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Will You Add? - Can't Get the Staff - Hiring Reliable Employees in a Small Business
Doing Business in Morocco, Investing in Moroccan Properties and Retirement Homes to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day!Strategically situated with both Atlantic and Mediterranean coastlines, Morocco stayed independent for centuries while developing a rich culture blended from Arab, Berber, European and African influences. Today one of the fastest growing economy in Africa, in 2005, the Moroccan GDP grew 7 %, 6.7 % in 2006, Morocco is also Europe’s nearest exotic location and has new free trade agreements with the USA. The U.S.-Moroccan Free Trade Agreement (FTA). Morocco was the top market reformer in the Middle East and North Africa in 2005–2006, according to a report by the World Bank and the International Finance Corporation (IFC) You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad A Business Plan? Whats The Point? In this article you will find out ideas and techniques to help you get through the minefield of laws and regulations to find the right people to help your business success, not hinder it. Hiring reliable, motivated staff to add to your success is becoming harder for employers. Employment Legislation, Data Protection Laws and EU Directives have all created a web in which the average small business owner can easily feel trapped and ensnared. I have trained hundreds of managers to find their way through, and these are some of the ideas I can offer to help you.Lets put it this way; supposing you knew you needed to make a journey for your business and you had a gut feeling you should do it tomorrow. You get in you car, still not knowing where you are going at a time that feels right. You drive to your first junction and think to yourself, “Shall I go left or right”? You choose right, because it looks the better option! You keep changing direction throughout the morning based on what feels or looks right, until you decide to stop and have a break.“Am I here yet?” you wonder to yourself sitting having your coffee and bacon sandwich. You look around, “no, I am sure this IT'S NOT ALL DOOM AND GLOOM. In this article I will show you how you can shift the odds in your favour without spending a fortune on recruitment advertising. This is part one of a series, so look out for updates or contact me for more details. 1 – Designing and advertising the job Most managers and business owners have been stuck at some point in our careers with the employee from hell, a difficult person who brings havoc to work with them. They take up time, they can sabotage work (and cost you money), and they can affect team morale, dragging their performance down and causing good staff to get fed up and leave. Some bosses have classified their problem people and among the worst are: · Moaners – if you want to give great customer service how will this person help? · Liars – can you trust them with your property? · Bullies – they don’t just scare the staff: customers will run a mile from them. Sometimes the boss is even scared · Addicts - drink, drugs, gambling – take your pick. Whatever their weakness, they are Trouble with a capital T · Lovers – they use the workplace as a free dating agency. It can be fine while romance is blossoming but when the honeymoon’s over the fallout will spill over at work, sometimes with violent results · Hypochondriacs – never there when you need them · Gossips – can cause backbiting in the most harmonious team. Good people will get tired of them and leave. Do these ring any bells? Are you worried about employing the next member of staff? Well read on and you will find out what you can do…… There are lots of things you can do to improve the odds of getting an effective person to fill your next vacancy. A sound job specification is particularly important, and that’s not just HR-speak. It will help avoid complaints of discrimination and helps you select suitable people who can develop into valuable assets for the organisation rather than difficult employees. Write a short job specification – this describes the skills and experience needed to do the job well. Write this up for the job and you will have a set of requirements against which you can filter the applications and decide who to interview. You can include anything that relates to the job – for example Experience, Training, Special Knowledge, Adaptability, Disposition. For example: you need someone to produce client contracts using Word and Excel. Sounds simple? Fine: let’s ask candidates to do that in a short test, using a simple draft as a starting point. Now we start to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day! You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad i Start Spreading the News! Nursing Jobs in New York – Designing and advertising the jobIf someone would have told me ten years ago that I could get paid to move to New York City, have my rent paid for me, make almost double my hourly rate plus a several thousand dollar bonus for committing to live there for three months I would have said they were crazy. But that is exactly the situation I now find myself in as I consider my next assignment as a traveling nurse in New York City. Wow! New York City!Before I take any new assignment as a traveling nurse, I always write down the pros and cons of the new assignment. This one was easy. Yankee Stadium, The Empire State Building, Central Park (I hear A-R Most managers and business owners have been stuck at some point in our careers with the employee from hell, a difficult person who brings havoc to work with them. They take up time, they can sabotage work (and cost you money), and they can affect team morale, dragging their performance down and causing good staff to get fed up and leave. Some bosses have classified their problem people and among the worst are: · Moaners – if you want to give great customer service how will this person help? · Liars – can you trust them with your property? · Bullies – they don’t just scare the staff: customers will run a mile from them. Sometimes the boss is even scared · Addicts - drink, drugs, gambling – take your pick. Whatever their weakness, they are Trouble with a capital T · Lovers – they use the workplace as a free dating agency. It can be fine while romance is blossoming but when the honeymoon’s over the fallout will spill over at work, sometimes with violent results · Hypochondriacs – never there when you need them · Gossips – can cause backbiting in the most harmonious team. Good people will get tired of them and leave. Do these ring any bells? Are you worried about employing the next member of staff? Well read on and you will find out what you can do…… There are lots of things you can do to improve the odds of getting an effective person to fill your next vacancy. A sound job specification is particularly important, and that’s not just HR-speak. It will help avoid