Watch Your Eating Habits!

Watch what you eat – it might reveal more than you think it does!

There’s an old story that Edison always believed in taking the people he was thinking of hiring, out to lunch. When the soup arrived, he would sit back and watch. Those that tasted the soup before salting it, he wouldn’t immediately cross them off his list. Instead, he would ask them questions and keep an open mind about their possibilities. However, anyone who salted his soup before tasting it wasn’t worth his salt. Why wouldn’t he hire these people? Because Edison believed these individuals had blinders on when it came to looking at life – they had too many assumptions about what was possible and what wasn’t. After all, they assumed the soup needed salt before they tasted it. So perhaps Edison was right-that you can tell a lot about a man by when he salts his soup. It’s interesting to think about.

Moral of the story – Next time you’re invited to lunch by management or a prospective new boss, hold the salt until after you taste the soup!

Life Is Simple

The best solutions in life are simple. Simple is beautiful. Today many managements and organizations are busy creating better and better solutions. Its time that they ensure that processes and systems ensure accomplishment of purpose they set out for.

I do not know the authenticity of this story but it has been quite popular on the email circuit. It is the case of the empty soap box, which happened in one of Japan’s biggest cosmetics companies. The company received a complaint that a consumer had bought a soap box that was empty. Immediately the authorities isolated the problem to the assembly line, which transported all the packaged boxes of soap to the delivery department. For some reason, one soap box went through the assembly line empty. Management asked its engineers to solve the problem. Post-haste, the engineers worked hard to devise an X-ray machine with high-resolution monitors manned by two people to watch all the soap boxes that passed through the line to make sure they were not empty. No doubt, they worked hard and they worked fast but they spent whoopee amount to do so.

But when a rank-and-file employee in a small company was posed with the same problem, he did not get into complications of X-rays, etc but instead came out with another solution. He bought a strong industrial electric fan and pointed it at the assembly line. He switched the fan on, and as each soap box passed the fan, it simply blew the empty boxes out of the line.

Moral of the story:
1. Always look for simple solutions.
2. Devise the simplest possible solution that solves the problem.
3. Learn to focus on solutions not on problems.

“If you look at what you do not have in life, you don’t have anything”

If you look at what you have in life, you have everything”

Ginger Hotel : Great Value Proposition

TATA Group‘s Indian Hotels’ Ginger Hotel is a very great concept. It provides smart accommodation at reasonable price. The charges for single room are Rs 999 and double room are Rs 1199. And we get a discount of Rs 50, if we book it online.

So need to spend a bomb while on your accommodation when you are on a business trip. This helps business travelers like me whose main focus is business. Our entire day is usually packed with meetings and we have our food outside only. What we actually need is a clean and comfortable place to stay. Ginger exactly serves this purpose. It scores better by providing facilities like WiFi, Multi-Cuisine Restaurant, Gym, Meeting Room etc. to the guests. Thus it lives up to its USP of Smart Basics! Time to check it out!

IT Tools for 2007

Technology change is the only constant. The speed and breadth of technology change as only widened over the last decade. Today, many new and emerging technologies are competing for the attention of IT Leaders. CIOs are also hard-pressed to choose the right technology for their organization as technology is a competitive differentiator today.

Recently, The McKinsey Quarterly carried an article on that addresses the above topic – Two New Tools That CIOs Want. The two technologies identified to bet the future on are : ‘server virtualization’ and ‘software as a service’.

Excerpts:

• Among the many new technologies competing for the attention of CIOs, two in particular—server virtualization and software as a service—are high on their radar screens and have a strong potential to bring real savings.
• Virtualization is a software technology that allows servers to run multiple operating systems, thus raising utilization rates. Software as a service is delivering savings of 20 to 40 percent and freeing some companies from the chore of maintaining certain common business applications.
• Together, these technologies signal a shift: instead of running programs on specific machines, companies are adopting a more flexible architecture that allows them to host and manage applications more efficiently.



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