Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,799,889 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Golden business ideas.


With a Little Help From Your Friends

Several large business competitors--airlines and telephone companies, for example--maintain mutual-aid agreements to help one another in the event a disaster strikes a key facility. There's no reason why small companies can't do the same thing.

Consider approaching local competitors or your industry trade group about forming such pacts.

More Power to Them

Danger: Empowerment em·pow·er  
tr.v. em·pow·ered, em·pow·er·ing, em·pow·ers
1. To invest with power, especially legal power or official authority. See Synonyms at authorize.

2.
 programs, if not sincerely implemented, can backfire.

For example, when companies give their rank-and-file workers fancy titles and tell them they have the authority to make certain decisions and then management keeps overruling o·ver·rule  
tr.v. o·ver·ruled, o·ver·rul·ing, o·ver·rules
1.
a. To disallow the action or arguments of, especially by virtue of higher authority:
 them, the newly titled workers typically become cynical, which undermines morale and company loyalty.

The bottom line: Unless managers intend to really empower empower verb To encourage or provide a person with the means or information to become involved in solving his/her own problems  these workers, they shouldn't even consider such a program.

In fact, when planning an empowerment program, realize that not everyone wants the extra responsibility--even if it involves only some small domain. After all, many workers disdain being in charge--especially after seeing how their bosses must work longer hours and deal with extra strain.

Formulas for Business Success

In this time of layoffs and belt tightening, many managers champion ways to overcome these hard times: Work harder, give 110% and put in longer hours.

While we're not suggesting this is a time to slack off slack 1  
adj. slack·er, slack·est
1. Moving slowly; sluggish: a slack pace.

2.
, we question the conventional wisdom that marathon efforts--the 80-hour workweek, skipped vacations, stepped-up pressure to work faster and cheaper--are business-success formulas. And that challenge stands even when times are not hard.

It doesn't take an expensive management consultant research project to tell you that 80-hour workweeks do not produce bright, eager, quick-thinking employees. And who would doubt that relentless hurrying on a job or dogged efforts to seek the very cheapest solutions lower a product's quality and, even more important, strain employee morale.

Get a New Employee Up to Speed

Do you remember the last time you started a new job? You spent the first week or so finding the bathroom, figuring out how the voice mail system worked and where to get office supplies Office supplies is the generic term that refers to all supplies regularly used in offices by businesses and other organizations, from private citizens to governments, who works with the collection, refinement, and output of information (colloquially referred to as "paper work"). .

What a waste of time.

Would it have been more efficient if a veteran staff person in your department had been assigned as your mentor Mentor, in Greek mythology
Mentor (mĕn`tər, –tôr'), in Greek mythology, friend of Odysseus and tutor of Telemachus.
 for an hour or so for a few days, guiding you through the maze maze, detail of landscape gardening based on the Greek labyrinth, consisting of intricate paths or alleys lined with high hedges and having a center and exit difficult to find. It was a prominent feature in the formal English gardens of the 17th and 18th cent. ? That way, you'd have been up to speed faster and avoided the start-up frustration.

Alternative to a Pay Raise

You want to give your employees a raise, but you just can't afford it right now because business is not that good. An alternative that benefits the employee and the company: Offer a skills-improvement mentoring program matching junior employees with more experienced seniors who can provide instruction and assistance on specific skills. Let the groups meet informally and set their own schedules.

Not only will the company end up with more skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 employees, but the workers will gain in the long run with better opportunities.

An Invitation

The JofA publishes a monthly collection of Golden Business Ideas and invites readers to contribute their favorites (for attribution at·tri·bu·tion  
n.
1. The act of attributing, especially the act of establishing a particular person as the creator of a work of art.

2.
, if you like).

Send your ideas to Senior Editor Stanley Zarowin via either e-mail (zarowin@mindspring.com) or regular mail at the Journal of Accountancy, Harborside har·bor·side  
n.
The area adjacent to a harbor.
 Financial Center, 201 Plaza Three, Jersey City, NJ 07311-3881.
COPYRIGHT 2003 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Apr 1, 2003
Words:535
Previous Article:Official releases: ethics interpretations and ruling.
Next Article:SEC strengthens audit committees.



Related Articles
GOLDEN BUSINESS IDEAS.
GOLDEN BUSINESS IDEAS.
Yes, please interrupt me. (Golden Business Ideas).
Golden business ideas.
Golden business ideas.
Golden business ideas.
Golden business ideas.
Turn mistakes into something useful. (Golden Business Ideas).
Avoid flight delays.(Golden Business Ideas)
Golden business ideas.(strategic planning)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2010 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles