30 Mar 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Interpersonal Competencies
Tags: ability, achieve, active, awareness, Behavior, benefit, build, clear, collaborate, collaborative, communication, competency, concern, constructive, create, Development, dialogue, diverse, dynamic, effective, emotional, empathy, external, foster, genuine, goal, group, idea, individual, internal, interpersonal, issue, leadership, listen, member, network, Organization, own, person, perspective, persuasive, present, relationship, responsibility, Role, sensitivity, social, solution, stakeholder, state, team, teamwork, understand
- Empathy: Sensitivity to and concern about others’ emotional states, ability to see one’s own behavior from the other person’s perspective
- Effective Communication: Actively listens in genuine dialogue and presents ideas clearly and persuasively
- Social Awareness: Understands group relationship issues and interpersonal dynamics between them between team members and among organizational stakeholders
- Relationship Development: Fosters constructive networking relationships within diverse internal and external organization groups
- Leadership: Takes on a leadership role and responsibilities for benefit of the group or organization
- Collaborative Teamwork: Actively builds dynamic teams of diverse individuals to collaborate in creating new solutions to achieve goals.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
24 Jan 2013
by Asif J. Mir
in Communities of Practice
Tags: about, almost, always, among, beyond, boundary, common, communication, community, component, contain, conventional, converse, cross, develop, emergence, environment, face, face-to-face meeting, fact successful, formal, fullness, group, hence, importance, individual, institution, interest, internet, intimacy, knowledge, life, link, locate, meet, Mission, necessarily, Organization, outside, passion, People, permit, physical, practice, problem, provide, replace, single, sole, sometime, Structure, subject, successful, sustain, time, tool, transact, Use, usual, workplace professional
One of the most successful uses of the Internet has been the emergence of informal knowledge communities or a community of interest. It is an environment usually outside of conventional organizational structures, where people can converse with each other about the common problems they face in their workplace or in their professional life, a common passion for some subject or a common mission. Most communities of practice are contained within a single organization but sometimes they cross institutional boundaries.
A community of practice does not necessarily have to be transacted solely on the Internet and in fact the most successful ones almost always have a face-to-face meeting component to them. As good a tool as the Internet is, it can never replace the intimacy and fullness of communication of face-to-face meetings of individuals. The importance of the internet to a community of practice js that it provides a link beyond the times when people can physically meet and hence sustains the group. It also permits a community of practice to develop among people who are not co-located.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
14 Nov 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Best Practices of Microsoft
Tags: apply, best, Bill Gates, boundary, business, chairman, communication, complaint, convert, create, credit, Customer, data, delivery, digital, easily, eliminate, email, feedback, flow, function, high, immediate, include, infrastructure, insight, insist, job, just-in-time, knowledge, level, loop, Microsoft, middlemen, new, online, paper, practice, problem, process, redefine, route, rule, sale, share, shift, single, solve, study, system, task, team, thinking, through, tool, transform, virtual, worker
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates has credited his best practices or new rules of how to function in the new digital business infrastructure. They can be applied in other businesses. The rules include:
- Insist that communications flow through email
- Study sales data online to share insights easily
- Shift knowledge workers into high level thinking
- Use digital tools to create virtual teams
- Convert every paper process to digital process
- Use digital tools to eliminate single-task jobs
- Create a digital feedback loop
- Use digital systems to route customer complaints immediately
- Use digital communication to redefine boundaries
- Transform every business process into just-in-time delivery
- Use digital delivery to eliminate middlemen
- Use digital tools to help customers solve problems for themselves.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
29 Oct 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Marketing Mix
Tags: activity, amount, available, buyer, channel, combine, communicate, communication, control, distribute, encompass, form, idea, include, kind, manager, market, Marketing, match, method, Mix, offer strategy, offering, Organization, pay, price, Product, recognition, require, service, typical
Matching offerings and markets requires recognition of the other marketing activities available to the marketing manager. Combined with the offering, these activities form the marketing mix.
A marketing mix typically encompasses activities controllable by the organization. These include the kind of product, service, or idea offered (product strategy); how it will be communicated to buyers (communication strategy) , the method for distributing the offering to buyers (channel strategy) and the amount buyers will pay for the offering (price strategy).
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
24 Oct 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Language and Communication Systems
Tags: act, addition, around, aspect, aware, communication, complex, complexity, day, define, describe, event, fill, hundred, identity, incredible, intrinsic, language, live, negotiate, People, quite, relationship, significant, situation, system, though, tool, way, world
Our lives are filled with language. We use it to describe the world around us, to negotiate our way through the complex situations and relationships of our lives. In addition, the way we use language defines us to the people around us. Language is not just a tool for communication but an intrinsic aspect of our identity. Every communication event is an act of identity. Even though language is so significant in our lives, and we quite easily make use of it hundreds of times every day, most people are not aware of the incredible complexity of all the systems that make up our communication system.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
08 Mar 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Macro-Marketing System
Tags: activity, addition, allow, business, communication, Competition, Consumer, criticism, deliver, Development, direct, economy, encourage, especially, firm, force, goods, idea, innovation, macro, Marketing, mass, money, need, part, possible, Product, production, public, satisfy, scale, service, ship, spread, system, think, transportation, visible
A macro-marketing system delivers goods and services to consumers. It also allows mass production with its economies of scale. Also mass communication and mass transportation allow products to be shipped where they’re needed. In addition to making mass production possible, a marketing directed, macro-marketing system encourages innovation—the development and spread of new ideas and products. Competition for consumers’ money forces firms to think of new and better ways of satisfying consumer needs. Marketing activity is especially open to criticism because it is the part of business most visible to the public.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
02 Mar 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Personal Selling: Two Approaches
Tags: advance, Advertising, agent, American, approach, Arabic, arrangement, aspect, business, carry, center, certain, communication, company, compare, complain, component, Consumer, cultivate, culture, detail, devote, different, direct, dirty, displace, distance, effort, electronic, energy, english, enough, executive, exporter, extraordinary, far, few, firm, generous, gift, graduation, hand, heavy, hotel, importer, infinitesimal, instead, instructive, international, introduction, invite, japanese, large, lead, local, luncheon, mail, market, meet, meeting, misdirect, normal, overlook, particular, People, personal, Personnel, preoccupied, presentation, private, Product, professional, range, room, rotate, round, sale, Saudi, Saudi Arabia, school, secondary, selling, small, specialist, specify, staff, Stick, stranger, sub-agent, success, supplement, supplier, tangible, team, telephone, tend, town, trading, travel, university, US, view, visit, warrantee, Western, workshop, worldwide, year
Personal Selling: Two Approaches
Many American companies do not put nearly enough effort into direct, personal communication. Japanese success in displacing the US as Saudi Arabia’s leading supplier is instructive. Japanese exporters and small teams to meet with Saudi importers: Japanese exporters; they go to Saudi workshops, travel to secondary towns, and meet with sub-agents. The Americans, on the other hand, invite all their Saudi agents together for a luncheon, do not have private meetings, do not get their hands dirty, and never travel to secondary towns—they tend to stick to the three market centers. Saudis complain that US effort is misdirected: American personnel devote infinitesimal detail to making advance arrangements for visiting executives, going so far as to specify rooms overlooking a certain view from the hotel.
