial literacy, for example, would be able to "read" the company's income statement. This employee or manager would understand the terminology (revenue, cost of goods sold, gross margin, profit, etc.) and what the numbers represent (i.e., gross margin equals total sales/revenue less the cost of goods sold).

With business acumen, the individual would be able to "interpret" this same income statement, taking into consideration how company strategies and initiatives have impacted the numbers during specific periods of time.

Consider a simple comparison: In football, it's necessary for players to know how the game is scored as well as how to play the game to change the score. In business, financial literacy is understanding the "score" (financial statements) and business acumen is understanding how to impact it (strategic actions and decisions).

Asking the Right Questions

When business acumen spreads through an organization, employees and managers begin to ask questions. These questions are directed not only at the organization, but also at themselves and their departments - questions about processes, products, systems, staffing and more that can lead to necessary and innovative decisions and actions.

Business acumen helps everyone understand that it's not enough to ask, "How do we cut costs?" or to say, "We need to increase sales." Digging deeper, employees with higher levels of business acumen will ask questions that take into consideration the far-reaching impact of potential decisions and demonstrate a greater ability to make the connections between performance and results.

Questions that could get to the root of disappointing operating ratios:

• Have production costs gone up? If so, why?

• Have we changed prices? If so, how has that affected our margins?

• Are there any competitive issues impacting our performance?

• Have there been any customer requirement changes?

• If our costs per unit produced have gone up, can we better control the efficiency of our production or service delivery?

• Is there a way to produce a greater product volume at the same cost?

• Can we raise prices, still provide value to the customer and remain competitive?

When questions become more specific, the right decisions can be made.

Business Acumen for Managers

Managers at all levels need a high level of business acumen to do their jobs. Every day, they make decisions about employees, projects, processes, expenditures, customers and much more - decisions that ultimately roll up into larger organizational results. Managers who make these decisions while looking through a departmental lens only, with a limited understanding of how these decisions affect financial results or how they are tied to the organization's goals and objectives, are working in silos that can ultimately damage the company.

Managers are often promoted to their positions of responsibility because of their "technical" expertise. They've been successful customer service representatives, great salespeople, innovative researchers or well-respected IT professionals. They are now entrusted with decision making, budgets, projects and people. They often do not have financial literacy, nor have they developed a higher-level perspective about the business. Over time, especially if they move up the managerial ladder, they may develop these. Or they may not.

Organizations need managers who operate as part of the management team, taking accountability for their own results as well as the results of the entire company. Therefore, more and more organizations have built financial literacy and business acumen into managerial competency requirements and have integrated business acumen training into management curriculums.

Business Acumen for Employees

Although there is little debate about the need for managers to develop business acumen, organizations sometimes question the need for this understanding at employee levels. But frontline contributors, those who are most directly involved with production or customer service, for example, take actions every day that impact business results.

Consider the salesperson who discounts products, or the service representative who deals with an unhappy customer, or the maintenance person who notices a problem. The actions each of them takes might erode profit margin, lose a good customer or allow safety issues to escalate. Without an understanding of how their actions impact the company's results, they might not have the context to consider alternatives.

Many organizations have determined that financial literacy and business acumen aren't just for managers anymore. They have decided to develop a company of people who understand the business; who know what return on assets and return on investment mean; who know how inventory turnover rates affect results and the importance of positive cash flow; who see the connection between the company's financial success and their own health benefits, 401(k) plans and more. In other words, they need people who understand the "business" of the business.

In his book Good to Great, Jim Collins says, "We found no evidence that the 'good-to-great' companies had more or better information than the comparison companies. None. Both sets of companies had virtually identical access to good information. The key, then, lies not in better information, but in turning information into information that cannot be ignored."

With an increased level of business acumen, managers and employees can better interpret information, making the connection between their actions and the company's results.

Another Reality of Today's Business World

A public company's operating results are well known at the end of each quarter. Analysts, investors, the media, employees-everyone has access to a company's financial results. With a significantly increased focus on accounting improprieties over the past few years, senior management has become highly conscious of the need to provide accurate and timely financial information. And employees have become much more likely to wonder about these numbers. "Is my company being honest? Are the numbers telling the whole story?"

Without a fundamental understanding of financial results and an ability to interpret them, employees may become suspicious and, ultimately, disengaged. Disengaged workers, in turn, negatively impact productivity and profits.

CEOs of public companies, then, must ensure that managers and employees are able to understand the numbers and have confidence in them. That means effective business acumen education as well as ongoing and open communication from the top.

Former GE chairman Jack Welch said in his book Straight from the Gut, "Getting every employee's mind into the game is a huge part of what the CEO job is all about...There's nothing more important."

The Big Picture

As we have become a nation of specialists, armed with new information technology and enterprise-wide operating systems, it has become easier for managers and employees to become myopically immersed in their own jobs. This immersion can have the effect of obscuring their view of the big picture. They may not consider the cumulative effect of wasted assets. They may have little regard for the objectives and responsibilities of other team members, departments or divisions. They may lack the motivation to invest personal energy in critical project work.

