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Saturday, January 31, 2009

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

Call Center Intake Representative at Match Play LLC (Chicago, Illinois)

Posted: 31 Jan 2009 10:31 AM CST

POSITION TITLE: Call Center Intake Representative TO APPLY: Please email your resume and references to Pamela Kieffer, MatchPlay LLC at kiefferpm@aol.com GENERAL PURPOSE: The Intake Represen...

Friday, January 30, 2009

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

VP/Director Netowrk Build out--Telecom at Managed Services Provider (Denver, Colorado)

Posted: 30 Jan 2009 06:30 PM CST

Seeking a talented VP/Director with extensive telecommunications network build out and expansion expertise to support the company's continued growth. In this role the ideal candidate will negotiate...

Thursday, January 29, 2009

How the Best Leaders Build Trust

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Almost everywhere we turn, trust is on the decline. Trust in our culture at large, in our institutions, and in our companies is significantly lower than a generation ago. Research shows that only 49% of employees trust senior management, and only 28% believe CEOs are a credible source of information. Consider the loss of trust and confidence in the financial markets today. Indeed, "trust makes the world go ‘round," and right now we're experiencing a crisis of trust. This crisis compels us to ask three questions. First, is there a measurable cost to low trust? Second, is there a tangible benefit to high trust? Third, how can the best leaders build trust in and within their organizations to reap the benefits of high trust? Most people don't know how to think about the organizational and societal consequences of low trust because they don't know how to quantify or measure the costs of such a so-called "soft" factor as trust. For many, trust is intangible, ethereal, unquantifiable. If it remains that way, then people don't know how to get their arms around it or how to improve it. But the fact is, the costs of low trust are very real, they are quantifiable, and they are staggering. In 2004, one estimate put the cost of complying with federal rules and regulations alone in the United States -- put in place essentially due to lack of trust -- at $1.1 trillion, which is more than 10% of the gross domestic product. A recent study conducted by the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners estimated that the average American company lost 6% of its annual revenue to some sort of fraudulent activity. Research shows similar effects for the other disguised low-trust taxes as well. Think about it this way: When trust is low, in a company or in a relationship, it places a hidden "tax" on every transaction: every communication, every interaction, every strategy, every decision is taxed, bringing speed down and sending costs up. My experience is that significant distrust doubles the cost of doing business and triples the time it takes to get things done. By contrast, individuals and organizations that have earned and operate with high trust experience the opposite of a tax -- a "dividend" that is like a performance multiplier, enabling them to succeed in their communications, interactions, and decisions, and to move with incredible speed. A recent Watson Wyatt study showed that high trust companies outperform low trust companies by nearly 300%! I contend that the ability to establish, grow, extend, and (where needed) restore trust among stakeholders is the critical competency of leadership needed today. It is needed more than any other competency. Engendering trust is, in fact, a competency that can be learned, applied, and understood. It is something that you can get good at, something you can measure and improve, something for which you can "move the needle." You cannot be an effective leader without trust. As Warren Bennis put it, "Leadership without mutual trust is a contradiction in terms." <b>How do the best leaders build trust?</b> The first job of any leader is to inspire trust. Trust is confidence born of two dimensions: character and competence. Character includes your integrity, motive, and intent with people. Competence includes your capabilities, skills, results, and track record. Both dimensions are vital. With the increasing focus on ethics in our society, the character side of trust is fast becoming the price of entry in the new global economy. However, the differentiating and often ignored side of trust -- competence -- is equally essential. You might think a person is sincere, even honest, but you won't trust that person fully if he or she doesn't get results. And the opposite is true. A person might have great skills and talents and a good track record, but if he or she is not honest, you're not going to trust that person either. The best leaders begin by framing trust in economic terms for their companies. When an organization recognizes that it has low trust, huge economic consequences can be expected. Everything will take longer and everything will cost more because of the steps organizations will need to take to compensate for their lack of trust. These costs can be quantified and, when they are, suddenly leaders recognize how low trust is not merely a social issue, but that it is an economic matter. The dividends of high trust can be similarly quantified, enabling leaders to make