Japanese firms supplement their direct, personal efforts with heavy local advertising. They use gifts generously in product introductions, and warrantees on Japanese consumer electronics range up to three years. To carry out this business, Japanese trading companies have large staffs of professional international marketers who have been cultivated since graduation from a Japanese international trading university, schooled in English and Arabic, and rotated worldwide as international trading specialists.
Compared to most other cultures, particularly non-Western. Americans are extraordinarily preoccupied with the tangible aspects of a product. They round up all their sales agents and give a product presentation instead of putting their energies into the more important component of international marketing—people. In American and only a few other countries it is normal to do business from a distance, between strangers, by mail or telephone.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
29 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Customers Criteria for Assessing Service
Tags: access, accurate, approachability, assess, believability, communication, competence, consideration, contact, Courtesy, credibility, Customer, danger, dependable, doubt, ease, evidence, freedom, friendliness, honesty, informed, keep, know, knowledge, listen, need, perform, Performance, Personnel, physical, politeness, promised, prompt, provide, readiness, reliability, responsiveness, risk, security, service, Skill, tangible, trustworthiness, understanding, willingness
Customers assess service by:
- Reliability – dependable and accurate performance of promised service
- Responsiveness – willingness/readiness to provide prompt service
- Competence – knowledge and skill to perform the service
- Access – approachability and ease of contact of service personnel
- Courtesy – politeness, consideration, and friendliness of service personnel
- Communication – keeping customers informed, listening to customers
- Credibility – trustworthiness, believability, honesty
- Security – freedom from danger, risk, or doubt
- Understanding/knowing customer – knowing customer’s needs
- Tangibles – physical evidence of service
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
27 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Inter-Cultural Communication
Tags: act, active, admire, audience, business, challenge, clear, communication, company, country, culture, direct, discrimination, ethic, face, home, information, Inter-cultural, lose, market, modify, obligate, offend, opportunity, oppose, Organization, pattern, People, prejudice, prevail, Product, reinforce, risk, service, special, target, understandable
Companies face special challenges when they market their products and services to people in other countries and to people in their home countries who come from other cultures:
- Companies have to make their communications understandable and clear to their target audiences. The company that does not modify its information risks offending its audience and losing the opportunity to do business.
- Companies are ethically obligated not to reinforce patterns of discrimination in product information.
- Companies are not obligated to challenge the prevailing prejudice directly. Organizations that actively oppose discrimination are acting admirably.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
23 Dec 2011
by Asif J. Mir
in Interacting with People
Tags: across, affect, appreciate, appropriate, aware, Behavior, build, clarify, clear, communicate, communication, compensate, concrete, conflict, confront, constructive, contact, conversation, convey, correct, country, cultural, culture, define, develop, direct, discrepancy, employee, enhance, eye, face, fashion, feedback, feel, flow, follow, foster, gesture, guideline, help, improve, increase, ineffective, inform, information, interact, issue, know, message, misunderstanding, Mix, need, nonaggressive, Open, opportunity, party, People, person, point, positive, possible, quick, receive, relationship, respond, send, simply, Skill, strong, term, think, time, trust, vague, verbal
Direct open communication with others fosters trust, enhances information flow, and builds stronger relationships. Use following guidelines to increase such communication:
- Let people know in a timely way about information that affects them. Respond as quickly as possible to any questions they may have.
- Be aware of the messages you send non-verbally. Communicate a positive, open message to people by facing them and making eye contact (or using other culturally appropriate gestures when in other countries or cultures).
- To help your employees and others develop their skills, convey positive and constructive feedback. Positive feedback lets people know what they are doing correctly and the behavior you appreciate. Constructive feedback informs people of their ineffective behavior and gives them an opportunity to compensate for or improve the behavior.
- If conflicting or mixed messages come up in conversation, confront the discrepancy and work with the other person to clarify the misunderstanding.
- When you receive vague messages, define the issues in concrete terms so that all parties are clear about what is being said.
- When you need to get a point across in a direct, nonaggressive, fashion, simply say what you think and feel without putting the other person down.
My Consultancy–Asif J. Mir - Management Consultant–transforms organizations where people have the freedom to be creative, a place that brings out the best in everybody–an open, fair place where people have a sense that what they do matters. For details please visit www.asifjmir.com, and my Lectures.
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