can any one give me glossary of words and their meanings relating to HR.in a word file or excel. it would be an little dictionary relating to HR.
i would be ever grateful to that person......
pls help
debasish halder
HR-Executive
kolkata
email :debasish_haldar@rediffmail.com
From India, Calcutta
i would be ever grateful to that person......
pls help
debasish halder
HR-Executive
kolkata
email :debasish_haldar@rediffmail.com
From India, Calcutta
Hi Debashish, Pl find h/w attached HR dictinory, which i get from cite HR only. regards, Prajakta.
From India, Delhi
From India, Delhi
Hi All,
please find enclosed a Article on " What to do during recession "
hope you it is a brain food.
What to do during a recession
Are we heading for a recession? The textbook defines a recession as two consecutive quarters of declining gross national product. However, practical business executives with PNL responsibility may see a true recession as an anticipated downturn in forecasted business activity. By that definition most people feel we are in the midst of one now and some executives have begun reducing their recognition efforts and/or trimming their sales incentive investment as way to weather the anticipated dip in earnings.
An economic slowdown should prompt a collective belt tightening across the corporate midsection, right? Think again. Smart businesses approach forecasted soft patches as an opportunity to get aggressive. The objective; swoop in and seize market share, strengthen customer equity and ignite employee innovation.
During a recession, customers hold the power. While they still have needs, they are also more cautious, risk averse and cost sensitive. Progressive firms are recalibrating their selling propositions constantly, but during a recession, the smartest ones make an extra effort to applaud consultative selling behaviors that satisfy the buyer’s desired for added value.
Want meaningful incentive measures that protect share and drive incremental revenue during down periods? Try rewarding for increased sales penetration across key accounts. You may also SPIFF the strategic bundling of products or services across key customer segments. Consider adding a customer satisfaction qualifier and/or an internal peer nomination element to the program. Why? During down times you want to stress steps-to-success as much as the outcome itself. “Doing it right” counterbalances any lost momentum that may occur with longer sales cycles brought on by cautious customers.
Short on funds? Explain the behavioral component to your marketing team and sell the notion that your program actually reinforces the behaviors that set the brand apart. They may see your program as a cost effective complement to their customer acquisition and retention initiatives.
Speaking of employee behaviors remember this. Recessions affect employee confidence too. Left unchecked restlessness, ambivalence, and a yearning to try something different can percolate. Businesses run the risk of losing employee mindshare at a time when they can least afford it. Companies that recognize innovation, promote best practices and nurture front line leadership are aligning employee values even during the toughest of times. They are literally leveraging the most important source of competitive advantage—people.
No one wants a recession of course. They can be long and difficult drains on wealth. But challenges also present opportunities. Properly designed reward and incentive programs can protect your standing in the category, chip away at a competitor’s weakness and put you in the position to ramp up quickly once the economy begins to hum again.
Cheers!!!
Sujeet
please find enclosed a Article on " What to do during recession "
hope you it is a brain food.
What to do during a recession
Are we heading for a recession? The textbook defines a recession as two consecutive quarters of declining gross national product. However, practical business executives with PNL responsibility may see a true recession as an anticipated downturn in forecasted business activity. By that definition most people feel we are in the midst of one now and some executives have begun reducing their recognition efforts and/or trimming their sales incentive investment as way to weather the anticipated dip in earnings.
An economic slowdown should prompt a collective belt tightening across the corporate midsection, right? Think again. Smart businesses approach forecasted soft patches as an opportunity to get aggressive. The objective; swoop in and seize market share, strengthen customer equity and ignite employee innovation.
During a recession, customers hold the power. While they still have needs, they are also more cautious, risk averse and cost sensitive. Progressive firms are recalibrating their selling propositions constantly, but during a recession, the smartest ones make an extra effort to applaud consultative selling behaviors that satisfy the buyer’s desired for added value.
Want meaningful incentive measures that protect share and drive incremental revenue during down periods? Try rewarding for increased sales penetration across key accounts. You may also SPIFF the strategic bundling of products or services across key customer segments. Consider adding a customer satisfaction qualifier and/or an internal peer nomination element to the program. Why? During down times you want to stress steps-to-success as much as the outcome itself. “Doing it right” counterbalances any lost momentum that may occur with longer sales cycles brought on by cautious customers.
Short on funds? Explain the behavioral component to your marketing team and sell the notion that your program actually reinforces the behaviors that set the brand apart. They may see your program as a cost effective complement to their customer acquisition and retention initiatives.
Speaking of employee behaviors remember this. Recessions affect employee confidence too. Left unchecked restlessness, ambivalence, and a yearning to try something different can percolate. Businesses run the risk of losing employee mindshare at a time when they can least afford it. Companies that recognize innovation, promote best practices and nurture front line leadership are aligning employee values even during the toughest of times. They are literally leveraging the most important source of competitive advantage—people.
No one wants a recession of course. They can be long and difficult drains on wealth. But challenges also present opportunities. Properly designed reward and incentive programs can protect your standing in the category, chip away at a competitor’s weakness and put you in the position to ramp up quickly once the economy begins to hum again.
Cheers!!!
Sujeet
Hi,
Just a suggestion for fresher.. before appearing for an interview just go through this dictionary and try to use these terms this gives a gr 8 impression.. using high-quality and accurate words help lot...I know its hard to memorize but whenever you find time go through this it will work automatically ..
Aprana
From India, Salai
Just a suggestion for fresher.. before appearing for an interview just go through this dictionary and try to use these terms this gives a gr 8 impression.. using high-quality and accurate words help lot...I know its hard to memorize but whenever you find time go through this it will work automatically ..
Aprana
From India, Salai
Dear Ms. Sudha, what you given the details is very usefull for everybody can you arrange same thing like that Maharashtra Shops and Establishment act,
Kindly do the needful
Regards,
V.Punniakotti,
Cell no: 09940682701,
Mail:punniakotti.hr@in.com
------------------------------------------------
From India, Madras
Kindly do the needful
Regards,
V.Punniakotti,
Cell no: 09940682701,
Mail:punniakotti.hr@in.com
------------------------------------------------
From India, Madras
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