by Larry Mandelberg | Feb 24, 2022 | Business, Business Growth, Employees, Human Resources, Recruiting, Staff Development, Staffing
Values are the bricks and like-mindedness is the mortar of organizational culture. When you and I have common values, we automatically have common ground. Common ground is where we can respect one another and find enjoyment working together. Enjoyment creates an emotional draw that attracts people.
Wordcount: 391 Time to read: 2 minutes
by Larry Mandelberg | Dec 31, 2021 | Business, Business Growth, General, Leadership, Strategic Planning
Nobody knows which ideas will succeed until one does. Success stories are often written off as bad ideas that won’t work by the experts before they’ve been tried or tested. How do you answer the question “How will COVID affect my business?” Read this post and find out!
Wordcount: 578 Time to read: 3 minutes
by Larry Mandelberg | Nov 15, 2021 | Business, Business Growth, Decision-making, Leaders, Leadership, Management, Managers, Strategic Planning
Sometimes the cost of not planning is negligible. Sometimes it’s expensive. The ease and speed with which a lack of planning can become fatal is almost impossible to grasp or prepare for. When it happens, game over.
Wordcount: 668 Time to read: 3½ minutes
by Larry Mandelberg | Sep 2, 2021 | Business, Business Growth, Leadership, Management, Managers, Strategic Planning
There are big business tactics small businesses will never be able to use. That’s not true for one of the most powerful. Small businesses tend to let themselves be overwhelmed by the urgent, failing to anticipate, plan, and prepare for the inevitable changes they will face if they survive and succeed.
by Larry Mandelberg | Aug 3, 2021 | Business, Business Growth, Culture, Decision-making, General, Leaders, Leadership, Management, Managers, Strategic Planning
A business satisfied with its success that stops trying to improve screams “We’re patiently waiting to be overtaken.” and signals the competition to attack. Why would any business do that? Sadly, that’s what most do. When times are good, a business has the time, money, and resources to work on areas of weakness and look for ways to maintain its dominance. That’s when proactive changes should be made, not when times are tough and you have no choice. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.
Wordcount: 428, Time to read: 3 minutes