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    Host A Casino Night Fundraiser
    Putting together a charity fundraising event like a Casino Night Fundraiser can be a lot of work unless you're well organized. Events like these often include live entertainment, a catered dinner, live and silent auctions, sponsorships, ticket sales, tax deductible donations, and a host of other details that require plenty of advance planning.The plus side is that a Casino Night is a great excuse for adults to get all dressed up and have a fun time, so turnouts are impressive. There are lots of charitable groups who need to raise large amounts of operating funds and these events really deliver if done well.Getting started You need a strong crew of volunteers with a passion for getting things done. Group the tasks by category and divide them up by skill set of your volunteers. It's best to have them work singly or in pairs, partnering veterans with newcomers. Having too many people assigned to a task just slows it down.The only exception to that rule is in seeking donations of auction item
    some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the pe

    Malcolm Baldrige Values and Concepts Part 10 – Focus on Results and Creating Value
    In this issue, I will share my experience acquired from the conglomerate and its operating companies. For the purpose of this article, I will articulate the Focus on Results and Creating Value which is one of the Eleven Values and Concepts in Malcolm Baldrige Criteria (Source: http//www.nist.gov/quality). As before, I will use case studies to show how some of the companies implement them.To recap, below are the Eleven Core Values and Concepts of Baldrige Criteria:-Visionary Leadership | Customer-Driven Excellence | Organizational and Personal Learning | Valuing Employees and Partners | Agility | Focus on the Future | Managing for Innovation | Management by Fact | Public Responsibility and Citizenship | Focus on Results and Creating Value | Systems PerspectiveI will deal with the one of the Value in bold letters in this article as below:-Articulated Focus on Results and Creating Value An organization’s performance expectations need to foc
    As a previous owner of a Franchise I know the importance of maintaining employee commitment, loyalty and enthusiasm in maximising customer satisfaction, generating positive customer perception and protecting your investment.

    Repeat business is the life-blood of any business worth its salt. Coupled with a structured approach to increasing market share, looking at the ‘window of opportunity’ and delivering services with excellence and cultivating positive customer perceptions would appear to be a recipe for success.

    Have you ever stood at the front counter of a business and overheard employee dialogue or noticed that some employees appear to convey displeasure with their jobs?

    As a person, and practitioner, interested in people it has often been my observation that many Franchisees need to wake up and realise that people management is not that complicated or as difficult as they may have thought. There are a few simple things that can be done to build an environment of high trust amongst employees.

    However, it appears that not all franchise owners practise what they preach. Many espouse that ‘we treat our employees as valuable assets of the business’. This has always been a great source of amusement to me (because experience has often demonstrated otherwise).

    Some people engage subtlety in intimidating staff, constantly making nit picking comments, refusing to lead by example and reducing staff numbers to the point where the bear minimum of staff are left to serve in the business. This begins to seriously effect employee moral, customers are disenfranchised and owners wonder why profits are down.

    Take this true, real life example which I was actively involved in some months ago (names and details changed to ensure privacy).

    Aunty Marges was a Brisbane Franchise that appeared on the scene several years ago. Aunty Marges specialised in quality cookies, cake and coffee. A husband and wife bought two of these Franchises.

    The new owner’s employed 4 staff in one particular location. Staff was rostered on at different times throughout the day with one of the owners helping for part of the day. The roster started at 7.30am and normally finished at 6.00pm

    It was a busy business located in a popular shopping centre, was a pressurised environment. The owners had over-extended their borrowing capacity.

    Janelle, a teenager had been employed along with the other 3 employees to work in the business.

    Janelle was known to be a hard worker who went out of her way to up-sell, interacted well with customers and took her job seriously. Despite being in her last year of college she took her responsibilities seriously.

    One morning the owners called a staff meeting where they admitted that they were over-committed and requested that employees put in an extra effort. When staff left they were not replaced.

    The friendliness soon began to disappear and the owners began to leave critical notes scolding employees and placing more demands on them. As a result staff began resigning.

    One night as our family was over at Janelle’s place the telephone rang. It was for Janelle. The business owner (the wife) rang up and was obviously berating the teenager on the telephone.

    Janelle went to her room sobbing and came back some time later to tell her parents and our family what had occurred.

    Over the next four months this became a consistent occurrence. Finally Janelle had enough and I was asked to speak with the owners, which I did.

    Why is it that some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the per

    Public Relations Counselors
    The aim of Public Relations is to maximize support and minimize opposition for your enterprise among the various stakeholders and general public. A PR campaign consists of two distinct elements -- strategy and execution, i.e. what to do and how to do it.The role of a Public Relations Counselor is to suggest strategy, i.e. advocate ???what to do???. A Public Relations Counselor would typically be involved in defining the PR policy of your enterprise, analyzing problems and opportunities, identifying the stakeholders or publics you need to reach, recommending the key messages for each public, and allocating responsibilities to the team.Given the criticality of this position, here are some qualities you need to look for in your Public Relations Counselor:Good JudgmentGood judgment is the single most important quality of a good PR counselor. She needs to correctly interpret the strength and longevity of public opinion, and must know what to react to, and when and how to react. This cal
    fficult as they may have thought. There are a few simple things that can be done to build an environment of high trust amongst employees.

