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  • Will You Add? - Risky Business: You May Not be as Daring as You Think

    Web Crimes: how to avoid common website design mistakes
    Thinking about designing your own website? Think again about adding any of these “features”…1. Animated gifs. You know the ones: the dancing baby, the rotating email sign. No matter what you chose, nothing screams out “amateur” quite like an animated gif. Next!2. Mouse trails. Those little pictures, or strings of letters that “follow” your mouse everywhere it goes. In my case, they follow my mouse all the way to the “back” button, so I can surf on to somewhere less annoying.<
    agel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call

    Replacing Your High Paying IT Job
    The demand for IT professionals is extremely large currently but it may not last forever. The government, military and large corporations are spending a lot on IT right now. Why you might ask?Well, the government is spending due to organizing its agencies to work better together. The military is spending on Net-Centric Warfare to protect the American People. Corporations are spending in order to comply with ridiculous over regulation due to the insanity of brain-dead bureaucrats in
    I thought I was through with exams when I finished college. Then my financial adviser (a.k.a. stockbroker) had me take a test to measure my tolerance for risk. He said, there were no right or wrong answers, but I knew better.

    Once I had taken a personality test when I was in career transition (a.k.a. unemployed). My counselor had said the same thing, “There is no right or…,” but when he told me my score he noted it was on the edge of the bell curve — the wrong edge. My need for acceptance by others was high; so high that I could not confront a taxi driver who gave me zero change from a $10 bill, on a $4.50 fare.

    I was very leery of taking this “risk-tolerance profile.” As I expected the questions showed that I was a total “wuss.” (In Pittsburgh, if you’re 15 and a guy it means you always cover your ears in winter).

    A typical question; if your portfolio dropped 21.8 percent in one year, would you:

    a. Sell all your equities?

    b. Sell 1/3 of your equities and buy intermediate-term, tax-free municipals?

    c. No change, staying the course?

    I selected ‘c’ not because I believed in my strategy but out of total fear.

    And yet deep down, when it came to the important things in life I felt that I was a risk-taker. I could be as much a risk-taker as an F-16 fighter pilot or a New York City undercover cop. However, no test ever asked the real important questions of life, the kind of questions that affected my daily reality. Questions like:

    You have to drive to the airport. You get in your car, turn on the engine, and the gas gauge is on “E.” Do you: a) immediately fill up, b) drive to the airport but don’t put on the air conditioning, or c) drive back and forth without ever looking at the gas gauge again. OK, now lets add some real risk to the above question. What is your answer assuming your spouse is in the car with you?

    Now let’s deal with food instead of hedge funds. For example, for breakfast you like your bagels dark but definitely not burned. You’ve just put a bagel in the toaster, and it is just not dark enough. You put it in the toaster again, just nudging the dial to the optimum position, taking into consideration the heat already generated and the level of darkness around the edges of the bagel. As you wait for your bagel, do you: a) stand there staring at the bagel, b) let the dog out, c) get your newspaper from the driveway and check the Knicks score.

    How would your answer change if it were your last bagel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call

    Effective Medical Billing: Get Paid On Time
    Timely medical claim reimbursement/payments for the medical provider are a serious problem by most of medical practices nowadays. How can a medical practice survive with slow revenue? too many claims denial and rejection? The solution here is to get the collection done as effectively as it can.Empirically, insurance companies will delay or deny claims payments! They are very slow on medical reviews, predetermination and processing claims. I think, that is one of their business strat
    p>

    I was very leery of taking this “risk-tolerance profile.” As I expected the questions showed that I was a total “wuss.” (In Pittsburgh, if you’re 15 and a guy it means you always cover your ears in winter).

    A typical question; if your portfolio dropped 21.8 percent in one year, would you:

    a. Sell all your equities?

    b. Sell 1/3 of your equities and buy intermediate-term, tax-free municipals?

    c. No change, staying the course?

    I selected ‘c’ not because I believed in my strategy but out of total fear.

    And yet deep down, when it came to the important things in life I felt that I was a risk-taker. I could be as much a risk-taker as an F-16 fighter pilot or a New York City undercover cop. However, no test ever asked the real important questions of life, the kind of questions that affected my daily reality. Questions like:

    You have to drive to the airport. You get in your car, turn on the engine, and the gas gauge is on “E.” Do you: a) immediately fill up, b) drive to the airport but don’t put on the air conditioning, or c) drive back and forth without ever looking at the gas gauge again. OK, now lets add some real risk to the above question. What is your answer assuming your spouse is in the car with you?

