Your iPhone has one. So should you. Providing detailed
instructions on how you operate can be a great dysfunction defuser. In
your “Managerial User’s Manual,” you can describe your preferences, your
style, what makes you apoplectic. After all, most bosses would claim,
“Hey, I’m not toxic, just misunderstood.”
A user’s manual
is a clear and concise document that communicates to others one’s
motivations, work style, management and delegation style, communication
and feedback style, learning and decision-making style, values, personal
style, and any other information that can help reduce
misunderstandings, accelerate mutual understanding and facilitate better
collaboration with your team.
http://www.businessweek.com/stories/2008-08-12/a-users-manual-to-you
Thursday, 28 February 2013
Teleworking: The myth of working from home
Yahoo has banned its
staff from "remote" working. After years of many predicting working
from home as the future for everybody, why is it not the norm?
When a memo from human resources dropped into the inbox of
Yahoo staff banning them from working from home it prompted anger from
many of its recipients.
"Some of the best decisions and insights come from hallway
and cafeteria discussions, meeting new people, and impromptu team
meetings," the memo said.
"Speed and quality are often sacrificed when we work from home."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-21588760
Tuesday, 26 February 2013
Management Tip of the Day Write Your First Draft Fast
Sometimes the hardest part about writing a memo, report, or proposal is
getting the words on paper. The key is to write all of your thoughts
down before you can overthink them. Then
decide how to best structure them. Once you’ve done that, rapidly write
your first draft. Don’t wait for inspiration. Write against the clock,
giving yourself 5-10 minutes for each section. Resist the urge to
perfect as you write. Save the editing until the draft is finished. If
you find yourself stumped, move on to a section you’re more comfortable
with and come back to the problem area once you’ve found your flow.
New Study Uses Tweets To Rank America’s Happiest Cities, States
Be warned: your next tweet could be used to determine how happy you are.
A new study by researchers at the Vermont
Complex Systems Center at the University of Vermont studied more than
10 million geotagged tweets from 2011 to rank the happiest U.S. cities
and states. Focusing on the how often positive or negative words
appeared in tweets, the team used its “hedonometer” to gauge which
American destinations are the happiest and posted its findings here.
Monday, 18 February 2013
iWatch: Is it time for wearable computers?
We have gradually accepted more and more intrusive forms of technology. Is the smart watch the next logical step?
There’s nothing the internet likes more than rumours about Apple
products – apart, possibly, from cute cats. In the last few days, it is
the former that has preoccupied countless netizens.
Specifically, it was rumours about the possible appearance of an iWatch from the Cupertino tech giant. The frenzy of speculation was sparked by a piece
written by interface expert and ex-Apple employee Bruce Tognazzini, who
argued that a watch would “fill a gaping hole in the Apple ecosystem”
and herald a new phase in how we interact with technology.
The
article offered no proof that Apple was working on a watch – or that the
device that was rapidly christened an iWatch was even a timekeeper
(could iWatch be the name of the long awaited TV from Apple?). But the
story – true or not – offers a fascinating insight into the rapidly
emerging field of wearable computing.
For Tognazzini – the
designer behind the Apple Mac’s original user interface – what’s at
stake is computing that is able to treat you, for the first time, as a
human being. Today, smartphones know roughly where we’re standing, the
logins for a selection of our online profiles, and hold a selection of
apps and files. Tomorrow, wearable computing might know everything from
your altitude and posture to your pulse, blood type, height, weight, and
daily routines, right down to the way you take coffee from different
stores.
Sunday, 17 February 2013
How to Check Your Facebook Privacy Settings
Graph Search is a new tool for Facebook
that makes it easier to look for people, places, things and photos.
Although Facebook has a search feature already, Graph Search is much
more powerful, allowing you to search based on phrases like “restaurants
my friends like” or “photos of my friends from college.”
What this means is that the things you’ve liked, the places you’ve been and the photos you’re in–even from years ago–are now much easier to dig up. Facebook seems aware of this, and in a new blog post, the company explains how Graph Search works for teens, and provides additional safety tips for all ages.
Facebook is rolling out Graph Search slowly–to use it, you still have to join a waiting list–but because some people are already using it, it’s not too early to check on your privacy settings and activity
Read more: http://techland.time.com/2013/02/15/how-to-check-your-facebook-privacy-settings/#ixzz2LAwV1yLF
What this means is that the things you’ve liked, the places you’ve been and the photos you’re in–even from years ago–are now much easier to dig up. Facebook seems aware of this, and in a new blog post, the company explains how Graph Search works for teens, and provides additional safety tips for all ages.
Facebook is rolling out Graph Search slowly–to use it, you still have to join a waiting list–but because some people are already using it, it’s not too early to check on your privacy settings and activity
Read more: http://techland.time.com/2013/02/15/how-to-check-your-facebook-privacy-settings/#ixzz2LAwV1yLF
What is going on in there?
I once knew a man, a Jamaican, who when he first came to England always
answered truthfully when asked ‘How are you?’ A bit sniffly, he might
reply; or he would describe his indigestion, or the twinge in his left
knee. One day a woman lost patience: ‘Look,’ she snapped, ‘there’s
something you must understand; in England, the answer to “How are you?”
is “I’m fine, how are you?”’ So he’d been told, and he didn’t need
telling twice: for all the English care, you can die and stiffen on the
street.
Royal Bodies
Last summer at the festival in Hay-on-Wye, I was asked to name a famous
person and choose a book to give them. I hate the leaden repetitiveness
of these little quizzes: who would be the guests at your ideal dinner
party, what book has changed your life, which fictional character do you
most resemble? I had to come up with an answer, however, so I chose
Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge, and I chose to give her a book published
in 2006, by the cultural historian Caroline Weber; it’s called Queen of Fashion: What Marie Antoinette Wore to the Revolution.
