Galt Global Review

QFS 360

Business and feature articles

CSIC's Authority Reaffirmed to Regulate Immigration Consultants "NEW"
The Canadian Society of Immigration Consultants (CSIC) was vindicated as the "gatekeeper to the profession of immigration consultant(s)" last month.
By Faye Mallett, August 15, 2008

A Green News Roundup
Soon it will mandatory in California for cars to be labeled witha "global warming score."
By Faye Mallett, August 8, 2008

What Type of Networker are you?
Networking is a powerful business and life tool, used in an appropriate and consistent manner it really can bring you anything you want in your business and life.
By Sue Henry, July 11, 2008

Seven Ways to Maximize the Value of Networking Meetings
Marketing yourself through networking is essential for ongoing career and professional success. Here are seven ways to maximize the value of professional networking meetings.
By Bruce L. Katcher, May 23, 2008

The Net Result: How Internet Blogging Has Transformed The Everyday Workplace
Blog - Facebook - MySpace - YouTube: Four words that have not only changed today’s lexicon, but have also created new issues for today’s employers. Incidents of “blogging gone bad”are steadily appearing in workplaces.
By Bull, Housser & Tupper LLP, May 8, 2008

10,000 Women
Arguably, investing in education for women may have the highest social return of any investment.
By Faye Mallett, April 25, 2008

Greenwashing
Have no doubt. Greenwashing comes in a sophisticated package. We may not always detect the extent to which we are "greenwashed," and this is exactly the intent. Like whitewashing, the term it is derived from, greenwashing masks the truth with a glossy image, the right spin, and a captivating design.
By Faye Mallett, March 28, 2008

Online Ad Spending – Are you investing in Social Networking?
In terms of online advertising and marketing, companies have a lot to gain by investing in websites like MySpace and Facebook, the current two “network giants.”In fact, with more marketers experimenting with this new medium, worldwide online social network ad spending is projected to jump from $1.2 billion in 2007 to $2.1 billion in 2008. By 2011, it is projected to be at $4.1 billion.
By Faye Mallett, March 6, 2008

The Clean Coal Debate
Given that coal is also the world’s largest source of C02 emissions –the main culprit in global warming –coal plants are at the top of the list of global warming threats cited by climate scientists.
By Faye Mallett, February 21, 2008

Burning Coal - The Clean Way
Burning coal to generate electricity is one of our planet’s major sources of carbon emissions –the primary gas blamed for global warming. Producing electricity with coal is therefore one of the pivotal issues in the conflict between our energy needs and our environmental needs.
By Faye Mallett, February 21, 2008

Out of the Red and into the Green: Transitioning your company from paper to paperless
Electronic agreements and digital signatures are no longer the future; they are here and ready to ease the burden on many aspects of business communication.
By Reed Clayton, January 3, 2008

Designing a Team
Jesse Hopps finds himself in a position familiar to many employers these days. He is running a successful business and has ambitious plans to grow it, but finding the right people to help him build his enterprise isn’t easy.
By Adrian Brijbassi, December 12, 2007

By-passed oil revitalizing the economy
New developments in technology are making bypassed oil a resource that could potentially increase the United State’s crude oil reserves by 10 times the amount.
By Faye Mallett, December 4, 2007

Doors Open Wide for International Students
For all the talk of building walls and reducing traffic through America's borders, there's one group of visitors who continue to enter the United States in record numbers. And Americans are enthusiastic to have them.
By Adrian Brijbassi, November 27, 2007

The Next Generation Builds Green
Over 55 million students in the United States spend their days in schools that are hazardous to their health. This is because conventional schools are designed to only meet minimum code, which holds no specific objective towards creating healthy and productive learning environments.
By Faye Mallett, November 6, 2007

Private Health Care a Growing Business in Canada
Procedures, such as plastic surgery, that are not covered under the Canada Health Act have historically been provided by private practitioners. In recent years, however, doctors and entrepreneurs in the medical field have started to offer services that are covered under the national health program. Economically speaking, they are filling a demand.
By Adrian Brijbassi, October 30, 2007

The Business of Emergency Preparation
A recent report in the New York Times cited numbers from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics that estimate a need for 14,000 emergency-management specialists by 2012, which would mean an increase of nearly 3,000 positions in 10 years.
By Adrian Brijbassi, October 9, 2007

Riders for Health
Riders for Health (RfH), a UK-based organization founded by former motorcycle racer Andrea Coleman and her husband, journalist Barry Coleman, offers an innovative solution to assist developing countries in their need for reliable transport. A member of the Make Poverty History campaign, the organization has worked for over 15 years on creating solutions for health care delivery in Africa.
By Faye Mallett, September 24, 2007

The Science of Intention
One recently-published book on the subject is The Intention Experiment, written by science writer and award-winning journalist Lynne McTaggart. By posing the question: Can our thoughts influence the world around us?; McTaggart makes a comprehensive investigation of the subject in her study of athletes; analysis of the leading evidence in neuroscience; psychology; and the latest findings in physics.
By Faye Mallett, September 5, 2007

Impact of a Declining Dollar
In what seems like a cruel trick typically reserved for parlour games, Todd Ariss has witnessed his revenues shrink before his disbelieving eyes. The now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t switch is a result of the evaporating worth of the U.S. dollar.
By Adrian Brijbassi, August 29, 2007

A Profitable Investment
Monica Villasenor believes commercial real estate is a profitable sector that anybody can invest in. Her own experience proves it.
By Adrian Brijbassi, July 4, 2007

