Tuesday, September 10, 2013

DELL WALK IN for Freshers/Exp as Associate in Hyderabad on 6th to 13th September 2013

DELL WALK IN for Freshers/Exp as Associate in Hyderabad on 6th to 13th September 2013

Company Name:  DELL Sonic WALL

Designation:  Client Technical Support Associatee

Experience: 0-2 years

Qualification:     Graduates

Location: Hyderabad / Secunderabad

Salary: As Per Industry

Job Details:

Candidate Should Be Any Graduate.

Candidate from Undergraduates (Not Pursuing graduation with a minimum 12 months of International Tech Support Voice Experience may apply).

Excellent Communication skills.

Work Experience ranging between 0 to 30 months.

Graduates freshers may apply.

Should be open to work in Night shifts.

Good Selling and Technical Skills.

Candidates with Customer Service background interested in Tech support can also apply.

Mandatory Documents:

Updated Resume

Photo Id

Apply Mode : Walk in

Walk in Details

Walk in Date: 2nd to 13th September 2013

Walk in Time: 12PM to 2PM

Dell Walkin Venues

Dell International Services India Pvt Ltd
Plot No-42
Hitec City Layout
Madhapur-500081
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Job Fair for Freshers/Exp on 14th to 15th September 2013

Job Fair for Freshers/Exp on 14th to 15th September 2013

Company Name: Chennai Multi Industrychennai job fair

Designation: Job Fair

Experience:  Freshers/Exp

Qualification: Check Details

Location:   Chennai

Salary: Best in Industry

Job  Details:

Walk-in for an interview with multiple copies of your CV

Apply Mode:  Walk In

Walk in Date:  14th and 15th September 2013

Venue:

CSI Mohanan Girls Higher Secondary School, No 196,

Near New College,

Peter’s Road, Royapetta,

Chennai, 600 014

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Tech Mahindra OFF CAMPUS for Freshers in Hyderabad on 12th September 2013

Tech Mahindra OFF CAMPUS for Freshers in Hyderabad on 12th September 2013

Company Name: Tech Mahindra

Designation : Network Support Engineer

Experience:  Freshers 2011, 2012, 2013

Qualification:  BE, B.Tech/Any Graduate

Location: Hyderabad

Salary : As Per Industry

Job Details:

    Any Graduates and Undergraduates(Non B.E\’s & B.Tech\’s) with proficiency     in  English Langauge & basic knowledge in     Networking is a must

    Confident and self motivation attitude

    Candidate should be flexible to work in 24*7 environment.

Apply Mode : Off Campus

Drive Date: 12th September 2013

Timings :  9.30 am

Drive Venue:

Nishita College Of Engineering & Technology
Lemoor(V), Kandukur(M), R.R Dist 501359
Near International Airport
Greater Hyderabad-501 359
Andhra Pradesh, India

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Your Nice Boss May Be Killing Your Career


Chris spent years working for a supportive, encouraging manager at a major technology company headquartered in Silicon Valley. In fact, his boss raved about him. His manager gave him top ratings in his performance evaluations, space to do his work, and had never been controlling. He was, according to Chris, terribly, unswervingly nice. Picture perfect boss, right? Wrong.

His manager had been in the company for 20 years. He had learned how to survive in the bureaucracy: don't make too many waves, don't cause problems. He played the political game well enough to still be there but not well enough to strengthen his reputation. He had slowly lost his political clout. As a result, his team had been winnowed away to a fraction of the size it used to be.

His own reputation bled over onto the members of his team. For Chris it had a powerful effect on his career: he had been passed up three times for a promotion he was repeatedly promised. It was not what his boss was doing that caused the problem. It was what his boss was not doing.

Over a twelve-month period I have gathered data from 1,000 managers about their experiences at over 100 companies including Apple, Cisco, HP, IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Novel, and Symantec. I wanted to understand the conditions under which people did the very best work of their careers. What I expected to find were examples of over managing, controlling, tyrannical managers. About half of the participants confirmed this assumption. The other half surprised me: what they described were managers who were nice but weak.

I once spent two days running a strategy session with just such an executive. He spoke with a soft, quiet voice. He never interrupted anyone when they were speaking. When he walked into the meeting he had a "nice" word for everyone. Every time the team became "positively frustrated" and ready to make the change necessary to get to the next level he would stand up and say sweetly, "Oh, I just wanted to remind you all of how far we have come." And after a few more sentences the spark of aspiration was gone from the room. He unintentionally signaled the status quo was plenty good enough. There was no need to try harder or change how things were going. He reminded me of what Jim Hacker (the fictional politician in the English cult classic "Yes, Minister") said to his bureaucratic colleague, "You really are a wet blanket, Humphrey, you just go around stirring up apathy."

Another executive I worked with had an almost voodoo ability to neutralize people's desire to take action. With an almost Jedi-like wave of the hand he seemed to say, "These are not the things you care about changing." People would be kicking and cussing before he walked into the room but a little later they would wonder what they had been frustrated about. That is a useful party trick to be sure but the result was career limiting for each member of his team. Everyone on the team was branded as average and in a reorganization the entire team were "let go."

These nice but somewhat absentee managers can continue to survive, unchecked for decades. At least a controlling boss who yells all the time gets noticed: they create acute pain and people complain. In contrast, the pain these nice "Neutralizers" produce is chronic. The pain is inflicted slowly, drip by drip. On any given day an employee can say, "Well, it's not so bad." They are, after all, nice. But the cumulative effect on your career can be dramatic.

