The,Power,Simplicity,little,ma business, insurance The Power of Simplicity
Small offices have unique needs, and thatincludes document shredding. Designed with the smaller business inmind, the Dahle 20314 is a cross-cut shredder that offers Level 3security and brings you into compliance with federal regulations. The As we all know to live in this world we have to perform some activity by which we can earn money. There are many activities by which we can earn money and meet the standards to live in this society. And from one of them is franchise. Franc
A little management book I read this week struck me as a perfect demonstration of the power of simplicity. The book, with the quirky title Who Moved My Cheese?, remains a business best-seller four years after its original release. It has sold well over 10 million copies in hard-back alone. Who Moved my Cheese? was written by Spencer Johnson (of The One Minute Manager fame). It is a book about change and the way we handle change. Its lessons are taught through the telling of a simple parable. We follow the fortunes of four characters (named Sniff and Scurry, Hem and Haw) as they move through the maze which is their lives. Cheese is a paradox in a publishing industry which produces hundreds of business books every year. Most of these books are thick, complex and offer countless checklists for success. In contrast, Cheese is thin (only 96 pages), offers no explicit solutions to anything and makes almost no reference to business at all.To summarise the lessons of this book would be to do it an injustice: you need to read it for yourself. But the success of Johnsons approach has a lot to teach us about how simplicity can make written communication more accessible. Consider these four characteristics:* Cheese uses simple language. Through its use of parable, the book speaks to a wide audience. Although marketed primarily as a management book, it has something to teach staff at all levels as well as parents, teenagers even politicians. * The book focuses on the basics. It strips the topic of change down to its bare essentials without clouding them in detail. Its philosophy is that while the details may be important, they can always come later. But they will be worth nothing if the fundamentals are not understood first. * It doesnt do our thinking for us. This book encourages us to interpret its lessons for ourselves. In this way, our conclusions are much more powerful and much more likely to stay with us. * Perhaps most powerful of all, the books concepts can be easily shared. Readers of Cheese become members of an informal club. They share a new language and can readily compare each others individual approaches to change using the simple cheese and maze analogy.Getting the message across to our market, to our customers, to our co-workers, to our staff is a fundamental part of business. Johnsons success proves yet again that keeping things simple is an effective way to have more of your audience understand what you are trying to say.We should never underestimate the power of simplicity.
The,Power,Simplicity,little,ma