Buying Back Our Carbon Footprint
While the concept of carbon neutrality dates back to at least a decade, it has only been in the last two or 3 years that interest in this market has exploded. Beginning with a few innovative companies and individuals looking for an opportunity to “do the right thing”; trading carbon emissions is quickly becoming an environmental commodity market.
By Faye Mallett, June 20, 2007

US Labor Market - March 2007
Although the US economy seems to be slowing slightly according to recent reports, the March Employment Situation Report released by the U.S. Department of Labor shows that the labor market is still in great shape.
By Shelley Brennan, April 11, 2007

A Choice of Where to Live for Skilled Workers
Leaving home is a part of life. Relocating to a far-flung destination, though, is largely a result of politics and economics.
By Adrian Brijbassi, April 4, 2007

Wellness in the Workforce
Considering how the majority of people spend at least a third of their day or more at their workplace, it is no wonder then that workplace environments have a major influence on national chronic health issues such as obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease.
By Faye Mallett, March 7, 2007

Online Advertising: A Growing Domain
The growing number of online users, the audience of online advertising is anticipated to be huge. Businesses can capitalize on this by using the internet to keep in touch with customers through newsletters, chat rooms, and promotions on their websites.
By Faye Mallett, March 7, 2007

Finding the Market Price
Finding a reliable resource on current market compensation rates can be a frustrating, time consuming and expensive endeavor. Employers searching for current salary rate information typically will find they need to pay for it, and even then, the information available to purchase is usually released once a year, causing the information to become outdated soon after the data is released.
By Faye Mallett, February 28, 2007

Up for Debate: Bush's Healthcare Reform Proposal
Last week, we looked at the details of Bush’s new health care proposal. This week, we will look at what supporters and opponents of the plan are saying.
By Shelley Brennan, January 31, 2007

Up for Debate: Bush's Healthcare Reform Proposal
President George Bush recently unveiled his plans for health care reform with a new proposal aimed at reducing the number of people without coverage, as well as addressing tax code disparities within the current American health care system.
By Shelley Brennan, January 31, 2007

Labour Optimization
Reduce unneeded overtime; create a more flexible workforce; and match labour to customer demand. These are the challenges that face modern management as companies seek to reduce the amount they spend on labour, while at the same time try to increase the quality of their service to customers and clients.
By Faye Mallett, January 10, 2007

Positive Global News Events of 2006
Please enjoy our end of year “round-up”of some of the more positive news events, trends, research and initiatives that occurred in 2006.
By The Editor, December 28, 2006

Social Networking: The Virtual Way
MySpace, Facebook, Friendster, Craigslist, LinkedIn, Nerve, Meetup, Tickle and SecondLife.com –ask any of your twenty to thirty-something co-workers or cohorts, and chances are they’ll know exactly what you’re talking about.
By Faye Mallett, October 25, 2006

Where Houses Lead, Will US Consumers Follow?
Homebuilding isn’t a large enough sector to bring the US economy to its knees on its own, but would be if household spending is destined to follow the housing market’s dramatic cooling. All else equal, the loss of home equity wealth extraction would seem to doom consumer spending to recession. But all else is not equal, as newfound labour income gains look to ease some of the real estate pain, and mitigate the consumer plunge.
By Benjamin Tal and Avery Shenfeld, October 18, 2006

The Wage Dispute
This is not a story about union vs. non-union. It is not a story of evil intent. Nor is it a story about profiteering. Although it may reach into all of these realms, it is ultimately a story about indifference –of how fellow workers can find themselves tolerating the intolerable.
By Faye Mallett, October 4, 2006

Smart Productivity
Roland Pujol’s life leapt from fast-paced to warp speed one moment 16 months ago. The moment occurred when the New York based reporter purchased the latest in the recent trend of Personal Digital Assistants: the Treo Smartphone.
By Adrian Brijbassi, September 20, 2006

On The Wire Part II
In a recent panel discussion in New York at the Associated Press, former Vietnam reporter and bureau chief, Richard Pyle, commented, "The military was remarkable in Vietnam -- they not only didn't try to censor us, they made every accommodation to us. There's never been a situation quite like that anywhere."
ByShelley Lightburn, September 6, 2006

On The Wire: Telegraphy, Commerce and The Associated Press
For years, sociologists, philosophers and anthropologists have studied the effects of media on society and how news shapes the way people think. However, the news profession, as a product and a purveyor of information, also drives technological innovation and new modes of business.
ByShelley Lightburn, August 9, 2006

Cell Phones Dial Into Kids Markets
Giving the order to "come home now" has never been so easy for a parent to
deliver. The cell-phone industry has targeted the preteen market with so many
choices and products you might think the craze was inspired by a George Lucas
movie.
By Adrian Brijbassi, August 1, 2006

Single Mothers Make Gains
The Canadian Government has just released some startling economic and employment statistics that provide insight into the economic status of single-mother families in Canada - the number of which have risen dramatically (70%) over the past twenty years.
By Faye Mallett, June 7, 2006

The Windy City Goes Green
Chicago wants to re-invent itself again, this time as the “Greenest city in America.”At the spurring of Mayor Richard M. Daley, who took office in 1989, Chicago has been transformed into one of the most attractive cities in the US.
By Faye Mallett, May 24, 2006

Ten Trends to Watch
Companies that tap into the wave of current trends and developments are more likely to succeed than those who struggle against them.
By Faye Mallett, May 3, 2006

Multi-Sided Markets: More Platforms for Business
Multi-sided markets are certainly not a new phenomenon. Yet it has only been within the last few years that economists have begun to view these markets as entities within their own right, unique in the way they unite two or more markets that seemingly have nothing to do with each other into one platform.
By Faye Mallett, April 17, 2006