This is a problem hidden in plain sight. The issue has been unintentionally camouflaged by leadership thinkers (I am guilty) who may have overemphasized overmanagement and underemphasized undermanagement. The majority of the leadership literature over the past 25 years has done this. But what happens if an undermanager reads an article, book or attends training of this kind? It may encourage them to continue in their hands-off, low control, absentee approach. They may say, "Yes, I don't like to smother my people or control them." They may speak about empowerment and enablement. All the while they allow their people's career prospect to decline slowly.

In the case of Chris, just naming the problem was liberating. Once he could see how toxic the situation was he took action. He met with his mentors. He visited with his connections. Within a few weeks he took a lateral move to get away from his "nice" manager. After another move a year later he is in a terrific position in a better company with far better prospects than he had before. Just developing a heightened awareness of the issue can be helpful. After all, we cannot solve a problem we do not see.
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A 90-Minute Plan for Personal Effectiveness

For nearly a decade now, I've begun my workdays by focusing for 90 minutes, uninterrupted, on the task I decide the night before is the most important one I'll face the following day. After 90 minutes, I take a break.

To make this possible, I turn off my email while I'm working, close all windows on my computer, and let the phone go to voicemail if it rings.

I typically get more work done during those 90 minutes, and feel more satisfied with my output, than I do for any comparable period of time the rest of the day. It can be tough on some days to fully focus for 90 minutes, but I always have a clear stopping time, which makes it easier.

I launched this practice because I long ago discovered that my energy, my will, and my capacity for intense focus diminish as the day wears on. Anything really challenging that I put off tends not to get done, and it's the most difficult work that tends to generate the greatest enduring value.

I first made this discovery while writing a book. At the time, I'd written three previous books. For each one, I'd dutifully sit down at my desk at 7 a.m., and I'd often stay there until 7 p.m.

Looking back, I probably spent more time avoiding writing than I did actually writing. Instead, I spent an inordinate amount of time and energy making lists, responding to email, answering the phone, and keeping my desk clean and my files incredibly well organized.

There were days I never got to writing at all. It was incredibly frustrating.

At the heart of making this work is to build highly precise, deliberate practices, done at specific times, so they eventually become automatic and don't require much expenditure of energy or self-discipline, akin to brushing your teeth at night. It's the crux of what I now do at my company, The Energy Project.

It was this approach that I applied to the book I was writing, and at other times to whatever I happen to be working on. The effect on my efficiency has been staggering. I wrote my fourth book in less than half the time I had invested in any of the three previous ones.

When I'm not working on a book, I choose the next day's work the night before because I don't want to squander energy thinking about what to do during the time I've set aside to actually do the work.

I define "important" as whatever it is I believe will add the most enduring the value if I get it done. More often than not, that means a challenge that is "important but not urgent," to use Steven Covey's language. These are precisely the activities we most often put off — in favor of those that are more urgent, and easier to accomplish, and provide more immediate gratification.

I start at a very specific time, because I discovered early on that when I didn't hold myself to an exact time, it became a license to procrastinate. "Oh wait," I'd tell myself, "I'm just going to answer this email," Before I knew it, I'd have answered a dozen emails, and a half dozen more had arrived, calling out for my attention.

Finding an excuse to avoid hard work isn't hard to do.

I work for 90 minutes because that's what the research suggests is the optimal human limit for focusing intensely on any given task. This "ultradian rhythm," the researcher Peretz Lavie and others have found, governs our energy levels (see page 51 for details).

Over the course of 90 minutes, especially when we're maximally focused, we move from a relatively high state of energy down into a physiological trough.

Many of us unwittingly train ourselves to ignore signals from our body that we need a rest — difficulty concentrating, physical restlessness, irritability. Instead, we find ways to override this need with caffeine, sugar, and our own stress hormones — adrenalin, noradrenalin, and cortisol — all of which provide short bursts of energy but leave us overaroused.

By intentionally aligning with my body's natural rhythms, I've learned to listen to its signals. When I notice them, it usually means I've hit the 90-minute mark. At that point, I take a break, even if I feel I'm on a roll, because I've learned that if I don't, I'll pay the price later in the day.

I don't get it right every day, but this single practice has been life-changing for me.

Try it for one week. Come back and report here on what you discover. I think you'll be amazed

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Four Lessons From the Best Bosses I Ever Had

My first boss at Bell Labs had a habit of yelling. While he was an equal-opportunity yeller, when he shouted at me in my first department meeting, I got up, told him when he wanted to talk, not yell, I'd be in my office and walked out. I was 20 years old, just out of undergrad, and sitting among a group of aghast Ph.D.'s . Perhaps this was not the best initial career move. But about 30 minutes later, he walked into my office and apologized. He never yelled at me again (though he did keep yelling at the rest of the team), and became one of three manager-mentors that shaped my career at Bell Labs and AT&T — and taught me to manage others and myself. I'll share one story from each boss and the lesson I learned from each.