    Now let’s deal with food instead of hedge funds. For example, for breakfast you like your bagels dark but definitely not burned. You’ve just put a bagel in the toaster, and it is just not dark enough. You put it in the toaster again, just nudging the dial to the optimum position, taking into consideration the heat already generated and the level of darkness around the edges of the bagel. As you wait for your bagel, do you: a) stand there staring at the bagel, b) let the dog out, c) get your newspaper from the driveway and check the Knicks score.

    How would your answer change if it were your last bagel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call

    Online Business – What Mindset Do You Have to Have to Be Successful Online?
    Online Business – What Mindset Do You Have to Have to Be Successful Online?I am going to jump into the fray here and say that I think that it is almost impossible to make money online if you do not have this one thing. I think that no matter how much you learn, or how many systems that you buy, if you do not have this one thing, you are not going to make it online. And with this one thing, you can make money without the perfect system, and without it, you can buy $5000 systems and
    a risk-taker. I could be as much a risk-taker as an F-16 fighter pilot or a New York City undercover cop. However, no test ever asked the real important questions of life, the kind of questions that affected my daily reality. Questions like:

    You have to drive to the airport. You get in your car, turn on the engine, and the gas gauge is on “E.” Do you: a) immediately fill up, b) drive to the airport but don’t put on the air conditioning, or c) drive back and forth without ever looking at the gas gauge again. OK, now lets add some real risk to the above question. What is your answer assuming your spouse is in the car with you?

    Now let’s deal with food instead of hedge funds. For example, for breakfast you like your bagels dark but definitely not burned. You’ve just put a bagel in the toaster, and it is just not dark enough. You put it in the toaster again, just nudging the dial to the optimum position, taking into consideration the heat already generated and the level of darkness around the edges of the bagel. As you wait for your bagel, do you: a) stand there staring at the bagel, b) let the dog out, c) get your newspaper from the driveway and check the Knicks score.

    How would your answer change if it were your last bagel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call

    An Apple a Day Keeps the Customer
    A large grocery store opened a new outlet in my neighborhood. A small basket of red apples sits by the cash register. The sign in the basket reads:‘Free apple if our staff at check-out did not greet you and say thank you.’But the apple basket stays full. Not because the check-out staff are always smiling (trust me), but because the act of taking an apple is tantamount to ‘catching the staff doing something wrong’! Who wants to irritate grocery check-out staff when they’re rin
    r with you?

    Now let’s deal with food instead of hedge funds. For example, for breakfast you like your bagels dark but definitely not burned. You’ve just put a bagel in the toaster, and it is just not dark enough. You put it in the toaster again, just nudging the dial to the optimum position, taking into consideration the heat already generated and the level of darkness around the edges of the bagel. As you wait for your bagel, do you: a) stand there staring at the bagel, b) let the dog out, c) get your newspaper from the driveway and check the Knicks score.

    How would your answer change if it were your last bagel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call

    Home Equity Loans - Very Popular Loan
    The home equity loan is very popular with both home owners and banks and money lending agencies. The home owners have an access to cash whenever they need it and the money lenders make a lot of money with the interests they charge on the loans.Home owners should count the cost of these loans. They definitely do not come cheaply. They are paying high interest rates and loan fees and they should first make quite sure that there is no other way of paying for a project except by taki
    agel?

    Now lets deal with the most risky part of life — relationships: Its 11:30 p.m., Thanksgiving Eve; your wife is exhausted, having cooked the 24-pound turkey and the rest of the food. She asks you to place the turkey in the fridge in the basement. She reminds you of last year’s fiasco when you forgot to refrigerate the bird. Do you: a) do it immediately; run upstairs to report to her that you completed the task. You then return to the basement to ensure that you have closed the fridge door, b) leave a note for your teenage son to do it when he comes in after midnight.

    Now for extra credit. You get a call from your high-school sweetheart. She asks to meet you for coffee in an hour. Do you: a) decline and tell you wife about the call, b) decline and not tell you wife about the call, c) ask your son if you can borrow his mousse. You get the idea. On this kind of test, I would score very high.

    I figure once I fine-tune my questions, I could use this kind of questionnaire to screen professionals trying to give me advice. For example, my internist wants me to come in to review the results of my prostate exam and to discuss the different options and the risks involved with each course of action. I may surprise him and ask him to complete my questionnaire first. I want to see what kind of risk-taker he is.

    P.S. My stockbroker just took my exam. He failed. I am looking for a new broker. Any recommendations?

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