Google @ Animal Farm
Then: “Google does not censor the results for any search term. Now: “It is Google’s policy not to censor search results. However, in response to local laws, regulations or policies, we may do so.
By Peter Meingast, March 8, 2006

The Motivation Contradiction
If leaders make their mark on the world because they motivated people to action, then the notion that motivation is entirely an individual choice must be wrong. This observation or deduction, if accurate, immediately places all managers into a peculiar bind. Contrary to our practice of firing 7% of our employees for bad attitudes, we’re forced to accept that we have another, underutilized option.
ByPeter de Jager, February 8, 2006

Fast Cities
What do Vancouver, Dublin, Helsinki, Sydney and Montreal have in common? They are all cities that have been dubbed, Fast Cities—the new up and coming metropolis’which are largely populated by the Creative Class—a distinct, innovative people who have a hand in creating metropolitan accomplishment.
ByJake Gosselin, January 26, 2006

More Profit Less Carbon
To limit the use of carbon-based products can seem like an exercise in discipline, not dissimilar to a diet or aerobics regimen. It's hard work, doesn't feel good at first, requires a demanding level of sticktoitiveness, and can seemingly always be put off until later. Like a 40-year-old with a waist size that's suddenly catching up to his age, businesses - and the industrial world - are learning the longer the procrastination, the more difficult the ability to change.
By Adrian Brijbassi, December 21, 2005

Board Game Lets Players Ponder Life Choices
After years of obsessing about choices related to love and money, teacher Susan Morry decided to create a board game about life’s little trade-offs. As they work their way through the game’s 660 questions on 330 cards, players of If You Had To Choose...?™ can also look forward to many hours of considering the pros and cons of different decisions.
By Lara Greenberg, November 30, 2005

Overseas Ambassadors
“If you can see the corruption at a very bottom level, then you can only imagine the level of corruption at the top,”says Rubin McNeely, a member of the steering committee for Amnesty International’s (AI) Business & Human Rights Committee. A recent addition to AI’s extensive global research, development and watchdog programs, the Business & Human Rights Committee is a group that is researching and monitoring human rights violations in the extractive industry.
By Faye Mallett, November 23, 2005

William McDonough: visionary architect and designer
Time Magazine called him a "Hero of the Planet" in 1999. In 1977, William McDonough designed and built the first-solar heated house in Ireland. In 1985 he designed the first "green" office in the US, commissioned by the US Environmental Defense Fund.
By Faye Mallett, October 26, 2005

Sustainable Economics
Once we’re producing beyond the rate of what we can renew, growth as we know it becomes incredibly ignorant in the short term and impossible to maintain in the long run. The economic status quo as we know it now cannot be maintained long into the future. Essentially, we are borrowing from the supply that belongs to future generations.
By Faye Mallett, September 14, 2005

Building Anew
Composite materials, plastics, and ceramics are increasingly emerging as viable building material solutions. The volume and number of applications of composite materials has grown steadily, creating a wide realm of new markets - from everyday products (think bath sinks to door frames) to niche applications in the aerospace and automotive industries.
By Faye Mallett, August 24, 2005

Increasing Creative Thought
When leading executives define the purpose of their business, many say it is to show a profit, increase shareholder value, or produce a specific product or service. On the surface, they are correct, but they miss the mark because these are not purposes but outcomes.
By Peter de Jager, August 24, 2005

Cause and Effect: Consumer Economics
When leading executives define the purpose of their business, many say it is to show a profit, increase shareholder value, or produce a specific product or service. On the surface, they are correct, but they miss the mark because these are not purposes but outcomes.
By Margaret J. King & Bret Rigby, August 10, 2005

The Future of Energy: Part I
Renewable energy sources could be used to generate much more electricity then they are currently being used to do.
By Faye Mallett, July 27, 2005

Diversity: The Industry
More so than multiculturalism, diversity can be called an industry. Within this industry are diversity trainers, diversity coaches and diversity consultants; one can study online through the Diversity Training University International (yet many consultants and trainers do hold PhD’s in education); and many organizations, recognizing the trends of workforce demographics, employ the expertise of trained diversity professionals as a way of adapting to the changing realities of the workforce.
By Faye Mallett, July 20, 2005

Weasel Words
Expect to find weasel words wherever the official language is a kind of code that, on surface, everyone must at least appear to understand - or risk being excluded. It happens in businesses and government departments, and today it is found predominantly in advertising and marketing, government and corporate PR ‘spins,’and management ‘speak.’
By Faye Mallett, June 23, 2005

Step up to it Canada, World Says
January 2005 brought the release of a major study of politicians, diplomats and thinkers from Europe, Asia, Africa, the US and Latin America - all sharing their views on Canada's importance in international affairs. It is a subject that most Canadians are by now quite familiarly obsessed by (or perhaps just Canadian media), second perhaps to the highly marketable question: What does being a Canadian mean?
By Faye Mallett, June 8, 2005

Entrepreneur Profile: John Savio
This is the first of a series of profiles on people who are adding something unique to our world, whether it is through a business venture, a passion, idea or dream. We will profile entrepreneurs, scientists, writers, students, retirees, CEO's, inventors, environmentalists, politicians, venture capitalists, doctors, artists and educators - anybody who is inspired to create change in our world, and inspiring others in the process.
By Melissa Montgomery, May 25, 2005

A Choice for BC Voters
Besides casting their vote in 2005, BC voters will be asked whether or not they want to replace the current “first past the post" system with a new alternative.
By Faye Mallett, May 11, 2004

Planning under the Influence of Change
Crafting a strategic plan is sort of like trying to get to Mars, or running to catch a baseball, we don't move to where it is now, but to where it will be, when we finally get there.
By Peter de Jager, May 4, 2005