That first boss, the reformed yeller, provided multiple opportunities for visibility up to the president of Bell Labs, coaching me all the way. He went out on a limb to make me the first person promoted to Member of Technical Staff (MTS) without a Ph.D. or M.S., and under the age of 25. He gave me the freedom to design my own role and the autonomy to accomplish my goals, only "interfering" to remove obstacles and create more visibility. When I was going to quit to move to Ohio and marry my husband, who had left Basic Research at Bell Labs to teach Physics at Oberlin College, he pulled strings with HR and his counterpart at AT&T for our project (and my next boss) so I wouldn't quit. These two men arranged my transfer to my new boss's organization, moved me to Oberlin, Ohio and flew me back and forth for nine years...just so I wouldn't quit.

Lesson: Let Your People Go. When you find great talent, do what you need to in order to encourage and support them. Treat them justly and do what's right for them and the organization over what's right for you personally. Give them opportunities to excel and succeed and air cover if they fail. Be willing to take "personal" risks for the right employee.

I knew my second boss already, having worked with him for a year or so with mutual respect and admiration. He fully supported my telecommuting, since it "proved" our project in action, and funded a home office with every device imaginable for 1988, including a laptop and cell phone. I commuted weekly to New Jersey and monthly to Europe and Asia. I designed my own job with my own set of outputs and outcomes — he provided the resources to make it happen. He taught me how to succeed at corporate politics without compromising my integrity and championed my work up the executive ladder. He orchestrated a "loan" of me to the president's office for a special project that was a significant career opportunity. And, when the project was done, he helped me choose from my available options: stay in the executive suite, go with the business I'd helped start as a result of the project, or return to my organization. I did not want to stay with the executives — there were no role models for me in the C-suite (which they interpreted as no women and I clarified as no humans). I wanted to go back to my boss and his wonderfully addictive leadership style, but he pushed me to join the management team running the new business.

Lesson: Light the Fire and Clear the Path. Guide your people's passion and get out of the way: the autonomy and freedom I was given to create and do my job exponentially increased my passion, excitement and success. My manager-mentors made sure my passions aligned with organizational direction, gave me some high-level boundaries, resources, and introductions to make it happen. They removed obstacles, showed me how to handle challenges, provided opportunities, and took the blame while giving me the credit.

The new business's management team consisted of many Labroids (Bell Labs folks), and my next boss also believed in autonomy, outcomes over outputs, customer-centricity, and developing his people. The experiences, opportunities, successes, failures, and learnings during that "start-up" time were amazing and we had a lot of fun creating a separate culture. While working for him, I had my first child. In addition to the very generous maternity leave benefits, his support and communication with the rest of the team in New Jersey made it possible for me to work from home, without travel, and still have significant impact on the business. For him, the fact I wasn't in New Jersey meant I had a politically unbiased perspective on the business's needs. He'd handle the politics; I'd handle getting the work done with my team. Unfortunately, AT&T was changing dramatically, and not positively. We all started leaving. But to this day, my friendship with my former boss remains strong.

Lesson: Remember, They're Human. Many companies treat their employees as employees — nicely and kindly, even generously — but not as humans. My manager-mentors made it clear that I mattered not just for what I could do, but also for who I was. It wasn't just about the generous maternity leave or the work-from-home flexibility, although I was grateful for both. Boss #2, for instance, required that I take two consecutive weeks of vacation to fully relax. My assistant took care of everything and virtually banned me from checking email, even though we would still do the New York Times crossword puzzle every day — an important ritual for us no matter where I was in the world. While I had "official" vacation days, no one ever kept tabs on them unless the number to be carried over was too large. It was important to all my bosses that I learn from their successes, mistakes and not share their regrets.

What else did I learn from three incredible manager-mentors? While there were many lessons, this has stood out for me over the past 30 years: Trust trumps everything. And everything flows from trust — learning, credibility, accountability, a sense of purpose and a mission that makes "work" bigger than oneself.

Yes, I've been extremely blessed and my circumstances were, and unfortunately still are, atypical. But they don't have to be. As you look at your organization, at your people, at your culture, please think about how you can apply just one of these lessons, perhaps even just one part of one lesson. The benefits last decades
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A Question That Can Change Your Life

For years I've exercised every day — doing weights, cardio, yoga — but despite my continuous effort, I haven't seen much change.

Until a few months ago.

Recently, my body has changed. My muscles are stronger, more defined, and I've lost five pounds along with a visible layer of fat. So what did I do differently?

Let's start with what I didn't do: Spend more time exercising. In fact, I've spent less. What I did change is how I use the time I spend working out.

Instead of doing the same old workout, day after day, I'm mixing it up with new routines. I'm focusing my effort more wisely — confusing my muscles with different exercises, adding balance challenges, power moves, and intervals.

The rapid results I achieved by changing my exercise routine made something very clear to me: We habitually squander time and effort on behaviors that do little to move us toward the outcomes we're seeking. Spending an hour on a treadmill watching TV had no visible impact on my fitness. But when I used that hour differently, I saw improvement.

It's not that we're lazy. We put effort into what we do. I ran on the treadmill every day. But, like my daily run, our efforts often don't translate into optimum results.

The basic principle is simple: We're already spending a certain amount of time doing things — in meetings, managing businesses, writing emails, making decisions. If we could just make a higher impact during that time, it's all upside with no cost.

So here's the question I'd like to propose you ask yourself throughout your day: What can I do, right now, that would be the most powerful use of this moment?

What can I say? What action can I take? What question can I ask? What issue can I bring up? What decision can I make that would have the greatest impact?

Asking these questions — and answering them honestly — is the path to choosing new actions that could bring better outcomes. The hard part is following through on the answers and taking the risks to reap the full benefits of each moment. That takes courage. But it's also what brings the payoff.

