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.
13 Sep 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Rolling up your Sleeves
Tags: achievement, actual, book, busy, challenge, course, develop, difficult, esteem, example, expert, far, feel, focus, hard, improve, industry, information, interest, language, lead, learn, learning, low, manage, mean, newspaper, novel, People, possible, practice, progress, read, rub, self, Skill, sure, text, time, Training, up-to-date, useful, way
If there’s one way that you can get other people to become more interested and more focused on improving themselves, it is to lead by example. Take time out to go on training courses, even though you may be too busy. Take time to read useful information, not just novels, books or newspapers but actual up-to-date books and texts from the experts within your industry. Practise your skills, use them and make sure that they’re developed as far as they possibly can be. If it means learning a new language or learning a skill that you don’t have then take on that challenge. It is very difficult to manage people well if you have low self-esteem, but if you feel good about yourself and you have that feeling of progress and achievement, then it is very hard for this not to rub off on other people.
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.
09 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Two-way HR Planning Process
Tags: action, address, adopt, affect, aggregate, analyses, ask, assessment, attune, bottom up, broad, broken, business, change, character, close, company, competitive, concern, condition, consideration, context, cumulative, department, detail, direction, down, economic, effort, employee, environment, external, focus, force, forecast, future, great, guidance, HR, Human, identify, impact, important, influence, information, input, issue, level, long-term, manager, meaningful, necessary, objective, operate, Organization, participate, People, plan, Planning, possible, practice, process, progressive, provide, raise, readily, regarding, require, Resource, select, shape, social, specific, staff, strategic, strategy, synthesize, team, top-down, trend, umbrella, unit, view
Like other business strategies, human resource strategies are shaped through both top-down and bottom-up processes in an organization. A top-down processes provides the strategic context necessary for team and unit planning.
Through a focused company environmental assessment, it provides information on possible future trends and issues affecting the business and influencing the shaping of plans and objectives. People close to the operating business may not readily take such a broad future view. It requires looking outside the company to external competitive practices, economic and social trends, and possible future conditions that may some day have an impact on the business.
A plan is strategic in character if it is focused on important issues raised in an environmental assessment. In today’s competitive organization, it is important that employees at all levels be attuned to external forces and changes and to the strategic direction being taken to address them.
In a bottom-up approach, planning of human resource actions is a cumulative process. Instead of broad strategies being broken down into progressively greater detail, detailed strategies are aggregated and synthesized into meaningful umbrella strategies. Each business unit or department is asked to identify the human resource issues of concern, taking into consideration the guidance of the long-term planning inputs. They are also asked to specific analyses, forecasts, and assessments regarding these issues. Specific action plans are selected and adopted. Both human resource staff and managers should participate in this effort.
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.
04 Aug 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Glass Ceiling
Tags: advance, background, ceiling, classic, discrimination, diverse, ethnic, glass, indicative, institution, limit, men, minority, mobility, Organization, practice, psychological, racial, reflect, represent, synonymous, term, today, top, wide, women
Glass ceiling is a term used to reflect why women and minorities aren’t more widely represented at the top of today’s organizations. The glass ceiling is not, however, synonymous with “classic” discrimination. Rather, the glass ceiling is indicative of “institutional and psychological practices, and the limited advancement and mobility of men and women of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds.”
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.
26 May 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Social Interactions
Tags: affect, authority, autonomous, basic, Behavior, bound, Buying, celebration, center, children, common, community, companionship, consider, contrast, convention, culture, decision-making, define, different, Dutch, economic, education, emerge, employee, establish, example, extended, family, festival, focus, form, framework, fulfill, gadget, get-together, grief, household, husband, include, influence, institutional, interaction, Latin, leader, life, machine, Marketing, marriage, mean, modern, mother, nuclear, occasion, opinion, Organization, pattern, People, personal, play, political, practice, prefer, prescribe, primary, protection, provide, reason, reference, religious, resent, responsibility, ritual, Role, scope, set, situation, social, society, specifically, stable, support, Swiss, unit, US, Value, vary, wife, woman
Social interactions establish the role that people play in a society and their authority responsibility pattern. Their roles and patterns are supported by a society’s institutional framework, which includes, for example, education and marriage.
Social roles are established by culture. For example, a woman can be a wife, a mother, a community leader, and/or an employee. What role is preferred in different situations is culture-bound. Most Swiss women consider household work as their primary role. For this reason, they resent modern gadgets and machines. Behavior also emerges from culture in the form of conventions, rituals, and practices on different occasions such as during festivals, marriages, get-togethers, and times of grief or religious celebration.
With reference to marketing, the social interactions influence family decision-making and buying behavior and define the scope of personal influence and opinion. In Latin America and Asia the extended family is considered the most basic and stable unit of social organization. It is the center for all economic, political, social, and religious life. It provides companionship, protection, and a common set of values with specifically prescribed means for fulfilling them. By contrast, in the US the nuclear family (husband, wife, and children) is the focus of social organization. The US wife plays a more autonomous role than the Dutch wife in family decision-making. Thus social roles vary from culture to culture and are likely to affect marketing behavior.