    However, it appears that not all franchise owners practise what they preach. Many espouse that ‘we treat our employees as valuable assets of the business’. This has always been a great source of amusement to me (because experience has often demonstrated otherwise).

    Some people engage subtlety in intimidating staff, constantly making nit picking comments, refusing to lead by example and reducing staff numbers to the point where the bear minimum of staff are left to serve in the business. This begins to seriously effect employee moral, customers are disenfranchised and owners wonder why profits are down.

    Take this true, real life example which I was actively involved in some months ago (names and details changed to ensure privacy).

    Aunty Marges was a Brisbane Franchise that appeared on the scene several years ago. Aunty Marges specialised in quality cookies, cake and coffee. A husband and wife bought two of these Franchises.

    The new owner’s employed 4 staff in one particular location. Staff was rostered on at different times throughout the day with one of the owners helping for part of the day. The roster started at 7.30am and normally finished at 6.00pm

    It was a busy business located in a popular shopping centre, was a pressurised environment. The owners had over-extended their borrowing capacity.

    Janelle, a teenager had been employed along with the other 3 employees to work in the business.

    Janelle was known to be a hard worker who went out of her way to up-sell, interacted well with customers and took her job seriously. Despite being in her last year of college she took her responsibilities seriously.

    One morning the owners called a staff meeting where they admitted that they were over-committed and requested that employees put in an extra effort. When staff left they were not replaced.

    The friendliness soon began to disappear and the owners began to leave critical notes scolding employees and placing more demands on them. As a result staff began resigning.

    One night as our family was over at Janelle’s place the telephone rang. It was for Janelle. The business owner (the wife) rang up and was obviously berating the teenager on the telephone.

    Janelle went to her room sobbing and came back some time later to tell her parents and our family what had occurred.

    Over the next four months this became a consistent occurrence. Finally Janelle had enough and I was asked to speak with the owners, which I did.

    Why is it that some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the pe

    Long and Short Headlines
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    ).

    Aunty Marges was a Brisbane Franchise that appeared on the scene several years ago. Aunty Marges specialised in quality cookies, cake and coffee. A husband and wife bought two of these Franchises.

    The new owner’s employed 4 staff in one particular location. Staff was rostered on at different times throughout the day with one of the owners helping for part of the day. The roster started at 7.30am and normally finished at 6.00pm

    It was a busy business located in a popular shopping centre, was a pressurised environment. The owners had over-extended their borrowing capacity.

    Janelle, a teenager had been employed along with the other 3 employees to work in the business.

    Janelle was known to be a hard worker who went out of her way to up-sell, interacted well with customers and took her job seriously. Despite being in her last year of college she took her responsibilities seriously.

    One morning the owners called a staff meeting where they admitted that they were over-committed and requested that employees put in an extra effort. When staff left they were not replaced.

    The friendliness soon began to disappear and the owners began to leave critical notes scolding employees and placing more demands on them. As a result staff began resigning.

    One night as our family was over at Janelle’s place the telephone rang. It was for Janelle. The business owner (the wife) rang up and was obviously berating the teenager on the telephone.

    Janelle went to her room sobbing and came back some time later to tell her parents and our family what had occurred.

    Over the next four months this became a consistent occurrence. Finally Janelle had enough and I was asked to speak with the owners, which I did.

    Why is it that some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the pe

    Basic Levels of Consumer Integrity that Presently Permeates Society
    Reality is not always pretty. But here is a tad bit of it for you today. Well here is an interesting occurrence that is of interest. And this is in any town middle class USA, mixed races neighborhood, the person in question happened to be white. While standing in line a counter for my turn to order and pay. A lady was talking to what could have been her daughter (teenager) and with her was a young child about 3 or 4, who carried a doll and was messing around with whatever was at her level she could reach. So this little girl picks up a candy cane with a Santa on top, a small doll about the size of a Silver dollar. While her mother is watching her, she breaks the candy cane in two and rips the head off of the Santa. Her mom, Paula, says “oh, oh” and takes the object (broken candy cane and mutilated Santa) from the little girl and pushes it out of the way from the clerk who is now ready to take the mom’s order.Seeing this I said to the clerk this lady would like to pay for this Candy Cane that her daugh
    r responsibilities seriously.

    One morning the owners called a staff meeting where they admitted that they were over-committed and requested that employees put in an extra effort. When staff left they were not replaced.

