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Will You Add? - Human Resources Which Will It Be?: Self-Service Pre-Employment Background
(Home-Based) Business Success Tips: Busting Five Myths someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case.
In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better.Every day I come across people who are unhappy because they are struggling to make ends meet, working like slaves, living paycheck to paycheck, in debt up to their eyeballs. I recognize them because I used to be in that situation. No longer though; I’m now part of the home-based business revolution.Why aren’t they? Because as I find out when I talk with them, they subscribe to many of the myths that surround business in general, and in particular the home business industry. To help them—and you if you’ve been thinking about it—I’d like to take a look at five of those myths and BUST them!MYTH # 1: You need A LOT OF MONEY to start a business…This is true IF you want to buy an existing business or start a traditional business (in most cases), specially a brick & mortar business. While doing some research the other day, I saw a motel for sale for $600K A Creativity Management: Effective Group Structure During the last number of years, a variety of Background checking systems have offered automated self-service systems where all the Human Resource personnel has to do is type in the search order and wait the appointed amount of time for the search to be returned to their email address. It seems simple enough, and for many companies no doubt it is preferable to the vagaries of human contact and the subsequent chance of human error. In fact, in a perfect world this may indeed be the more efficient way to order your background checks.What do creativity managers do?Replace the word management with the word optimisation.That's what creativity managers do: they optimise the quality of the idea pool (creativity) and the implementation process (innovation).There are many methods of optimisation and the creativity leader must be aware of all of them, in other words, he or she must synthesise them for optimal effect.Areas [within creativity] that need managing include motivation, organisational culture, organisational structure, incremental versus radical effects and processes, knowledge mix, group structures, goals, process and valuation.Areas [within innovation] that need managing include idea selection, development / prototyping and the art of commercialisation.It is worth noting that 4000 good ideas result in 4 development programs, which in turn result However, as the more cognizant among us have come to realize, this is far from a perfect world and the seemingly perfect systems have their flaws. While some of the more experienced HR personnel may find it easier to order their background screening searches through automated systems, other human resource people may find it troublesome, costly and very time consuming. Essentially, what you are doing as an HR person is the work that should be allocated to the background checking service. You are using that background screening service’s system to order and conduct the research yourself. You have taken as much as thirty percent of your office time, in order to transform yourself into a self-service employment screening system. You are incurring hidden costs and overlooking desired services. If this is not incredibly time consuming, then you should factor in the mistakes you and your assistants make while conducting background screenings in the course of the month. Orders come in all the time where there are spelling mistakes or typos on names and relevant information. There are overlapping search orders. There are orders for searches on candidates who are already disqualified or even fired. It should be no secret that the less educated and the less trained an individual the more likely they are to make mistakes in ordering. Sometimes orders for criminal background checks are specified for the wrong state or county. Since there is no one available from the background checking service to actually review your order for overlaps, typos and other usual and costly mistakes, the background screening orders are passed on as is and often come back as incomplete or inaccurate. There are any number of mistakes that are made, and once they are made, you the Human Resource Department are responsible for the additional expenses that accumulate through human error. There are more than a few occasions when HR personnel, especially those who are new to the background checking process, need clarification or help in interpreting reports. They may need timely answers concerning a background report, or you may need clarification on a bill. Should you have these needs, HR personnel lament, just try to contact someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case. In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better. Au Job Search Stalled? 5 Ways to Keep Your References From Killing Your Career ome of the more experienced HR personnel may find it easier to order their background screening searches through automated systems, other human resource people may find it troublesome, costly and very time consuming. Essentially, what you are doing as an HR person is the work that should be allocated to the background checking service. You are using that background screening service’s system to order and conduct the research yourself. You have taken as much as thirty percent of your office time, in order to transform yourself into a self-service employment screening system. You are incurring hidden costs and overlooking desired services.You're changing jobs. You know you'll need references for your next career move. You've done a great job so you shouldn't worry about getting a reference - right?Wrong.References can sabotage even the most sophisticated, well-executed job search. Sometimes you can lose an opportunity when your reference thinks he's helping you out 100%.Here are 5 ways to make your references work for you, not against you.(1) Skip the 'To Whom It May Concern' letters.Clients often tell me their well-meaning bosses offered to write a 'To Whom It May Concern' letter on your behalf. These letters used to be common 20 or 30 years ago.Today, corporate employers rarely pay attention to these letters. In fact, often hiring managers will be skeptical about any written correspondence.Let's face it: employers tend to be conscious of lawsuits. They If this is not incredibly time consuming, then you should factor in the mistakes you and your assistants make while conducting background screenings in the course of the month. Orders come in all the time where there are spelling mistakes or typos on names and relevant information. There are overlapping search orders. There are orders for searches on candidates who are already disqualified or even fired. It should be no secret that the less educated and the less trained an individual the more likely they are to make mistakes in ordering. Sometimes orders for criminal background checks are specified for the wrong state or county. Since there is no one available from the background checking service to actually review your order for overlaps, typos and other usual and costly mistakes, the background screening orders are passed on as is and often come back as incomplete or inaccurate. There are any number of mistakes that are made, and once they are made, you the Human Resource Department are responsible for the additional expenses that accumulate through human error. There are more than a few occasions when HR personnel, especially those who are new to the background checking process, need clarification or help in interpreting reports. They may need timely answers concerning a background report, or you may need clarification on a bill. Should you have these needs, HR personnel lament, just try to contact someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case. In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better. A The Personality of a Home-Based Entrepreneur en you should factor in the mistakes you and your assistants make while conducting background screenings in the course of the month. Orders come in all the time where there are spelling mistakes or typos on names and