I was once sitting in a meeting with the CEO of a large bank and his head of HR. Right before the meeting, the CEO had told me that he had lost confidence in his HR chief after he had made a number of blunders without accepting any responsibility. "He really needs to go," the CEO told me.

Then, during the meeting, the head of HR asked the CEO for feedback. He's opened the door, I thought to myself. But the CEO said nothing. That led to more dysfunction as the head of HR stayed on, continuing to disappoint the CEO, but without getting straight feedback.

It's easy to judge the CEO. And he certainly should have been bolder. But how many of us miss similar opportunities out of fear or nervousness or even simply concern for hurting other people's feelings?

While the CEO's missed opportunity was a glaring omission with painful consequences, it is, unfortunately, not unusual.

There's some good reason for that: Sometimes the bold move can backfire. I know a similar situation to the one above, where a VP level person asked her employee for feedback, but when the employee answered honestly, he was shunned and treated poorly afterwards.

Rejection, failure, even ridicule — those are the risks of making the most powerful use of a moment. But in my experience, boldness, combined with skilled communication, almost always pays off because it moves the energy of a situation and creates new possibilities in otherwise old ruts.

Having the courage to take the kind of bold action that creates new opportunities is, possibly, the most critical skill a leader can have. It's why leadership development should involve experiences that hone emotional courage, and the communication abilities necessary to use it productively.

I recently saw a short video that perfectly illustrates the risk-reward payoff of courageously using a moment well. Billy Joel was speaking at Vanderbilt University when a young student, Michael Pollack, raised his hand. When Joel called on him, Michael asked if he could play the piano to accompany the musician for a song. A silence followed. Michael had taken a big risk just by asking and you could feel the tension and suspense in the room. After a pause, Joel said "OK" and the video of their astounding spontaneous collaboration has now been viewed over 2.5 million times.

How often have you been in a similar situation, at one time or another, wanting to say something or do something, yet letting the moment pass by? Next time you're in that situation, pay attention to it. Notice the feelings that come along with it. Observe the physical sensations in your body. Can you feel your heart beating? Can you connect with the conflicting urges to act and not to? Getting in touch with those feelings is the first step to acting in the face of them.

Woody Allen famously said that 80% of success is showing up. Maybe that's true. But, if it is, then I'd say the other 20% is the most important. Simply showing up and watching TV on a treadmill — that's not enough. Your greatest opportunity is to use your time in a way that will garner the most productive return. To take risks that will shake things up.

What can you do, right now, that would be the most powerful use of this moment?

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The Most Important Negotiation in Your Life

Life is a series of negotiations.

You negotiate all day, every day, from the time you wake up to the time you go to sleep.

Contract terms and conditions. Hiring, managing performance, and firing. Defining deadlines, scope, and deliverables. Collecting fees. Seeking alignment about business strategy. Enlisting stakeholders. Creating partnerships and joint ventures. Dissolving them. You make offers, counteroffers, and agreements to settle. You say yes. You say no. You stall for time.

Finally, lunch.

When you go home, the negotiations continue. Over buying a new car, switching carpool days, or how much screen time the kids are allowed. The stakes of negotiating at home can feel sky-high: which medical advice to follow; how much to spend or save; how long your aging parents can live at home; whether to stay together.

From the major to the mundane, negotiating is the way we get things done. One of my clients told me, "my toughest negotiations are with my dog."

If you're like most people, when you think about negotiation, you picture people talking to "the other side." Whether they're pitching to a customer in an office, brokering a peace deal at Camp David, or arguing over curfew at the kitchen table, negotiators are people trying to persuade other people of their point of view.

That's only half the story.

After nearly 20 years of teaching negotiation at Harvard Law School, and the same years spent advising and training thousands of executives, public sector leaders, consultants and lawyers from all over the world, I see things differently.

Actually, the most important negotiations we have — the ones that determine the quality of our lives and the impact of our actions — are the ones we have with ourselves. Learning to communicate well and to influence other people are essential skills in business. But even more fundamental to your success is learning to negotiate effectively with yourself.

Negotiating with yourself?

Yes. Better results, stronger relationships, and more of life's deeper rewards, all come from learning to negotiate with yourself.

At first this sounds strange. Can you talk to yourself without being crazy? Can you disagree with yourself? If you have an argument with yourself, who wins?

At the start of my leadership development programs, I ask people for examples of "negotiating with yourself." It's not hard to brainstorm a list once you think about it.
People usually come up with personal examples first: Should I eat the ice cream or stick to my diet? Make a scene with the garage for charging more than the estimate, or just pay the bill and move on? Should I raise that difficult topic today — or wait? Accept a "friend" request from my college nemesis, or have 25 years not removed the sting?

Soon, the list of topics grows more serious, and turns to work:

My plate is completely full, but my boss just asked me to start a new project. There's no particular glory in it. Do I say yes to please her? What about ever eating dinner with my family?

I want to approach my colleague who's back from bereavement leave, but then I tell myself it's none of my business.

My client is pushing me hard to do something questionable. Technically speaking, it's not against the written rules. On the other hand, it feels a bit unethical. Should I say no?

We're nearing our fundraising target, but we're not quite there. Our biggest donor said I could ask him for more money if we fell short, but I feel awkward going back to him again.

I suspect you're no stranger to this inner tug-of-war.