    The friendliness soon began to disappear and the owners began to leave critical notes scolding employees and placing more demands on them. As a result staff began resigning.

    One night as our family was over at Janelle’s place the telephone rang. It was for Janelle. The business owner (the wife) rang up and was obviously berating the teenager on the telephone.

    Janelle went to her room sobbing and came back some time later to tell her parents and our family what had occurred.

    Over the next four months this became a consistent occurrence. Finally Janelle had enough and I was asked to speak with the owners, which I did.

    Why is it that some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the pe

    Electronic Straight Through Billing Service and Software Methodology for Medical Practice
    Medical billing complexity and massive volumes of daily claims render manual claims processes incapable of protecting both the provider and the payer from underpayments, overpayments, and billing compliance violations. Straight Through Billing addresses complexity and volume processing problems by automating the majority of the claim flow and focusing the billing follow-up specialists to exceptions only. A Straight Through Billing process flags problems, routes them for follow up, and enables online correction and resubmission. Straight Through Billing methodology implements billing service transparency and focuses management on strategic process improvement opportunities.Straight Through Billing (STB) integrates billing process within the practice management workflow, automates vast majority of transactions, focuses manual labor on exceptions, and establishes a process for continuous improvement.First, integrated practice management and billing workflow connects patient scheduling, medical re
    some people seem to have a moribund fascination in causing other people pain and afflicting them with a life a drudgery and frustration. Our teenagers need positive role models instead of having roadblocks placed in their paths.

    Why is it that we consistently hear about businesses that seem to pay lip service to ‘our employees are our most valuable assets’ behave abominably and wonder why the books are down?

    What is Workplace Harassment?

    Under the Workplace Health and Safety Act 1995 employers have an obligation to ensure the health and safety of all workers by managing risks at the workplace.

    1. A person is subjected to “workplace harassment” if the person is subjected to repeated behaviour, by a person, including the person’s employer or a co-worker or group of co-workers of the person that-

    (a) is unwelcome and unsolicited; and.

    (b) the person considers to be offensive, intimidating, humiliating or threatening; and

    (c) a reasonable person would consider to be offensive, humiliating, intimidating or threatening.

    A recent draft statement released by the Queensland Government includes some examples of behaviour, where repeated or occurring as part of a pattern of behaviour, may be considered workplace harassment includes the following.

    Abusing the person/s loudly, usually when others are present;

    Repeated threats of dismissal or other severe punishment for no reason;

    Constant ridicule and being put down;

    Leaving offensive messages on email or the telephone;

    Sabotaging the person’s work for example by deliberately withholding or supplying incorrect information; hiding documents or equipment; not passing on messages; and in other ways, getting the worker into trouble;

    Maliciously excluding and isolating the person/s from workplace activities; Persistent and unjustified criticisms, usually of the nit-picking variety;

    Humiliating the person/s through sarcasm, criticism and insults, often in front of customers, management or other workers;

    Spreading gossip or false, malicious rumours about the person/s with an intent to cause them harm;

    Singling out and treating person/s differently from others, without good reason

    Effects of Workplace Harassment on the Employees and the Business

    Workplace harassment has detrimental effects on workers and the workplace.

    Workers who are harassed can become:

    distressed, anxious, withdrawn and depressed

    physically ill, sleep deprived

    aggressive, vengeful

    less self-confident and develop low self-esteem.

    Workplace harassment may result in:

    loss of trained and talented workers;

    loss of profits;

    reduced productivity and morale;

    an unsafe working environment; and

    legal costs for a workplace.

    Employer Costs – (off your bottom-line)

    Employers who engage in these behaviours may face stiff penalties and the full weight of the law.

    • Costs to the employer include high staff turnover, which inturn places added pressure on owners to spend longer hours in the business.

    • Low morale which decreases productivity

    • Workplace investigations by the OH&S people

    • Higher workers compensation premiums where the claim has been proven

    • Legal penalties and damages awards in some circumstances

    • Mediation Fees

    • Becoming known as a ‘bad’ employer

    • Indirect costs (often significant) added to the bottom line.

    • Incurring the displeasure of the master franchise holder.

    It has been my experience that on average an employer will be out of pocket through direct and indirect means by $25,000 for one incidence.

    Prevention

    You can effectively manage workplace harassment by adopting some of the following procedures

    Recognise your strengths and weaknesses and educate yourself and your employees.

    Make a commitment to treat staff with respect. You have a vested interest in doing this.

    Introduce a workplace specific harassment policy for all levels of management and staff.

    Arrange for an in-house seminar on workplace harassment and have employees sign to say they will comply with the policy.

    Deal with all complaints immediately, confidentially and thoroughly.

    The place where Janelle previously was employed continues to be an unhappy place, the owners are stressed and the master franchise holder

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