a compelling business case for trust. The best leaders then focus on making the creation of trust an explicit objective. It must become like any other goal that is focused on, measured, and improved. It must be communicated that trust matters to management and leadership. It must be expressed that it is the right thing to do and it is the economic thing to do. One of the best ways to do this is to make an initial baseline measurement of organizational trust and then to track improvements over time. The true transformation starts with building credibility at the personal level. The foundation of trust is your own credibility, and it can be a real differentiator for any leader. A person's reputation is a direct reflection of their credibility, and it precedes them in any interactions or negotiations they might have. When a leader's credibility and reputation are high, it enables them to establish trust fast -- speed goes up, cost goes down. There are 4 Cores of Credibility, and it's about all 4 Cores working in tandem—Integrity, Intent, Capabilities, and Results. Part of building trust is understanding -- clarifying -- what the organization wants and what you can offer them. Be the one that does that best. Then add to your credibility the kind of behavior that builds trust. (see the 13 high trust behaviors below). Next, take it beyond just you as the leader and extend it to your entire organization. The combination of that type of credibility and behavior and organizational alignment results in a culture of high trust. Consider the example of Warren Buffett -- CEO of Berkshire Hathaway (and generally considered one of the most trusted leaders in the world) -- who completed a major acquisition of McLane Distribution (a $23 billion company) from Wal-Mart. As public companies, both Berkshire Hathaway and Wal-Mart are subject to all kinds of market and regulatory scrutiny. Typically, a merger of this size would take several months to complete and cost several million dollars to pay for accountants, auditors, and attorneys to verify and validate all kinds of information. But in this instance, because both parties operated with high trust, the deal was made with one two-hour meeting and a handshake. In less than a month, it was completed. High trust, high speed, low cost. <b>13 Behaviors of High-Trust Leaders Worldwide</b> I approach this strategy primarily as a practitioner, both in my own experience and in my extensive work with other organizations. Throughout this learning process, have identified 13 common behaviors of trusted leaders around the world that build -- and allow you to maintain -- trust. When you adopt these ways of behaving, it's like making deposits into a "trust account" of another party. 1. Talk Straight 2. Demonstrate Respect 3. Create Transparency 4. Right Wrongs 5. Show Loyalty 6. Deliver Results 7. Get Better 8. Confront Reality 9. Clarify Expectation 10. Practice Accountability 11. Listen First 12. Keep Commitments 13. Extend Trust Remember that the 13 Behaviors always need to be balanced by each other (e.g., Talk Straight needs to be balanced by Demonstrate Respect) and that any behavior pushed to the extreme can become a weakness. Depending on your roles and responsibilities, you may have more or less influence on others. However, you can always have extraordinary influence on your starting points: Self-Trust (the confidence you have in yourself -- in your ability to set and achieve goals, to keep commitments, to walk your talk, and also with your ability to inspire trust in others) and Relationship Trust (how to establish and increase the trust accounts we have with others). The job of a leader is to go first, to extend trust first. Not a blind trust without expectations and accountability, but rather a "smart trust" with clear expectations and strong accountability built into the process. The best leaders always lead out with a decided propensity to trust, as opposed to a propensity not to trust. As Craig Weatherup, former CEO of PepsiCo said, "Trust cannot become a performance multiplier unless the leader is prepared to go first." The best leaders recognize that trust impacts us 24/7, 365 days a year. It undergirds and affects the quality of every relationship, every communication, every work project, every business venture, every effort in which we are engaged. It changes the quality of every present moment and alters the trajectory and outcome of every future moment of our lives -- both personally and professionally. I am convinced that in every situation, nothing is as fast as the speed of trust. Copyright © 2009 Stephen M. R. Covey author of The Speed of Trust: The One Thing That Changes Everything <b>Author Bio</b> <b>Stephen M. R. Covey</b> is the author of The Speed of Trust: The One Thing That Changes Everything and keynote speaker at Linkage's Eleventh Annual Best of Organization Development Summit in Chicago, IL, May 12-14, 2009 - the world-renowned meeting for OD practitioners, line leaders, as well as HR generalists and executives. The Summit will provide best-in-class tools, case studies, techniques, and skills to address the needs of practitioners at every level. Register by March 13th and SAVE $200! Simply mention Priority Code ODC09-XX. For more information or to register call 781-402-5555 or visit http://www.linkageinc.com/offerings/summitsandinstitutes/organizationaldevelopment/Pages/Overview.aspx