What's in a Name?
Imagine if our choices between the two main competitors in the computer world were between Apple and….Melinda.
By Faye Mallett, April 27, 2005

The Future in SWORDS
The US plans to deploy 18 armed robots to Iraq this spring, making them the first generation of robots to go to combat. Although the robots have a memorable name: SWORDS (for Special Weapons Observation Reconnaissance Detection Systems), they aren't quite the cold-blooded androids of Star Wars or I, Robot, yet.
By Faye Mallett, April 12, 2005

The Purpose Driven Organization
Compassion has always been a driving force of humanity. This drive remains true in the business sphere, where there are many examples of organizations defining a higher purpose that is above the traditional accumulation of profit as means of their existence. This may lead to a competitive significance in the very near future.
By David Smith, April 6, 2005

Venture Capital Investment on the Rise
The amount of venture capital invested in the US in 2004 increased for the first time since 2001, according to two recently released venture-capital surveys. In venture-capital history, this marks 2004 as the year VCs recovered from last decade's boom (in 2000, venture capitalists invested a whopping $103 billion into startups) and subsequent bust.
By Faye Mallett, February 23, 2005

Performance Anxiety
Step into the boardroom at any major company and you’re almost certain to get an earful about mission statements and company goals. In today’s intensely competitive global environment, everyone agrees that a strong focus on core business strategies is essential. “When employees are all on the same page it can create some awesome capabilities,”states Stephen Covey, vice chairman of Salt Lake City-based consulting and professional services firm FranklinCovey.
By Samuel Greengard, January 5, 2005

Kahn's reality check
Amongst Herman Kahn's many insights was a basic technique that remains an essential part of my analytical toolbox. Ironically, it is about thinking about the present. It offers a valuable lesson for all senior executives charged with forming a realistic and valid view of the future environment for their business.
By The Global Future Forum, December 21 2004

Mind Your Manners! A Global Guide to Etiquette
This author was recently at a business dinner in Chinatown in Calgary. A Chinese woman briefed us before on what to expect, which went along the lines of: “They are taking you out to dinner to see if they like you personally. Then they will decide whether or not to do business with you.
By Melissa Montgomery, December 14,2004

The Essential Ethical Exam
It's difficult to think of a subject touchier than that of what actions are "Right" and what are "Wrong", especially when we're discussing a real life situation. Ethics places not only our actions and behavior under the microscope, but it also scrutinizes our integrity and worth as a person.
By Peter de Jager, December 7,2004

CDN Roundup *NEW*
Ah, those Alberta Oil Sands. Not since Woodward and Bernstein were in their prime has the digging of dirt spurred so much fanfare. Fresh off a spot on “60 Minutes”, the Alberta oil fields –which have ignited the most ferocious economy in North America, if not the Western world –are extracting plenty of another form of black liquid: ink.
By Adrian Brijbassi

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Asian Business Roundup
With half the world's workers unable to earn enough to rise above the two dollars a day poverty line, fairer globalization and better jobs are vital to achieving the UN millennium development goal (MDG) of halving the number of global poor by 2015, according to a new report published this week.
By Faye Mallett, December 7, 2004

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Consistency Is The Key To Interviewing The Disabled
Handicapped. Disabled. What pictures come to mind when you read these words? If, like many people, you think of someone in a wheelchair, your interviewing procedures may be putting your company at risk of losing a discrimination lawsuit.
By Workplace.ca November 30 2004

Dealing With the Old Guard
There is some 'old guard' in each of us when it comes to any major change. That inner voice or the critical skeptic is actually an ancient biological response that keeps us from doing anything new that might endanger us until we have assessed the situation and have sufficient information to move forward.
By Chris Edgelow November 16 2004

The Global Tea Party
About fifteen years ago the world was hit with the specialty coffee boom. Spurred by Starbucks and nurtured by coffee aficionados and café socialites, the beverage bar boom is far reaching. Now that there are no shortages of cafes to choose from, the coffee market is slowing down.
By Shelley Lightburn November 9 2004

The Art of Managing Culture through Organizational Change
Promoting dialogue and interconnectedness As companies grow, it becomes more difficult to maintain a culture with healthy communication among employees. Crystal Decisions, also included in the top ten list of the Watson Wyatt survey, is currently facing that challenge. The company, a provider of information management software, has reached a critical point in its development. It currently has 1,500 employees and continues to grow, bucking the downward trend in the high-tech sector. Staying interconnected is particularly complex given that they have more than 20 offices worldwide.
By Jeffrey Rotin November 2 2004

The Cultural Drivers of Money
Money, like all human invention, is a tool. Like all tools, it is an extension and amplification of some human attribute. If a hammer is an extension of our fist and a pencil or a telephone is an extension of our voice, of what is money an extension?
By Jamie O'Boyle November 2 2004

Beyond this Horizon
The study, or even the casual examination of the future has a bit of a bad reputation. Any media coverage of a World Future Society event will include the obligatory references to tea leaves and chicken entrails. Not surprisingly, the public perception of Futurists is that of a group of wide-eyed mystics making ridiculous and incredible claims of the future that defy verification.
By Peter de Jager October 26, 2004

Benefiting from Corporate Volunteerism
Many companies become involved with the volunteer sector by helping employees find opportunities to share their professional expertise with non-profit organizations. This so called skills-based volunteering has its roots in the legal community, with a long history of pro-bono services. It has expanded, however, to include the employees of technology, financial services, marketing and other professional services companies
By Faye Mallett October 12, 2004