As you go about the ordinary business of every day, there are inner commentators competing for your attention. At times they speak nicely. But often their voices debate each other like hostile adversaries on talk radio.

I think of them as negotiating parties, what I call your "inner negotiators." Like actual individuals, these internal negotiators have a range of styles, motivations, and rules of engagement. They have their own interests and preferred outcomes. They also correlate with different regions in our brains.

Meet your inner negotiation team.

Leading mythologist Joseph Campbell described each of us as "a hero with a thousand faces." Mastering a thousand faces sounds a bit daunting. If you have all of these different sides of you, how can you even begin to get a hold on them, no less negotiate with them all successfully?

To help people develop in their leadership and in their lives, I honed in on a small set of those hundreds of faces. I call this group "The Big Four." Since I advise a lot of businesses, I sometimes describe the Big Four as a top team, occupying your internal executive suite. I also use more general names because their functions transcend professional titles.

The Big Four are:

    The Chief Executive Officer: your inner Dreamer
    The Chief Financial Officer: your inner Thinker
    The Vice-President of Human Resources: your inner Lover
    The Chief Operating Officer: your inner Warrior

These inner negotiators govern your capacity to dream about the future, to analyze and solve problems, to build relationships with people, and to take effective action. Each one enables you with its own skills, unique characteristics, and particular values about leading and living.

The Dreamer is led by intuition, and fuels your ability to innovate. Look at Jeff Bezos and the Washington Post. His Dreamer is strong, so he sees a world full of possibilities. Facing an industry others see as dying, Bezos senses opportunity to create something wonderful and entirely new. Or last week's remarkable commemoration of Dr. Martin Luther King, whose immortal words articulate the signature of the inner visionary, "I Have a Dream."

The Thinker is led by reason, and equips you to analyze and evaluate information. Larry Summers and Janet Yellen are final contenders to replace Ben Bernanke because they have strong inner Thinkers, respected for sound judgment on complex issues. Political baggage aside, they're first-rate economists who base monetary policy on hard data. The inner Thinker excels at challenges like managing interest rates and defining ways to control inflation.

The Lover is led by emotion, and knows how to manage relationships. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde recently appealed to U.S. policy makers to deploy the communication skills of the Lover. She wants them to explain plans to safeguard global markets in light of changing American economic policy. The Lover's ability to get communication right is essential now to avoid a downward spiral in reactive global markets.

The Warrior is led by willpower, and excels at taking action. In the work world, the inner Warrior steps forward to tell the hard truth, to take a stand for your values, and to roll up your sleeves to get things done. Think of Meg Whitman, Hewlett-Packard CEO. She concedes that HP has a long way to go. And yet, she says time and again, she's facing the challenges with a results-focus. As she wrote in a blog, "I don't want excuses. I want action." Whitman's determined to turn a once-great company around by taking aim at the Warrior's targets: improving execution and operations; making tough calls to control costs; and telling the hard truth to investors until HP is fully back on track.

Despite the temptation to ask yourself, "Am I a Thinker?" or "Am I a Warrior?", those aren't the right questions. You have all of these inner negotiators in you. The right questions are:

    How do the Big Four operate in me today?
    How do I tap more of their skills and inner wisdom in the future?
    How do I best balance them with each other, as four inner executives working as one team? In other words, how do I negotiate effectively with myself?

These are good questions whether you're managing a team or running a global organization.

At the end of the day, a company will find itself in trouble if it doesn't envision possibilities, can't formulate a nuanced perspective, fails to care for its people, or turns in lackluster performance. This is true for you, too.

The most important negotiation in your life is "getting to yes" with yourself. When you learn how to do that, you'll start winning at everything else.


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It Takes Purpose to Become a Billionaire

What do billionaires have in common? What is it that they do better than anyone else? Why do we admire them, or their companies' products and services, so much?

I've spent some time trying to identify common traits in the Forbes list of billionaires and other similar lists of the world's wealthiest. I'm particularly interested in finding patterns in the types of people whom I respect. It's less about all that dough they've accumulated than about better understanding how and why they made their fortunes.

It turns out there are many ways to make a billion dollars: real estate, investing, gaming and entertainment, retail, technology, and good old-fashioned inheritance. But the most interesting (and most respected) businesses and personalities are also the ones with the strongest and most authentic purposes behind them. My business partner, Mats Lederhausen, was one of the first advocates I knew of purpose-driven business and entrepreneurship. I credit Mats with helping me understand that purpose is neither something soft nor something overly lofty. Instead, purpose is the bigger why of a business. All of us understand the what of any successful business, but what about the why?

While billionaires and their companies are bucket companies by industry (i.e. the what of the company), I believe that there are three categories of purpose that are interesting to observe, and consider which one dominates your company's mission. Here they are:

1. Making the world more beautiful.
2. Making the world more fun.
3. Making the world more efficient and smart.


1. Making the world more beautiful. These are the people who make us look, eat, and live more beautifully. It is a broad definition of outer and inner beauty. The best are able to make us look and feel good. The beauty category of billionaires includes the larger-than-life fashion figures of Ralph Lauren, Bernard Arnault (of LVMH), and recently minted billionaire Tory Burch. It is actually quite amazing to see how many of the world's richest come from the fashion, retail, and design worlds. And then there are those who aren't explicitly in the design, style, or beauty business but nonetheless identify strongly with these themes. Apple, of course, is the poster child for this ethos, as it puts design first for everything from its software to the industrial engineering of products. For Apple, it is not just design that matters — what's paramount is using design to connect to the user.