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

Patrol Officer at Heartland Private Services, Inc. (Dallas, Texas)

Posted: 28 Jan 2009 01:49 PM CST

Heartland Private Services, Inc. is currently hiring commissioned security officers. Qualified applicants must have a valid commission card, or have recently completed Level III training. Our patr...

Back to Basics: Creating Value and Solidifying Your Edge

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For too many years, complexity and cleverness were used to seemingly create value out of thin air. Risky no-doc, no-money-down loans were sliced and diced, wrapped and repackaged to emerge as safe triple-A investments and enable minimum wage earners to buy half-million-dollar homes. The Detroit 3 auto manufacturers sold the cars that few wanted by giving them away with no interest loans and huge rebates. For anyone who asked for an explanation of his uncannily consistent returns, Bernie Madoff and the feeder funds that resold his product protested that the strategy too complex to explain. Retailers grew by incessantly adding new locations, and tapped into consumers’ bottomless home equity lines, car loans, and new credit cards, with little thought for how or when bills would be paid. Now that cheap credit has dried up for everyone, complexity and cleverness will no longer carry the day. Businesses can only succeed by returning to fundamentals and delivering real, basic value to customers. Yet, delivering value won’t be enough, with competition more brutal than ever; customers’ budgets have shrunk and every firm is fighting for survival. To do more than scrape by, you have to establish an edge that differentiates you and your offerings from your rivals’. This challenge, never easy in our competitive world, can seem especially overwhelming now when most company’s budgets have been slashed, and fewer resources are available with which to build your edge. Fortunately, a “back to basics” approach can simplify the challenge and focus your efforts, by adapting the techniques that professional investors (mutual fund managers, institutional shareholder and equity analysts) have developed over the years when analyzing companies. With portfolios typically holding stakes in 100+ companies, professional investors have had to learn to get at the heart of what drives businesses quickly. With real money at stake, investors also have a lot riding on being right. <i>The solution</i> Fundamental professional investors decide where to invest money by identifying each business’s “value edge” in three to five bullet points that cover both the value that you create for customers as well as what differentiates your offering from your competitors, and from alternate solutions (including doing nothing). Though boiling your business down to a few points may seem overly simplistic, it is the perfect antidote to the complexity for our credit-crunch hangover. It’s easy and cheap to do – no legions of consultants are required – and it provides an invaluable touchstone for the tough decisions required in our resource-constrained times. Consider how the management of McDonald’s transformed the company over the last five years, and developed into a business that is thriving even in these challenging times. In 2002, McDonald’s management faced its own crisis as its strategy of growing by adding additional stores no longer worked. Current stores were seeing same-store sales declines as quality fell and customers sought out new dining options. Management responded with a “grand solution” to re-engineer and speed up the ordering process by installing expensive new technology that would separate order-taking from order fulfillment. It didn’t work. In 2003, new management, led by Jim Cantalupo and continued by Jim Skinner, took over, changed course and refocused on the food, introducing salads, premium coffee, and new breakfast sandwiches. This solution not only worked; it has provided a foundation for McDonald’s to continue to grow. A look at McDonald’s value edge shows why the complex solution didn’t work and the back-to-basics one did. The three reasons why people eat at McDonald’s and that separate it from other restaurants are: Inexpensive, tasty food, with a few specialties available only at this restaurant Consistency and convenience – you know what you’re going to get anywhere in the world, including quick service Friendly environment and image, particularly for children At its most basic, McDonald’s sells food, and it has succeeded in many ways because of its distinctive, branded food, e.g. the Big Mac, the Egg McMuffin, Chicken McNuggets. No matter how fast the service, the company is going to fail if customers don’t want its food. Of course, McDonald’s had always maintained test kitchens to come up with new products, including a prior salad attempt, the Salad Shaker. But products like Salad Shakers didn’t work, because they were aimed at improving the speed of delivery rather than creating value with the food. When the new leadership came in, they reenergized the salad effort and brought in Newman’s Own salad dressing to distinguish their salads from the competition. Borrowing someone else’s brand and value edge was a quick way to distinguish their effort, and allowed some room to work on building their own products. The edge part of value edge explains why prior management’s focus on speed didn’t work, even though speed of service is an expected part of the value of McDonald’s offering. Improving the speed of food delivery offered no edge. No competitor had meaningfully faster service than McDonald’s and there was no evidence that customers valued faster service. Instead, customers were clamoring for cleaner environments, which the new management addressed by reinvigorating their mystery shopper program and imposing sanctions for those who didn’t meet standards, a decidedly low-tech, basic way to improve the service that customers really valued. <i>How to establish your value edge</i> To establish your value edge and create a touchstone for your decisions on where to focus your resources is inexpensive, but it requires a two-step process. First, write down the three to five elements that your business, department or unit offers to customers and what distinguishes them from other options. Make the points as simple as possible; full sentences aren’t needed. Keeping it brief is a crucial part of the discipline. One of the perils of operating or managing a business is how easy it is to become mired in the details and the complexity. The goal here is to establish the foundation of your business and what you offer clients; once you have a solid foundation, you can build the details from there. Second and crucially, you have to test this foundation. You have to obtain feedback to see how solid and differentiated it is. Discuss your bullet points with employees, superiors, trusted customers and advisors. Solicit feedback on whether they agree with what you’ve identified as your operation’s value and how differentiated it is. An even more rigorous test is to ask a trusted advisor or customer to show the bullet points, without any identification, to knowledgeable third parties to see if they can identify your business from your three points alone. (Another option is to post your three to five points on moneymakersbook.com/valueedge to see if our community can identify your business.) Use this feedback to refine your edge. Revisit and refine your edge periodically. In the meantime, you have a powerful tool to guide your business through tough times. Copyright © 2009 Anne-Marie Fink Author Anne-Marie Fink is the author of The Moneymakers: How Extraordinary Managers Win in a World Turned Upside Down (Crown Business; January 27, 2009). For more information, please visit http://www.moneymakersbook.com/.