The Art of Managing Culture through Organizational Change
In order to compete in the marketplace, companies must keep pace with change by reengineering, restructuring and reorganizing. Too often, however, they focus on the more tangible aspects of a transition —the procedures, finances, policies and structures —without considering cultural issues. Yet managing culture can be the key to effective organizational change.
By Jeffrey Rotin September 28 2004

12 surefire ways to market HIGH TECH without raising costs
IF WHAT FOLLOWS seems like just so much commonsense, remember that marketing is 90 per cent commonsense. Everything else –database technology, relationship marketing, statistical analysis, and other special tools –sits on that base of commonsense.
By John Friesen October 5, 2004

Interview with Mark Hornung, senior vice president of the Bernard Hodes Group, on Employer Branding
Employer branding has been around as long as there have been employers and workers. The concept gained recognition as a separate discipline in the mid-90s. The talent wars of the dot com era, coupled with the looming demographic shift caused by the retirement of the Baby Boomers, meant employers had to start thinking seriously about how they would attract the best people.
By Faye Mallett September 28 2004

Trust on-the-line
Trust will be the new ‘watchword’ of the future. There is nothing new about the need to be trustworthy; in our private, public and business lives. If we are to deal fairly with one another it is the bedrock of our every action.
By David Smith, September 21, 2004

Are we there yet?
We could if we wished, and perhaps we should, get some formal training in project management (PM). There are certainly enough books, more than enough courses, conferences and seminars to take us as far as we want along the path of PM enlightenment.
By Peter de Jager, September 15, 2004

Meet the ‘Renewables’: Eco-Industry and Green Democracy
The current lexicon of industry and government policy incorporates lively terminology that is diagnostic of environmental upkeep. Climate Change, sustainable resource management, energy needs, and water availability have created an atmosphere of activity uniting business, government, and non-profit groups.
By Shelley Lightburn, September 1, 2004

How to Choose a Web Hosting Provider: Part 3 of 3
As the Internet becomes ever-more vital to most companies’ business, choosing the right web hosting provider is one of the most critical decisions an IT director must make. So, how can you cut through the morass? Here are the last of the 25 top questions you should be asking.
By Joe Mullich, July 21, 2004

The Ergosphere: A concept for the world of work in the 21st century
Words have meaning and the meaning matters. "Work" doesn't mean what it meant in the past: the world of work is changing. We need new words to describe that world.
By Margaret J. King, July 14, 2004

The Bus Stops Here: Public Transit and the ‘Hydrogen Highway’
There is a lot of hype over hydrogen in the news lately. Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin and California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger both have ensured plans to construct several hydrogen gas stations. The ‘Highway Highway’ has the potential to extend from California to Whistler BC by 2010. Hydrogen fuel cell cars are expected to be on the market anywhere from 2010 to 2014. However, in many places hydrogen fuel cell buses are already on the go.
ByShelley Lightburn, June 30, 2004

How to Choose a Web Hosting Provider: Part 2 of 3
As the Internet becomes ever-more vital to most companies’ business, choosing the right web hosting provider is one of the most critical decisions an IT director must make. So, how can you cut through the morass? Here are 8 more of the 25 top questions you should be asking.
By Joe Mullich, June 23, 2004

Sponsorships Rule!
The way Michael Marckx sees it, building a brand name and connecting with customers isn’t an endeavor for the feint of heart. With megabytes of spam flooding inboxes, mountains of junk mail buckling mailboxes and a seemingly endless stream of commercials assaulting the airwaves, today’s consumer is increasingly tuning out.
By Samuel Greengard, June 8, 2004

How to Choose a Web Hosting Provider: 25 Questions You’d Better Know the Answers To
As the Internet becomes ever-more vital to most companies’ business, choosing the right web hosting provider is one of the most critical decisions an IT director must make. It’s also one of the most puzzling decisions, considering analysts say there are more than 15,000 web hosters offering a complex array of hard-to-compare services. How can you cut through the morass? Start with this list of 25 questions – probing providers about what they can offer and probing yourself to determine what services and technology you really need.
By Joe Mullich, May 27, 2004

Paperless Office
A quarter century ago, futurists predicted that computers would soon usher in the paperless office. Since then, the demand for paper has actually increased. Soon, however, the Internet and more advanced software may finally offer hope that businesses can crumple the paper jam.
By Sam Greengard, May 5, 2004

Caged by Our Labels
If you've done any reading in the area of Creativity or Innovation then you've certainly come across the advice "Think outside the Box". Even though it’s almost a cliché, it hasn't outlived its usefulness. “Think outside the box” is a brilliantly accurate description of the primary goal of the creative process. I wish I'd come up with it.
By Peter de Jager, April 27, 2004

Working for Nothing - Corporate Lessons from Nonprofits
Ask your colleagues about the work they do for nothing and you may be shocked. You could learn more about them in three minutes than in the last three years working together.
Volunteering is a rapidly growing phenomenon, a common passion among executives, and a vital issue for corporations to understand.
By Dr. Patrick Dixon, April 7, 2004

Choose a Coach with Care: Part 2 of 2
There are numerous distressing, off-the-record accounts about the behaviour of instant coaches, from the 27-year-old who boasted how he was working with a suicidal middle-aged woman, to the tone-deaf and tool-happy: No matter what the presenting issue, they use time-tracking checklists and batteries of tests unrelated to the presenting issue, from which they interpret the results to their clients as "truth," despite having little or no training in testing.
By Barbara Moses PhD, March 17, 2004

Our Taxations System Simplified
Suppose that every day, ten men go out for dinner. The bill for all ten comes to $100. If they paid their bill the way we pay our taxes, it would go something like this...
Author Unknown, March 10, 2004