Beyond beauty sensed with our sight and touch, there are the founders in this category who have focused on our inner beauty and health. Indeed, there are people like Hamdi Ulukaya (the Turkish founder of Chobani Greek Yogurt) or the founders of a variety of biotech and pharmaceutical firms who have achieved this through focusing on the purpose of healthier ways for us to eat and live.


2. Making the world more fun. One name that springs immediately to mind is Richard Branson. His mission and purpose center around fun and play. Disney is another icon that has redefined the entertainment experience. But perhaps my personal favorite of a billionaire founder who has spread his creative fun around the world is Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberté. Making the world more fun is noble and creates greater happiness for us all. The billionaire founders who get this and who have succeeded in doing so help to put more smiles, more laughter and yes, more fun into a world that is too often dull and mundane. Fun is a good business model -- and it does not need to be a billion-dollar enterprise. It is perhaps because it is relatively easy to think of small ways to create fun that it is even more impressive when people such as these are able to scale fun on a massive level.


3. Making the world smarter, more efficient, and more relevant. There are more "knowledge workers" today than ever before. In this world, we have all become familiar with the technology and Internet moguls (e.g. Larry Ellison, Bill Gates, Sergey Brin, and Larry Page) who have helped to make us smarter, faster and more efficient in our daily lives. Doing work via shared Google Docs versus a word processor versus a typewriter — yes, we've come a long way. The connected social economy and its companies like Facebook and LinkedIn are all about how we can try to do more, faster. That is, these companies allow us to have more communication moments in ever-shorter time segments. And there are also information and media moguls, like Mike Bloomberg or the Thomson family behind Thomson Reuters, who dominate financial and legal information, respectively, and are viewed as being mission critical to professionals in those fields. As these firms enable more, faster, and smarter throughput of information, a challenge will be to maintain relevancy. As more and more information is thrown at us, we are now ironically often seeking less and less of it. And this is perhaps what the next great wave of tech and info billionaires will address — as curators whose purpose will be to find greater meaning, context, and relevancy in this mass information world.

So, while there are many ways to make money, there tend to be some common patterns of higher purpose. The three purposes illustrated here help explain why and how some of the world's wealthiest have have gotten so rich, and made our lives richer as well. These three purpose categories likely blur at times, and certainly co-exist in terms of the culture and value propositions of the truly great companies. But the take-home lesson is to ask yourself which of these purposes you are willing to strive to become the absolute best at. Companies and founders that make a singular and unwavering commitment to excel along any of these three purpose dimensions not only have the chance to make our lives better, but also to leave an imprint on our culture, on how we view and experience this world. That, and they might just end up as billionaires.

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15 More Unethical And Illegal Ways That People Get Ahead In Life

How To Find The Right Person For The JobHow To Find The Right Person For The Job

Why Every Office Should Try 'No Meeting Wednesdays'Why Every Office Should Try 'No Meeting Wednesdays'

The Advice That Changed One Entrepreneur's Life: 'Being Comfortable Is The Enemy'The Advice That Changed One Entrepreneur's

Life: 'Being Comfortable Is The Enemy'

Whether it's because they're of dubious moral fiber or simply want to know how to defend themselves or their business, people find the sneaky and unethical ways people save money and get ahead fascinating.

We've pulled together a new thread of dirty tricks and illegal cheats from Reddit and elsewhere.

These hacks are uniformly unethical. Some veer into fraud. They should be regarded as informational and for entertainment purposes rather than as actual suggestions. You shouldn't do them. If you do do them, you are a bad person.


"At my summer theater where everyone is brought in from various parts of the nation and lives together for the season, the length of employment is roughly 68 days. Walmart's electronic return policy is 90 days. So, the carpenters would get a huge widescreen hi-def, whatever, lovingly store every scrap of packaging and the receipt, and take it back as soon as the season was over. It was actually pretty freaking smart."


"If you want to cancel your cellphone contract without paying a fee, pull up the provider's service map. Find a huge hole in the map, like a desert out west. Look for a town name in that map. Tell them you're moving to Putzachateeawaka, Arizona and you want to cancel because they don't provide service there. Boom.


"Putzachateeawaka" is not a real place, but this is a remote desert that probably doesn't have good cell coverage.


"This one should be kept a secret but whatever. Next time you're at your dentist or any place that has a layout of various magazines, take a picture of the barcode, address, and name. When you get home that's all the information you'll need log into the online version of the magazine. Either that or set it up on your iPad and enjoy free versions of magazines forever."

Waiting room
Building a startup or website? There are lots of underhanded ways to boost traffic, via OMGPOP founder Dan Porter:

    Drive traffic, either directly or indirectly, with pornography. "It's cheap to buy and can generate a lot of click," Porter writes
    Traffic robots and meta-refresh can help artificially boost stats as well.

business guy on computer

"I've been canceling and switching the name on my cable bill now for 10 years between myself and my wife so I always get the new customers rate."


"I know a married couple who started a "food blog" basically so they can write off their entire grocery bill."