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.
13 May 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Best Practices of Winning Companies
Tags: build, company, employee, experience, high, lasting, long-term, low, partner, partnership, Performance, period, practice, price, provide, realize, respective, shareholder, stock, strategic, successful, sustain, transition, truly, Value, winning
Winning companies realize the strategic value of building successful partnerships. While all companies experience periods of highs, lows, and transitions in their respective performance and in stock prices, truly successful companies build lasting partnerships that sustain and provide long term value to all partners, employees, and shareholders.
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.
07 May 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Retailing
Tags: achieve, activity, adopt, aim, basic, conducive, Consumer, continuous, country, Customer, define, design, developed, different, environment, family, final, goods, household, imply, improvement, involve, maintain, manufacturer, Marketing, objective, personal, practice, profitability, program, provide, Quality, remain, retail, retailer, retailing, sale, satisfaction, satisfy, scope, service, similar, situation, Use, vast, win-win
Retailing implies activities involved in the sale of goods and services to the consumers for their personal, family and household use. That’s about marketing activities designed to provide satisfaction to the final consumer and profitability maintain these customers through a program of continuous quality improvement. The scope of retailing, therefore, is defined as activities aimed at satisfying the final consumer profitability. This win-win situation is achieved through different activities the retailers provide both to the consumers as well as the manufacturers.
While the basic objective of retailing would remain the same in all countries, the retail environment in developed countries would be vastly different, and hence not conducive to adopting similar marketing practices.
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.
18 Apr 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Employee Demand
Tags: adoption, boom, calculate, change, combination, Consumer, cycle, decrease, demand, Development, easy, economic, employee, employment, extreme, factor, improvement, include, increase, link, new, practice, problematic, Product, productivity, recession, requirement, seem, Skill, superficial, supply, technology, time, turbulence, variable, worker
Demand for workers is linked to the economic cycle increasing in boom times and decreasing in recession. Other factors include the adoption of new technology, productivity, improvements and changing skill requirements. Superficially, calculating employment supply and demand seems easy. In practice, the combination of variable consumer demand, development of new products and technology, and economic turbulence make it extremely problematic.
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.
17 Feb 2012
by Asif J. Mir
in Compliance and Integrity
Tags: add, advocacy, affect, anti, application, area, array, balance, base, best, beyond, boundary, bribery, broaden, center, challenge, change, characterize, child, citizenship, common, community, company, compliance, concern, consequence, consider, consistency, continue, corporate, corporation, corruption, culture, decision, definition, descriptor, desire, develop, diverse, earliest, embrace, emerge, environment, especially, ethic, expand, expansion, face, focus, following, fundamental, global, governance, group, holistic, Human, increase, integrity, labor, latest, law, litigation, little, local, logical, manager, market, mature, mean, media, minimize, model, multinational, narrow, need, notion, obligation, office, officer, Organization, personal, perspective, practice, preparation, program, question, rank, reach, regard, reshape, respect, responsibility, right, risk, rule of law, safety, scrutiny, select, shift, social, sophistication, special, stage, stakeholder, standard, supplier, surrounding, tradition, Value, view, whole
In the earliest stages, organizational ethics centered on the narrow perspective of ethics—the notion of compliance. Are we following the laws? Are we at risk from litigation? If so, how do we minimize that risk?
Ethics programs matured and ethics officers, most of whom are selected from the managerial ranks with little, if any, special preparation, developed increased sophistication regarding the challenges facing their organizations. Both the ethics officers and their organizations began to embrace personal and corporate values in decision making (value-based decision making) as the logical expansion of the definition of what it means to be ethical. What has emerged is what many ethics officers today characterize as the “best practices” model of the ethics office and of a values-based corporation.
But change continues. What is emerging today is a more holistic definition of what it means to be a “good” corporation. This new, global view will again help to reshape the responsibilities and focus of the ethics officer.
The shift to a global perspective means another broadening of the definition of ethics. “Global Integrity” is the latest descriptor, and it embraces both compliance and ethics. It also adds concern for rule of law, human rights, good governance, labor/child labor concerns, anti-corruption/anti-bribery, concern for the environment, safety, social responsibility, good corporate citizenship, and respect for the whole diverse array of local cultures to the definition. This increases the organization’s obligation to reach beyond traditional company boundaries to consider how decisions would affect the surrounding community. One consequence of this new global definition of the organizational ethics is increased scrutiny by stakeholders, especially advocacy groups and the media.
Corporate ethics officers, especially those in multinational corporations and/or corporations with global suppliers/markets, are being challenged with fundamental questions in this expanded integrity area. Perhaps the most common, and most challenging, is how the corporation will balance the desire for global standards (consistency) against the need for local application of standards.
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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