Choose a Coach with Care: Part 1 of 2
Carole's manager sent her to see a corporate coach because her performance had suddenly declined. "I told him this nuanced story about getting over my father's recent death, how my marriage was in trouble and I was having difficulty coping with it all. And that basically my job was the least of my problems, because I didn't really care much about it any more." The coach's response? Carole sighs. "He asked me what my passion was."
By Barbara Moses PhD, March 3, 2004

Hybrids Pick up Speed in the Race to Go Green
Since environmental issues have gained an active voice in legislation and policy-making, cars became the synonymous evil to Global Warming. Governments around the globe launched their own programs to decrease the amount of harmful emissions that enter the environment by cars and other transport vehicles. It was Japan that first launched studies into developing an alternative to the internal combustion engine as an answer to Tokyo’s increasing air quality concerns. In 1997 Japan was also home to the first mass produced electric petrol hybrid vehicle, the Toyota Prius. Since then several of the world’s car giants have launched their own hybrid cars. The issue for the consumer is this: can a fuel-efficient low emissions vehicle also be cost efficient?
By Shelley Lightburn, February 18, 2004

[Information] Highway Robbery
The Internet is a modern day convenience that can make everyone’s life virtually easier, but it can also be used to anyone’s advantage. For example, the same technology that enables us to visit our bank from any personal computer is also the technology that enables certain dubious individual’s to rob one. And, the remote chance of these cybercriminals getting caught means that this form of fraud risks becoming an epidemic, making all areas of identity theft, and the resulting financial loss, an increasingly important security issue for businesses worldwide.
By Jana Ritter, February 4, 2004

Getting Credit When It's Due: Part 2
A growing number of applications tie together all the various aspects of credit management and automatio processes, from initial credit checks all the way through re-verifying credit status when a customer reaches its credit limit. Within seconds, a system can tap into a variety of sources, including credit ratings from the likes of TransUnion, Experian and Equifax, as well as Dunn & Bradstreet reports. It can then determine whether a company should halt sales until a customer pays up or extend additional credit.
By Samuel Greengard, January 20, 2004

Getting Credit When It's Due: Part 1
In the quest for greater market share and revenues, today’s companies leave no stone unturned. Advertising and marketing executives conjure up crafty campaigns to entice corporate decision makers. Salespeople mine leads and court potential buyers with relentless zeal.
By Samuel Greengard, January 6, 2004

Coming in to 2004: an economic overview
Despite all the talk of corporate downsizing, possible recession and the economics of terrorism and war, a closer look at the state of our economy has shown that we are better off than some might have us think.
By Esme Friesen, December 31, 2003

Going Viral: Part 2 of 2
Make no mistake, a growing number of companies are discovering that a healthy dose of viral marketing is just the cure for the advertising blues. Over the last couple of years, The New York Times, for example, has used online games, including “Chess” and a Scrabble-like word game called “Big Darn Word,” to generate traffic to its Website. Once there, subscribers could also e-mail copies of articles to colleagues and friends, and participate in any array of other activities, including crossword puzzles and sports quizzes.
By Samuel Greengard, November 12, 2003

Going Viral: Part 1 of 2
Amid all the glowing talk about how the Internet and e-mail have changed the world for the better, it’s a rare day that consumers aren’t pitched, blitzed and cajoled beyond their breaking point. Megabytes of Spam flood inboxes. Banner ads blot out Web pages. And mountains of junk mail buckle mailboxes from Seattle to Saratoga. Everyone, it seems, is vying for our attention…and hard earned cash.
By Samuel Greengard, November 4, 2003

Why your Salespeople hate trade shows... How to make them love them! Part 2 of 2
"As the nirvana of the selling environment," says Britt Roberts, advertising and trade show coordinator at Camco International, a Houston supplier of gas and oil products. "Where else are customers coming to you to see your products?"
By Joe Mullich, October 21, 2003

Why your Salespeople hate trade shows... How to make them love them! Part 1 of 2
As trade show consultant Steve Miller sees it, salespeople have two views of staffing a booth at a trade show: Some think of it as a vacation. Others consider it a prison sentence. How would companies like their salespeople to regard trade shows?
By Joe Mullich, October 7, 2003

Work flows downhill
Here's a thought... with the rise of the Internet and the ability to send information in all it's many forms anywhere, at minimal cost, immediately... most white collar work is now geographically ambivalent.
By Peter de Jager, September 16, 2003

Sales reps need not apply
A question that I am often asked at my seminar is “What will be the role of the sales rep in the future?" A fair question given the abundance of technology, sales automation and the growing popularity of e-commerce. My answer suggests that the role of a sales professional will not disappear anytime soon but the code of conduct and responsibilities will certainly change.
By Tim Breithoupt, September 2, 2003

The role of the emerging Hispanic population: Power in numbers
No one was surprised when the US Census Bureau announced at the beginning of the year that Latinos had surpassed African Americans as the USA’s largest minority. Just turn on the TV, tune in the radio, open a magazine, read a newspaper, look out the window and it’s clear that Latinos – or Hispanics – are influencing every part of American life. But, while the numbers are massive, it must be asked if there is such a thing as a Latino community. Does speaking a common language bind Spanish-speakers from all corners of Central and South America into a cohesive community in the United States?
By Jim Plouffe, August 26, 2003

The spinning wheel
There's no doubt about it, we're a mobile society. The ability to get from point 'A' to point 'B' as quickly, safely and conveniently as possible, is important to us. A quick look around your community will confirm this observation: Planes and trains, boats, gliders and parachutes, trucks, buses and cars, scooters, bikes, roller blades, escalators and elevators. You get the general idea... we like to move around.
By Peter de Jager, August 19, 2003