It's surprisingly easy to take advantage of people's fear and insecurity with the "fear then relief" technique. Basically, you make someone think they're in serious danger of losing their livelihood, or anything else likely to provoke fear. Then you relent, and ask for something less. They're much, much more likely to comply

An example would be a manager making an employee think that their job's in danger, leaving them to stew for a few hours or a day, then relenting and letting them know they're safe. That's when they ask for them to work overtime.

undercover boss boston market

"I learned that you can get into almost any special event by wearing a chef coat. Even just carrying one and walking like you know where you're going will work every time. Most people don't want to look stupid by asking you who you are."

Chef butter
An unethical business tactic that isn't technically illegal, via Quora user Antone Johnson:

"(Tie) up a key competitor or strategic partner in extensive negotiations (merger, joint venture, etc.) when you aren't seriously considering actually doing the deal and are just trying to learn as much as possible about their business -- or use them as a competing bidder to drive up the price for the other company you're serious about."

Negotiations board room

"My go to missing work call was never "I'm sick", it was "Family problems". They never questioned it, it's vague enough and embarrassing enough that nobody ever asks."

bed sheets sleeping
Lots of people have figured out how to look busy and satisfy their bosses without doing all that much work. A few tips to accomplish this.

    Respond extremely rapidly to emails. It doesn't take that much effort, and makes you look on top of things
    Prioritize visible tasks for the people that can help your career over anything else, regardless of import or job function
    Always have a long list of things you're working on so you aren't assigned more
    Pad your estimates of how long things will take by 25%, and deliver ahead of schedule, but use this sparingly
    Make a "decoy screen"

working, busy, focused, tumblr,

"My friend from high school works at the recycling center for his college. About a thousand books get thrown away each semester because the school won't buy them back. Amazon definitely buys them though. He gets about a $1000 bonus every semester.."

recycled garbage trash

"When career hunting, flagging Craigslist posts as spam after applying, or taking down flyers for a position (like at a college campus). cuts down on the competition."

"Lots of government bodies/agencies buy computers with the OS pre-bundled and pre-installed (Windows Vista, 7, 8) which they then overwrite with XP because that's what the IT department wants. If you see a relatively new computer running XP, check the side of it for the license sticker. More likely than not it will be a perfectly valid windows 7/8 pro license key not being used and never going to be used. I've picked up over 50 this way. Anytime I need to upgrade a friend's PC, I use one. No point in them going to waste."

Cubicle farm

"I always sleep in the Islamic prayer rooms when I have a red-eye layover somewhere...they're fairly spacious, absolutely quiet, and clean as can be. There is plenty of room to lay down on the carpet, and security never comes in to bother you."
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Why Talented People Underperform And How To Stop It

One of the most frustrating things for a manager or small-business owner is to see a smart, talented employee underperforming.

Often, this happens because people faced with tough challenges tend to revert to a primitive mindset, which bestselling author Christine Comaford calls "the critter state." They react to problems by fighting, running, or freezing, rather than intelligently responding.

They become scared or uncertain and use just a fraction of their brains and abilities as they regress to the low-risk, uncreative behavior they see as "safe."

Comaford, author of the recently released book "Smart Tribes," has made a career using neuroscience to help people and businesses change such self-destructive behavior.

She shared a few essential tips from the latest neuroscience research and her own years of working with companies on how to motivate employees to work harder, smarter, and with greater purpose.

Ask questions instead of making statements.

"Most leaders give orders all of the time, and then they complain that they have a culture of order-takers," Comaford says. "Well, they created that."

When leaders are asked a question, their impulse is to give an immediate answer. That trains employees to constantly ask questions instead of trying to solve problems and find solutions.

Instead of just answering a question, she suggests asking employees what they would try, who could be looped in, and what could go right or wrong. That puts their brains into problem-solving mode rather than a state in which they're more inclined to freeze or fight back, or ignore the problem entirely.

Be extremely clear. Don't leave people to "figure it out."

It's extremely easy to think that employees know everything that you know, and that they can figure out what you want. Often, that's not the case. Uncertainty leads people to waste time, get nervous, and revert to that critter state, says Comaford.

The more detail you put into a request, the better. Say exactly what you want - in which format, on what terms, and by when - instead of being vague.

Make accountability central to your culture.

"The problem with accountability is two-fold," Comaford says. Oftentimes, businesses don't have clear structures. People may not know exactly what they're accountable for or the consequences of underperforming.

There's nothing more important in business than having employees do what they say they're going to do. When someone doesn't follow through, always find out why, Comaford advises.

The first time they drop the ball, if there's no personal issue, figure out additional structure to make sure it doesn't happen again. In practice, this may mean additional check-ins or status reports at specific times every week. If it happens a second time, ask if you've put too much on their plate, and work to reduce the number of low-value tasks they spend time on, Comaford suggests.

Consequences don't need to be adversarial, but they do need to be there if you want behavior to change.

Use these three phrases to knock employees out of a critter state.

There are three things you can say to an employee that can help you influence them in the right direction.

The first: "What if?" Says Comaford, "When we preface an idea or a suggestion with 'what if,' we remove ego, and we reduce emotion." Rather than stating a position, invite people to engage by throwing a few ideas out there and letting them respond to and build on them.

Using "what if" is like "a leader throwing a beach ball into the middle of a concert. The people will bounce the beach ball around and make it their own," Comaford says. "We're throwing that beach ball out there and enabling people to brainstorm more easily."

The second phrase? "I need your help." That invites an employee to temporarily swap roles with their boss, to think like a leader, and step up, often to a level they may not have thought themselves capable of.