It’s not that I think we’re heading for a revolution. It’s rather that I
saw Kate becoming a jointed doll on which certain rags are hung. In
those days she was a shop-window mannequin, with no personality of her
own, entirely defined by what she wore. These days she is a
mother-to-be, and draped in another set of threadbare attributions. Once
she gets over being sick, the press will find that she is radiant. They
will find that this young woman’s life until now was nothing, her only
point and purpose being to give birth.
Friday, 15 February 2013
Facebook reassures members over teen privacy in Graph Search
Facebook has sought to reassure members that its new Graph Search system will not expose teenagers’ profiles to adults they don't know.
Graph Search is being gradually introduced to the social network's one billion
members after it was announced
by Mark Zuckerberg last month.
The new system has provoked privacy concerns, because it allows members to
search for information on Facebook such as "single women in London".
Graph Search returns a list of members who meet the criteria and set their
privacy setting such that whoever entered the search is allowed to see their
profile.
Facebook today said it had taken special measures to ensure that teenagers
were not exposed to potentially dangerous strangers.
"As with all of our products, we designed Graph Search to take into
account the unique needs of teens on Facebook," it said in
a blog post.
In particular, Graph Search follows the existing rule on Facebook that
teenagers are not allowed to make their profile visible to anyone more
distant than a friend of a friend.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/facebook/9873330/Facebook-reassures-members-over-teen-privacy-in-Graph-Search.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/facebook/9873330/Facebook-reassures-members-over-teen-privacy-in-Graph-Search.html
Apple’s Retail Strategy Proves That If They Build It, You Will Come (And Spend)
Apple is a unique company in that even if you break down its individual
lines of business and view them as distinct from the whole, it can still
be regarded as immensely successful in a number of different areas. As a
hardware company, it’s a success; as a software and services provider,
it’s a success; and as a retail chain, it’s a success. And Apple’s
physical retail presence shows such steady upwards growth that it,
rather than any product, could be the site of the company’s greatest
innovation over the next few years.
http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/14/apples-retail-strategy-proves-that-if-they-build-it-you-will-come-and-spend/
http://techcrunch.com/2013/02/14/apples-retail-strategy-proves-that-if-they-build-it-you-will-come-and-spend/
China wird Deutschlands Land der Ideen
Für deutsche Firmen ist China längst nicht mehr nur ein billiger
Produktionsstandort. Viele lassen dort auch Neues entwickeln. Konzerne
und Mittelständler eröffnen reihenweise Forschungszentren. Viel
wichtiger als niedrige Löhne sind dabei andere Motive.
Und wieder wird ein rotes Band durchschnitten. Dieses Mal in Peking
bei Audi. Der deutsche Autobauer eröffnet in der chinesischen Hauptstadt
sein neues Forschungszentrum für Asien.
300 Entwickler werden
hier in Zukunft Fahrzeuge an fernöstliche Bedürfnisse anpassen, sagt
Audi-Chef Rupert Stadler. Es gehe um Fahrzeugentwicklungen, "die wir
dann vielleicht in Langversionen darstellen. Da sind die Sitzeinlagen,
die etwas weicher, etwas komfortabler, angenehmer sind - so wie es der
Chinese wünscht." Es gehe auch um Navigationsthemen, die in China
aufgrund der Schriften und der Schriftzeichen anders seien.
Apple iWatch 'heading into production'
Fresh leaks about a wrist-wearable version of Apple’s iPhone – inevitably dubbed the iWatch – have suggested that development of the device is far more advanced than previously thought and could be heading towards the production stage.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/apple/9866999/Apple-iWatch-heading-into-production.htmlFriday, 8 February 2013
Why do politicians use business jargon?
Going forward. Leverage.
Level playing field. In the business of politics, politicians
increasingly use corporate buzzwords. Why, asks Sally Davies.
There was a line that stood out in Barack Obama's second
inaugural address last month, but not in a
carve-it-on-the-Lincoln-memorial sort of way.
Before 800,000 onlookers, the freshly anointed US President had just recited the famous passage from the American Declaration of Independence, proclaiming man's unalienable rights to "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness".
Facebook Graph Search: The Emperor Needs New Digital Clothes
I have to admit that I’m not much into clothes. Give me some comfortable
jeans and a clean shirt and I’m ready to go. My better half has a
different position on this topic. Sometimes she takes 30 minutes or more
just to decide what to wear. Apparently this gene is being passed down
to my granddaughters who, when over at our house, also spend more time
than I think necessary to get ready to go out the door — even if we’re
just going to a movie theater where it’s dark the whole time. But I am
beginning to think that when it comes to a digital world, I may need to
be more cognizant of my digital clothing.
How do I keep my job away from the chopping block?
I’ve worked for my company for three tumultuous years, during which I
have seen six people be dismissed – out of a staff of only 16. Everyone
is worried, thinking “Am I next on the chopping block?”
I have
always met or exceeded goals, I am well-liked, my subordinates perform
well, and I have branched out to take on instructor duties.
Wanted: A user manual for the boss
Not long ago, I bought a new Braun toaster because I was fed up with
the way the old one left a golfer’s tan on one side of the bread and
ignored the other side altogether. It is early days, but the new one
appears to work much better.
Yet what is even more impressive than
its ability to grill bread on both sides simultaneously is that it came
with a 15-page manual telling me how to operate it. Do not use
unattended, it said. Only use in upright position. Do not place toaster
in a heated oven. Do not use for other than its stated use.