The truth that economists forgot: we're human
The most effective attacks on conventional economics are launched by renegade economists. Why? Because they know where the bodies are buried. Clive Hamilton, director of the Canberra think-tank the Australia Institute, is a former econocrat with a PhD in economics.
By Ross Gittens, August 6, 2003

The opportunity impaired
Here is a First Nations’saying which I find intriguing: You cannot wake those who pretend to sleep. At first, it brings to mind memories of children pretending to sleep while you tried to get their attention so you could send them off to bed. Their eyes clinched tighter and their snores became more insistent. An amusing memory if you were not too obsessive about bundling them off to bed.
By Peter de Jager, July 22, 2003

The customer is always right
All businesses, small, medium and large, at some point hit the problem of determining if their customer service is working while trying to attract more customers. Advertising is costly and easily saturated, and there is not always the budget for extravagant marketing campaigns to build brand awareness and loyalty. As well, auditing employee performance is costly if outsourced and is rarely done properly internally. So what’s a company to do?
By Jim Plouffe, July 1, 2003

Rot spreads from the top
I am a CEO. I work hard, stay in moderate priced hotels on business trips, have my income linked to the organizational profitability - meaning it goes up and it also goes down along with the fortunes of the organization, spend long hours reading and learning and can only describe the occupation as a lifestyle, not as a job.
By Peter Meingast, June 24, 2003

Engaging your employees is a must for shareholder value
Success is a great motivator and a powerful tool to spur employees on to produce even better results. It provides an affirmation of their value and improves their career prospects. But in today’s economic climate, success seems to be the exception and not the norm.
By Watson Wyatt, June 3, 2003

Turning over CDs
Several years ago, I made the transition from black plastic records to shiny plastic CDs. The sound quality is better and despite the price increase, I'm satisfied with the value and the convenience. Yet, from time to time, years after the transition from wax ruts to laser pits, when a CD finishes playing, I'll get up from my desk and turn over the CD.
By Peter de Jager, May 27, 2003

Feeling Lucky?
Well it happens to all of us at some time or another. We feel strongly about our position, our legal counsel advises us, then the Judge…well the Judge disagrees.
By Peter Meingast, May 13, 2003

Profitable Airlines Say…
We spoke with JetBlue: Southwest Airlines: Virgin Atlantic, Virgin Blue and WestJet. We list their response by alphabetical ranking on each issue.
By Peter Meingast, April 22, 2003

Succession planning: a tool for success
Expected or not, leadership succession is inevitable for any surviving business but successful succession is a reality that must be planned. An increasingly important factor in this ever-changing economy is the imminent retirement of an entire generation of leaders. Consequently, succession planning is becoming an increasingly distinct strategic imperative.
By Jana Ritter, April 15, 2003

The Goose Story
Next fall, when you see geese heading south for the winter, flying along in 'V formation, think about what science has learned about why they fly that way.
Author Unknown, April 15, 2003

Up, Up, And A…
Set aside for the moment the Iraq war and go back to the real issues behind the problems some airlines are facing. Those problems are self-inflicted and like most self-inflicted problems, embarrass the top brass, thus necessitating the mythology of external nasty forces causing all the woes. When many airlines are in trouble, and have been in trouble for years, it is hardly sporting to blame the war as the cause of the demise.
By Peter Meingast, April 8, 2003

New Research Points to "What Works" When Pursuing Organizational Change
The truth of the statement "Nothing endures but change" endures unchanged some 2,500 years after the Greek philosopher Heraclitus declared it. Today, many organizations are attempting to harness change to their advantage and avoid being buffeted by a turbulent, hyper-competitive economy and rapid technological evolution.
By Watson Wyatt, April 8, 2003

Buyer Beware: Uncovering Undercover Advertising
In this age of skeptical consumerism, traditional advertising vehicles are facing roadblocks that have many companies seeking innovative, if not extreme, alternatives. While a more sophisticated and discerning breed of consumers has inspired innovative approaches to slipping past consumer radar, it has also resulted in undercover marketing operations that are avoiding detection altogether.
By Jana Ritter, March 18, 2003

Good etiquette makes for good business
Have you mastered the nuances of business etiquette - the subtle but critical behaviors that can make important meetings, influence first impressions, or impress potential clients?
By Carole Kanchier, March 4, 2003

Another fine mess, Stanley!
What is the world coming to? Nothing really, it is as it always was..
By Peter Meingast, February 25, 2003

A Corporate Affair: Ruling Love Out Of Business
Be it love at first sight in the elevator, a growing affection between cubicle neighbors or a Christmas party fling, the workplace can be a rendezvous for romance. Appropriate or not, it's difficult to prevent the chemistry of human attraction. While most companies have accepted that even good ventilation won't remove the love in office air, employers are best advised to warn love-struck workers that mixing business with pleasure can be a dangerous endeavor.
by Jana Ritter, February 11, 2003

Trade can brush in a new border
The most important policy issue facing Canadian's today is our relationship with the United States. Washington has assumed a changed, newly assertive role in the world. Whatever they might think about that role, Canadian's should expect Ottawa to take the lead in managing this swiftly changing relationship because it is critical to our future.
by Wendy Dobson, February 4, 2003

Kyoto: You and Me
I am reminded of the old Far Side cartoon, in which some dinosaurs are standing around smoking, bearing the caption "The real reason dinosaurs are extinct."
Funny? Yes. True? Symbolically, yes.
By Peter Meingast, January 27, 2003

Politics of Oil
The modern era of oil production began on August 27, 1859, when Edwin L. Drake drilled the first successful oil well 69 feet deep near Titusville in northwestern Pennsylvania. Just five years earlier, the invention of the kerosene lamp had ignited intense demand for oil. By drilling an oil well, Drake had hoped to meet the growing demand for oil for lighting and industrial lubrication.
By Steven Mintz, January 21, 2003