The last one is, "Would it be helpful if ..." Success breeds bigger expectations, which can be terrifying for people. By taking the focus away from an intimidating task and focusing on solutions, people start to move forward. 
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Why You Need A Sponsor — Not A Mentor — To Fast-Track Your Career

The One Thing You Need To Know To Be A Top Performer

7 Shocking Discoveries From Harvard Business School’s Attempt To Improve Gender Equality
The Surprisingly Simple Mix Of Qualities That Make People Influential

If you thought finding and cultivating a mentor with clout would be your key to career success, you were dead wrong.

Mentors may offer an open door and helpful guidance, but little more. To win, you need a sponsor, says Sylvia Ann Hewlett, CEO of think tank The Center for Talent Innovation (CTI) and author of just released “Forget a Mentor, Find a Sponsor: The New Way to Fast-Track Your Career.”

“A mentor gives you friendly advice,” says Hewlett. “A sponsor is senior in your organization or world and has the power to get you that next job. It’s not about empathy.”

CTI has tracked the “sponsor effect” since 2010 in four U.S.-based and global studies that clearly show that sponsorship — not mentorship — is how power is transferred in the workplace. When it comes to getting ahead you need more than the counsel of a supporter; you need someone to advocate for you when you’re not in the room. That takes someone who believes in you and has the juice to make it happen. 

Sponsors have three attributes, Hewlett says: They believe in your potential and are prepared to take a bet on you; they have a voice at the table and are willing to be your champion; and they provide you the cover you need to take the risks necessary to succeed. While mentors listen, sponsors act — by telling you what you need to know, clearing obstacles from your path, and making your success their business, she says.

In the corporate world, a sponsor might be your boss or your boss’ boss. For an entrepreneur, sponsorship often comes in the form of a venture capitalist or an influencer who helps you make connections and raise money.

Sponsorship is not a gift, says Hewlett. You can’t just walk up to someone and ask, “Will you be my sponsor?” Instead, it is earned. “They have to truly believe in your ability,” she says. “If I go to bat for a young talent, I have to be sure she’s going to come through. You’re very much aligning reputations.”

So how do you impress a potential sponsor? Hewlett outlines the three most important tactics:

Exceed expectations, and make your performance known.

You’ve got to come through on an obvious front: stellar performance. Hit your numbers, meet deadlines, and go above and beyond, Hewlett says. “Nothing makes you easier to sponsor than outstanding results.” 

You’ve also got to make sure your sponsor knows about your success. Stay on top of your numbers, and keep your sponsor looped in. If they can easily point to your past successes, they’ll be better equipped to push for you to get a big assignment or promotion. 

Demonstrate that you are trustworthy and loyal.

“A leader wants you to make them look good,” says Hewlett. By advocating for you, sponsors are putting their own reputations on the line, so you have to be willing to help them succeed, too. According to her research, managers value a protégé who’s loyal more than they value someone who’s collaborative, visionary, or even highly productive.

Demonstrate that you have your sponsor’s back by sharing valuable information, offering your assistance, giving honest feedback in private, and aligning yourself with them and their viewpoints in public. “Star performers are very likely to attract sponsors, and loyal performers are very likely to keep them,” Hewlett says.

Bring something special to the table.

Identify and develop your best, most unique skill, and deploy it to make yourself indispensable, advises Hewlett. Ideally, this skill will not only set you apart from your peers but will also be something your sponsor lacks. Then it is additive to their own skillset, she says. The skill may be that you have such emotional intelligence that you can pull a team together in a way your sponsor can’t. It could also be as simple as having tech savvy or knowing a foreign language. 

Pat Fili-Krushel, the chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, told Hewlett that whenever she starts a new job and there’s a senior leader who she wants on her side, she figures out what they need to accomplish most urgently and then delivers it to them. Who wouldn’t be pleased?

Despite that for decades mentorship has been the white knight of career success, it hasn’t proven effective, says Hewlett. Research by women’s advocacy group Catalyst found that women are mentored more than men, but men receive 15% more promotions. Meanwhile, research by CTI finds that one in four white men in the middle ranks of workplaces have sponsorship, but only one in eight women and just one in 20 minorities have them.

One of the top reasons women and minorities struggle with securing sponsors is the level of comfort and trust, says Hewlett. Particularly, sexual tension or its reputation-damning outward appearance, which she calls “the 800-pound gorilla” in the room, can keep senior men from helping women, lest their attention seem inappropriate. 

“It’s a trip wire,” Hewlett says, “but it can be handled well.” Women can signal to senior men that they are not a threat and to the world that it is a strictly professional relationship with their attire and the way they present themselves, by openly discussing their rich personal lives, and meeting the sponsor in public view, such as having breakfast in the cafeteria or coffee in a common area. 

As the evidence for sponsorship’s effectiveness builds, companies are paying attention. Several corporations, including American Express, Cisco, and Deloitte, have launched programs that help senior leaders and high-potential employees find each other. CTI’s research shows these programs are seeing some initial success.

Ultimately, hard work isn’t enough, says Hewlett. You need others to recognize your potential and help you up, and that means having powerful sponsors providing a boost



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HR Executive at Chennai

HR Executive

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Job Details: HR Executive recruitment at BeWell Hospitals,

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Invites Experienced Candidates for the post: HR Executive

Email: hr@bewellhospitals.com

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CA - Chennai

 Experienced Candidates for the post: Chartered Accountant

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