Organizations that engage in developing business acumen provide a clearer vision and an overall context within which employees can work, while creating an environment that is more likely to break down internal barriers. There is less waste and less ambivalence. There is increased innovation. Employees are more engaged, they understand their role and its impact on business results, and they are more likely to believe that their efforts really matter. They are more likely to think like a business owner.

Think Like an Owner

To be successful, business owners must be able to helicopter above day-to-day issues and see the big picture. They must understand how the pieces of the business fit together to impact profitability and cash flow, and they must be able to assess the risks and rewards of potential decisions. The best business owners study the numbers, ask themselves tough questions, analyze their mistakes and take decisive action.

To truly understand the business, owners have to understand how that business makes money - in other words, how it produces sales, profit and cash. Organizationally, they know that it's about people, processes and productivity. On the customer front, it's about satisfaction, loyalty and market share. Ultimately, every action taken and every decision made in any of these areas will impact sales, profit or cash.

When managers and employees begin thinking like owners, they, too, look at the big picture, understand how all the pieces fit together, and assess risks and rewards. They understand, like an owner, how the company makes money, how it stays in business and how they contribute to its success.

The benefits to an organization of engaging managers and employees in this kind of ownership thinking are obvious. So how can a company develop the business acumen of its people?

Developing Business Acumen: Two Stories

Entrepreneurs are generally forced to develop business acumen on their own. They are hands-on with their businesses and have to make all the decisions as they go along, whether good or bad. They either learn from their mistakes or fail.

It's very different for managers and employees in an organization.

They aren't involved in all aspects of the business, and they make decisions primarily within their own areas of responsibility. Since seeing the connections isn't easy, they need to learn in some other way.

Books and lectures can help. But business acumen is best developed experientially. Learners must be able to analyze situations, ask questions, discuss issues with other learners, consider options, make mistakes and see results.

Although there are a variety of ways to accomplish this kind of experiential learning, many companies have found that simulations, which mirror reality and allow learners to experiment in a safe environment, are one of the best ways. Here are the stories of two companies who chose to educate their learners with business simulations.

Comcast Cable Communications

The NorthCentral Division of Comcast - one of the country's largest entertainment, information and communications companies, specializing in cable television, high-speed Internet and telephone service - set out to ensure that managers and employees throughout the organization had the financial acumen required to make good decisions. A companywide survey had clearly demonstrated this need - especially for managers of employees who had direct contact with customers.

For example, if a customer calls with a service problem, frontline employees and their supervisors can issue credits to the customer's account in an effort to resolve the issue. Although this may be exactly what is needed for the situation, Comcast realized that employees making these decisions didn't necessarily understand that a $10 credit could ultimately require more than $100 in revenue for the company to break even. Similarly, a service technician's visit to a customer's home might cost $50 directly, but the company might have to sell an additional $500 in services to cover the cost.

"The lack of financial acumen among supervisors and employees was largely understandable," says Mark Fortin, senior vice president of finance for Comcast's NorthCentral Division. "Almost 75 percent of the company's employees are on the front lines in roles such as call center personnel or field technicians. They are trained to be good at what they do, but their backgrounds typically don't include emphasis on financial literacy."

Comcast human resource executives determined that a fundamental approach to the development of business acumen was needed. However, this approach also would need to be fast, engaging and job-relevant. Expanding upon its already robust Comcast University management curriculum, the executives chose to integrate a high-energy, tailored learning experience that would provide the "basics" and, at the same time, deal specifically with Comcast terminology, concepts and strategic imperatives.

As they participated, learners made decisions about products, processes, pricing and more, and they saw how those decisions impacted financial success. In the end, it became easier for them to make sharper day-to-day choices.

"The thing that sticks out for the frontline leaders, the field technicians, and the call center supervisors and managers who attend, is the high cost of sales in our business," says Sophia Alexander, senior manager of curriculum and metrics for the division. "It's like a bell goes off in their heads when they realize what it costs for us to earn what we need to earn to run the organization."

Attending the learning session is not mandatory for supervisors and managers. However, there is an unwritten expectation that they will participate in business acumen training as well as other Comcast University core programs, according to Jan Underhill, senior manager of leadership development for the NorthCentral Division. That expectation, coupled with the fact that manager compensation has recently become tied to meeting specific financial goals, has kept attendance high.

Senior executive support also has been an important factor in creating interest and awareness around financial literacy. "Getting people to sign up is much easier when senior executives like Mark Fortin are strong advocates for the program," says Underhill.

Feedback has been resoundingly positive. On average, for example, Level 1 feedback about the discovery learning based business acumen sessions has been 4.5 on a 5-point scale. That means that the program has exceeded expectations. Better than that, says Sophia Alexander, senior manager of curriculum and metrics for the NorthCentral Division, is the empirical evidence that the new insights and knowledge have made a difference. For example:

• Participant self-evaluations indicate that financial literacy has increased by at least 25 percent as a result of the business acumen training.

• After the training, there was a 20 percent increase in the participants' ability to use basic financial terms and concepts on the job.

• Almost 45 percent of supervisory participants report that they are using their business acumen knowledge in daily communications with staff and peers.