relevant information. There are overlapping search orders. There are orders for searches on candidates who are already disqualified or even fired. It should be no secret that the less educated and the less trained an individual the more likely they are to make mistakes in ordering.Working from home isn’t for everyone. I wish that I could say that it is. After all, it’s an amazing alternative to the grind of the corporate life. But, alas, that just wouldn’t be true. The reality is that it takes a certain personality and set of traits to work from home. Before you quit your job, you should take an honest inventory of yourself and decide what your strengths and weaknesses are.You will have to be flexible. If you’re going to work from home, you likely have a spouse and children. They are going to have emergencies. They are going to need to talk. They are going to want to eat or get a drink. They will expect you to stop what you’re doing. While you shouldn’t stop for every disturbance, you should be able to set aside your work when necessary to attend to other matters.You also have to have self-discipline, however. It would be wonderful Sometimes orders for criminal background checks are specified for the wrong state or county. Since there is no one available from the background checking service to actually review your order for overlaps, typos and other usual and costly mistakes, the background screening orders are passed on as is and often come back as incomplete or inaccurate. There are any number of mistakes that are made, and once they are made, you the Human Resource Department are responsible for the additional expenses that accumulate through human error. There are more than a few occasions when HR personnel, especially those who are new to the background checking process, need clarification or help in interpreting reports. They may need timely answers concerning a background report, or you may need clarification on a bill. Should you have these needs, HR personnel lament, just try to contact someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case. In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better. A Be Careful What You Wish For – When Having a Large Benefactor is Not a Good Thing rder for overlaps, typos and other usual and costly mistakes, the background screening orders are passed on as is and often come back as incomplete or inaccurate. There are any number of mistakes that are made, and once they are made, you the Human Resource Department are responsible for the additional expenses that accumulate through human error.You spend so much time and resources chasing too many small donors and too few large donors that sometimes you can't help but wish your organization had one large benefactor. While that could be wonderful, you ought to be careful what you wish for, because sometimes having a single large benefactor can hurt your organization more than it can help it.There are the obvious problems with having one or two large donors: the organization may have to placate a large ego to get the money, and the organization may have to contend with unwarranted interference by the donor in governance or program activities. Placating a donor's ego is often not so difficult to deal with, name something after the donor and all's well. However, if a large donor wants greater recognition, a special event in her honor for example, that could be headache. Donor interference is a little bit m There are more than a few occasions when HR personnel, especially those who are new to the background checking process, need clarification or help in interpreting reports. They may need timely answers concerning a background report, or you may need clarification on a bill. Should you have these needs, HR personnel lament, just try to contact someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case. In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better. A Medical Billing - HCPCS Updates someone at the automated screening services. You can telephone, or you can email, but you already know you are in for a frustrating session either case.
In fact, you may have better odds at winning at blackjack than you do getting timely answers from an automated system. Service from even major background systems is too often an arcane concept, much like free parking or checking your oil. For those who don’t think so, just try to dial up the number of any vendor and see how long it takes before you resolve any issues. Between phone menu hell and the phone bank from somewhere else you could be days waiting in Limbo. And the email merry go round won’t do you much better.If you're really into medical billing you know the importance of doing a HCPCS update. You also know the headaches that doing these can give you. In this particular installment, we're going to look at some basic things about HCPCS, including, for the uninformed out there, what they are, how the updates are done and what problems you are likely to encounter when doing yours.The first thing that probably should be explained is what HCPCS stands for. HCPCS is an acronym for HCFA Common Procedure Coding System. So just what is this system? Well, it's a system where every procedure and piece of equipment that is sold in the world of medicine is given a specific code to identify it. Now you might be thinking, "Why is this so important?" Well, look at it this way. Imagine a medical biller needing to look up the pricing for a particular item and this item just h Automated self-service background checking systems are used as a hedge against volume and as a dependable resource to elevate the bottom line. The trouble is the resource is not as beloved as some would think. Since most self-service systems eliminate what they deem as the need for essential human contact from their business model they also eliminate the human touch. Studies show tha the more automated a system, as evidenced by banks without tellers, the less inclined are customers to evoke goodwill. The lack of goodwill leads to a breakdown in loyalty, and that in turn accelerates customer churn. Fewer customers obviously reduce the profit margins. With profit margins reduced, to satisfy investors, the self-service background screening firms are compelled to further cut corners in order to reduce costs. When costs are cut even mediocre service descends into horrific service and this subsequently leads once again to customer churn. It’s a vicious cycle and you become its prey. For the customers, there are hidden costs with the automated systems. Factor in that you are usually working in a compressed time frame and need answers and solutions within hours and not days. With pressure on you from the hiring manager, you make a hasty decision and offer the candidate the working. By the time you do get that much needed answer, the ship has sailed, the person is hired, trained and on the job. And then you get the bad news, the information you were waiting on, the nebulous charge was indeed a felony, he or she does have a substance abuse problem, there is a history of violence. So no you have to fired that candidate and find someone else for the position. More training means more money. As I said in the beginning, this is not every automated self-service system. I’m sure a great many HR people are happy doing the work themselves. Not everyone needs guidance, and not everyone desires human contact. And, as sad as the fact may be, not everyone wants service. Because it is seldom provided in any industry a good many of us have forgotten what true service is really like. Or maybe you believe it is relegated to that thing you get on a cruise. But there are a great many that need guidance, who want service. There are many who realize their workday is long and tough enough and it becomes even tougher when they have to do the work that others can do. There are a great many who wish to get what they are paying for, and they want it delivered in a timely fashion from knowledgeable people. There are people who even like it when you actually answer the phone and can answer their questions. They like it when they can the exchange is in comprehensible English, and not committed to either corporate jargon, esoteric phrases or in a lan
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