AMD Cuts 900 Additional Jobs

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written by Dylan McGrath, courtesy of EE Times

Samsung Electronics Restructures, Shifts Execs

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written by Michele Masterson, courtesy of ChannelWeb

Seagate Cuts Jobs, Slashes Executive Salaries

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written by Antone Gonsalves, courtesy of InformationWeek

Motorola To Cut 4,000 Jobs

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written by Marin Perez, courtesy of InformationWeek

FormFactor To Cut Workforce By 22%

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written by Dylan McGrath, courtesy of EE Times

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

You've Already Faced Your Career Fears

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Remember when you said to yourself that if you ever lost your job, you wouldn't know what to do? Well guess what, the worst has happened for many of you, and you are managing. Yes, your future is unknown, and a bit scary, but you have learned that if you can accept your situation and deal with it, you can handle anything that comes your way. Since what you feared has occurred, there is nothing left to fear anymore. All those onversations you had with yourself when you were working about wanting to find a career you would love can now be fulfilled. Yes, you may be wondering how you can pay the bills if you pursue the career you've always wanted, but you might as explore your options. What else is there to do? So How Can You Make Unemployment The Best Thing That Ever Happened To You? 1. Realize That You Are More That Your Career What we do for a living gives us the ability to find out who we are. Through our careers we may discover our talents and our gifts. We can find our strengths and identify our weaknesses. We learn to interact with people, and discover how to motivate and inspire them to be their best. We also make money that allows us to create a life filled with comfort and beauty. This is the good news. The bad news is we spend so much time at work learning these things that we might allow our careers to define who we are. How is your love life? Your friendships? I bet they are in better shape now than when you were working. I am not telling you to stay unemployed forever. I am saying that you should realize that there are other pieces and people in your life that count too. 2. Realize That On The Other Side Is Inspiration Right now is the hardest part. You are working hard and not getting results. And, you are a person who is used to seeing results. One the other side of discouragement and frustration is inspiration. So, how do you get inspired? You put your disappointments behind you because you realize how much they are holding you back. You write down your vision on a piece of paper, and you look at it every day. Then, you put a plan in place to get it. And, you don't ever give up. 3. Realize That It Was Time For A Change Anyway How much time did you spend thinking about making a change in your career before you were let go? Months? Years? This is your opportunity to go after what you want. I know it's hard because the future is unknown and you do not know when it will improve. Maybe not knowing is a blessing. How about using the uncertainty to your advantage? If you do not know any better, then you can't make a mistake. 4. Realize That The Only Reasons Are The Ones You Tell Yourself Right now it may seem like you are battling the economy, but the truth is you are battling yourself. You are battling the circumstances that you have accepted as the reasons that you can't find a job. If you keep talking yourself out of the possibilities, you will never get anywhere. Instead of accepting reasons for failure, accept reasons for success. 5. Realize That You Cannot Achieve What You Want Alone Asking for help is not a bad thing. Think about it this way, if someone came to you and asked for your help, you would gladly help them. Wouldn't you? So why wouldn't you let the people in your life do the same for you? Is your pride or embarrassment keeping you from making a request for assistance? Let people contribute to you. You would be surprised how many people would like to make a difference in your life. So, what do you say? You only have one life to live, so it might as well be a life you love!

Monday, January 26, 2009

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

MartJobs.com - Available Jobs In: General Search

Senior Sales Engineer--Telecommunications at National CLEC (Chicago, Illinois)

Posted: 26 Jan 2009 07:21 PM CST

General Summary: Responsible for the day-to-day technical field support of the Sales Team. Assist in moving opportunities through the sales process by utilization of technical and communication ski...

General Manager---Telecommunications at National CLEC (Miami, Florida)

Posted: 26 Jan 2009 07:15 PM CST

General Summary: Responsible for the performance and overall success of assigned major metropolitan market by ensuring achievement of revenue and P&L targets while maintaining the highest standards ...

P/T Grant Writer in Chicago at Non Profit Community Organization (Chicago, Illinois)

Posted: 26 Jan 2009 06:08 PM CST

Position: Part Time Grant Writer . This is not a remote position. A Chicago-based non profit organization is seeking an experienced part time grant writer. The grant writer will research, write an...

President at The KindExcellence Institute (New York, New York)

Posted: 25 Jan 2009 11:25 PM CST

Dear independent senior OD/HR/Mgt. consultant, How do you deal with the competition and few opportunities of a slow economy? Finding clients as a consultant or a coach is challenging and with ...