complaints of discrimination and helps you select suitable people who can develop into valuable assets for the organisation rather than difficult employees. Write a short job specification – this describes the skills and experience needed to do the job well. Write this up for the job and you will have a set of requirements against which you can filter the applications and decide who to interview. You can include anything that relates to the job – for example Experience, Training, Special Knowledge, Adaptability, Disposition. For example: you need someone to produce client contracts using Word and Excel. Sounds simple? Fine: let’s ask candidates to do that in a short test, using a simple draft as a starting point. Now we start to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day! You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad Job Interview Questions And Answers dash; take your pick. Whatever their weakness, they are Trouble with a capital TYou can never top a first impression, or so the saying goes. Therefore, when it comes to applying for a new job, it seems that the most terrifying aspect is the dreaded interview. One can wrack their brain for hours on end, in the hopes that the proper answers will be given for the scrutinizing questions. Primarily, the basic reason for an interview is an opportunity for the prospective job applicant to share his or her talents. You may know that you are the right person for the job, but the employer would like the opportunity to acknowledge that as well. In addition, it is nice to put a face with a name. Many compan · Lovers – they use the workplace as a free dating agency. It can be fine while romance is blossoming but when the honeymoon’s over the fallout will spill over at work, sometimes with violent results · Hypochondriacs – never there when you need them · Gossips – can cause backbiting in the most harmonious team. Good people will get tired of them and leave. Do these ring any bells? Are you worried about employing the next member of staff? Well read on and you will find out what you can do…… There are lots of things you can do to improve the odds of getting an effective person to fill your next vacancy. A sound job specification is particularly important, and that’s not just HR-speak. It will help avoid complaints of discrimination and helps you select suitable people who can develop into valuable assets for the organisation rather than difficult employees. Write a short job specification – this describes the skills and experience needed to do the job well. Write this up for the job and you will have a set of requirements against which you can filter the applications and decide who to interview. You can include anything that relates to the job – for example Experience, Training, Special Knowledge, Adaptability, Disposition. For example: you need someone to produce client contracts using Word and Excel. Sounds simple? Fine: let’s ask candidates to do that in a short test, using a simple draft as a starting point. Now we start to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day! You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad Business and Relationships tant, and that’s not just HR-speak. It will help avoid complaints of discrimination and helps you select suitable people who can develop into valuable assets for the organisation rather than difficult employees. Write a short job specification – this describes the skills and experience needed to do the job well. Write this up for the job and you will have a set of requirements against which you can filter the applications and decide who to interview. You can include anything that relates to the job – for example Experience, Training, Special Knowledge, Adaptability, Disposition.Management is relationships; sales is relationships; service is relationships; office politics is relationships. Salaries and bonuses; vacations and office assignments; training and education --- all relationships.Shopping is business; handling the checkbook and credit cards are business; life insurance is business; health is business; who’s doing what and when is business. We say, “let’s get down to business.’ That’s relationship.I have not seen the separation. Is “the separation of Church and State” about relationship or about business? They are peculiar synonyms Here's some more -- It's clear you For example: you need someone to produce client contracts using Word and Excel. Sounds simple? Fine: let’s ask candidates to do that in a short test, using a simple draft as a starting point. Now we start to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day! You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad Can A Strong Personal Brand Revive A Flagging Corporate Brand? to find out who can walk their talk. And on the subject of walking, if that’s part of the job, put it in the specification, then they can’t say they didn’t expect to be on their feet all day!The personal marketing power of Eddie McGuire as chief executive of the Nine Network could add more than 100 million dollars to the company over the next five years.Running a commercial TV station is a simple business model. The more eyeballs you have watching - the more you can charge for advertising.Advertising is limited by time and space so the key is to get the maximum number of viewers with good programming.In the case of Channel 9, analysts believe each rating point increase is worth about $40 million dollars in revenue a year.McGuire's unique combination of charismatic personality, You can recruit without spending a fortune. Before you run into the arms of a recruitment agency, try and compare notes with another local employer. Has anyone found a really good, loyal agency? If so, grab them! Lots of companies use employment agencies to do the work for them, with varying results. They can charge a month’s salary for finding the employee, and once they place them with you they can be ready to tempt them away with the next vacancy – and there’s often nothing you can do about this! So how do you find the right person? Just be practical – put a small ad in the right advertising medium: often one of the local papers. But also offer it to the local Jobcentre, and tell all your staff that the job is open. There’s no reason not to interview a friend or relative of an existing member of staff, if they meet the basic job requirements. Are there any other free outlets to advertise the job? Set a closing date and interview date(s) when you advertise. This lets the applicant know when they might be asked to an interview, and can save a lot of time in dealing with enquiries. So you’ve designed a clear, simple job spec, you’ve told everyone that you’re looking for someone good, and now just wait for that flood of applicants to beat a path to your door. Part Two coming soon, but if you can’t wait that long you can contact me – see my details below.
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