"Some people, particularly in big companies, feel like there is an open checkbook. They think... I don't own the company. It's not my problem. Somebody will pay the bills. But in today's environment, with some very large companies in trouble, everyone needs to be part of the solution. Business acumen education for managers and employees helps the company as a whole, but it also helps employees. It's about self-preservation to some extent." comments Fortin.

Southwest Airlines

Southwest Airlines is one of the consistently profitable companies that makes "business literacy" a core component of its employee training programs. Every employee has a solid understanding of what a new customer, and new revenue, means to the company. Employees also know how the loss of a customer can impact the business.

According to Elizabeth Bryant, director of leadership training at Southwest Airlines, "Our training covers how the financial ratios such as return on assets and various margins are determined. Knowing that team managers, supervisors and all employees have this knowledge enables the company's leadership to present detailed financial reports and explain to the teams where the margins need to be. Management can speak more in depth to all the employees, and the employees understand what the objectives are."

Bryant added, "Because we don't waste the little things, because we track every penny and every activity, we've all come to know the importance of each cent. With the pennies in hand, we spotlight the idea of compound interest- for example, how the small savings help us by year's end and how small amounts of waste can conversely add up to hurt us."

Consider the importance of a key operating metric for the airline industry - operating cost-per-seat mile. This is how much it costs an airline to fly one seat one mile. All the operating costs are divided by the total number of seat miles (the total number of miles of all the seats that were flown for a given period, whether a passenger was in the seat or not). Much of the industry has had cost-per-seat mile results at or over 10 cents. Southwest Airlines' cost-per-seat mile is about 6.5 cents. The lowest cost-per-seat mile in the industry almost 25 years ago was just over 5 cents.

How do they do it? Certainly there are a number of factors that lead to success. However, one of the key influences is Southwest's ongoing training in business acumen. This training ensures that employees know:

• How challenging it is to ensure ongoing profitability; making a profit can never be taken for granted

• The importance of utilizing the benefits of the good years to prepare for the tough years

• The impact of individual actions and decisions to the bottom line

In other words, Southwest invests in training to help employees think like business owners. This, in turn, produces real results, like its consistently low cost-per-seat mile. When Southwest's learning team decided to implement a business acumen simulation several years ago, there was some initial concern about how well it would be received.

Bryant explained, "Some people, especially those without financial training, were nervous about the topic. We are such a people-oriented company that we didn't want people to think that now we're just a financially oriented company and everyone will be judged purely on financial performance. But we positioned the need for the business literacy training as another way to prove that we actually care tremendously for each employee. We explained that if you understand what the numbers mean then you can better understand how your work provides an integral contribution to the business."

Southwest Airlines, according to Bryant, has never had a layoff - a rarity in the airline business. The more their employees understand the challenges of the business, the better they appreciate the importance of making smart decisions every day.

Bryant concluded that the discovery learning techniques in a robust business simulation work well in the Southwest culture because of the team orientation. "All the participants learn that they can't individually make it all happen," said Bryant. "They learn that they have to look beyond themselves, act and think like an owner, and realize that our efforts and financial results here are not just for a career, but for a cause. It's this cause-oriented philosophy toward delivering a low-cost, high-quality service that allows people the opportunity to travel. Our success at achieving positive results translates to individual opportunities to work, to grow and to continually think of innovative ways to improve our business and serve our customers."

The Classroom Advantage

These two companies chose to develop the business acumen of managers and employees by using a classroom-based simulation, facilitated by instructors at company sites. Although online options were available and were used in some cases to supplement the instructor-led training sessions, they decided that there were significant advantages to tackling this subject in a "live" session where they could leverage the power of:

• SHARED KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE: Learners bring their own perspectives and issues to the session.

• TEAMWORK: Learners work together, make decisions together and rely on each other as they learn.

• COMPETITIVE FUN: Small teams "play" against each other and enjoy a competitive environment.

• COMPANY-SPECIFIC DISCUSSIONS: The learners' common interest in their own company's financial and strategic issues allows for greater analysis and depth of discussions and a true "connection" between the learning simulation and the organization's reality.

• LEARNING MOTIVATION AND COMFORT: Learners who may not be comfortable with the subject of finance find themselves playing a game in the comfort of a team environment.

Although there are a number of educational approaches available to organizations in the area of business acumen, classroom-based training that brings together teams of learners can help ensure that learning occurs and that connections to the business are made in ways that prompt action back on the job.

The Bottom Line

More than ever, successful companies will need to focus on developing the business acumen of managers and employees. These companies will realize that when their people understand the numbers, when they understand how their departments contribute to the company's objectives and when they see how their own decisions and actions make a difference, they will begin to operate as part of a team rather than in a departmental or personal silo. And a critical piece of the alignment puzzle will be solved.

With widespread business acumen, companies can have a powerful asset - educated, knowledgeable and motivated employees. And with this asset, those will be the companies best positioned to succeed.




Raymond (Ray) Green is cofounder and CEO of Paradigm Learning. Paradigm Learning is a corporate training and communications company specializing in the design of business games, business simulations and Discovery Maps®.





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