Alberta's potential Kyoto bonanza
I learned some of life's most important lessons in the Canadian oil patch.
by Thomas Homer-Dixon, December 24, 2002

Power-Writing for the Web: 10 Golden Rules
What's the most common thing visitors do on your web site? Okay, so some of you might offer more...uh ... visual adult entertainment. But for the majority of us, our visitors come to our sites seeking information. Simply, most come to do one thing: read.
by Ann Handley, November 26, 2002

Emerging Greenhouse Gas Market
Emissions trading has become the "policy of choice" for addressing climate change, according to a new report from the Pew Center on Global Climate Change that documents the emergence of a market for greenhouse gas emissions.
by Katie Mandes, November 13, 2002

Presumed guilt puts taxpayers in legal and financial bind
Do Canadians enjoy taxation more than other nationalities? Probably not, but we acquiesce to oppressive procedures in tax law, most notably the presumption of guilt.
by Vern Krishna, November 5, 2002

Economic Globalization: Merging roads to universal prosperity
Promoted as the path to widespread prosperity and protested as the course of human disparity, globalization has become the controversial term of our era. Defined as the process by which corporations and institutions operate on a global scale, the effects of economic globalization continue to verify both positions. But if this trend is evolving into an inevitable reality, a unified direction may be the only way to global success.
by Jana Ritter, October 8, 2002

How to do an E-mail newsletter
E-mail newsletters are one of the most popular vehicles for connecting with your target audiences, attracting visitors to your website, and ultimately enticing more people to do business with you. Like the corporate website itself, the e-newsletter is becoming a staple of e-marketing.
by Joanna Piros & Bruce Rozenhart October 1, 2002

Brave New Economics
Hold all the Earth Summits you want, we'll never achieve sustainable development without developing new economics that value natural capital
by David J. McGuinty September 24, 2002

The sooner we grasp the labour shortage issue, the better.
It was encouraging to learn in a report by the Canadian Labour and Business Centre that there is no longer a debate about whether Canada will be facing a skills shortage in the foreseeable future
by Dr. David E. Bond. September 10, 2002

Cubed: Life in a goldfish bowl
Cubicle life can easily cause tension and strife in the office. Facing the prospective hell of sitting next to an unseen individual with the laugh of a slightly nervous hyena, or the assault on your nostrils from the overpowering onion/curry/sausage aroma of your neighbour's hot lunch, how do you get through the days, weeks, months, and years?
by Mario Cacciottolo. August 13th, 2002

Asian Business Roundup
Headlines: Samsung leads brand value growth, Cathay wants China routes, The Big Mac tumbles in Japan, China telecom hopes to float in sinking industry, Nike reduces Indonesian production.
by Jim Plouffe. August 13th, 2002

East and West: Strategic management
'We' vs. 'Me'. Your business, be it local or global, can achieve dramatically increased productivity and an improved workplace atmosphere through the creation of a management strategy that combines the best aspects of eastern and western culture.
August 6th, 2002

Continuing Education
Forty years ago, it was said that the store of human knowledge would double within our lifetime. In fact, it is now doubling every two years. This is a daunting fact—no one can know it all—and many of us cannot access much of it. It is almost all potentially accessible; one must educate oneself on the basics, and determine how, what, where and why they want access.
July 16th, 2002

Setting up for Success... in Human Resources - Part 2
Part two of two. Our contributing writer and associate, Bathyah Charikar, brings her years of experience in Human Resources into a helpful article on the challenges of setting up an HR function, as well as tips on success for planning and maintaining a strong infrastructure.
July 16th, 2002

Setting up for Success... in Human Resources - Part 1
Part one of two. Our contributing writer and associate, Bathyah Charikar, brings her years of experience in Human Resources into a helpful article on the challenges of setting up an HR function, as well as tips on success for planning and maintaining a strong infrastructure.
July 9th, 2002

Top 10 dot cons
Can you avoid being caught by a scam artist working the web? Not always, but prudence pays. Here are the top 10 dot cons as determined by consumer complaints to the Federal Trade Commission of the US.
July 2nd, 2002

The suit is history
The advent of the dot-com age with its slew of startup companies heralded a new dress code: Casual Fridays became Casual Every Day. It seemed that the suit, an enduring tradition and symbol of professionalism for centuries, had hit the end of the road. However, rumors of its death have been greatly exaggerated.
June 18th, 2002

Just-in-time hiring
There are many unforeseen circumstances that may arise in the normal course of business that can affect your team's productivity or achievement of company goals. Find out how to augment permanent staff with temporary staff to increase productivity and workflow.
June 11th, 2002

Checking up on post-secondary e-learning institutions
In 1834, the University of London became the first higher learning institution to offer degrees without classroom attendance requirements. Today, with the expansion of the Internet and advancement in technology, greater options in distance learning have evolved. New technology makes online learning flexible, versatile, and in some ways more effective than traditional methods.

Creating a "Sick Free" Work Environment
With corporate restructuring becoming widespread, you may find yourself faced with the difficult challenge of having to manage shrinking departments and increased employee workloads. The result is that employee attendance becomes more crucial to the function of business operations. A key strategy for reducing sickness related absences is to implement proactive responses. Following are suggestions and strategies to help you overcome this increasingly common problem.

Special Feature: Commonly used keyboard shortcuts
Knowing a few keyboard shortcuts is invaluable if your mouse suddenly becomes inoperable. They will save you time and could reduce your risk of carpal tunnel syndrome.

Loonie loyalty has its rewards
Canada's dollar is not as weak as it seems. So don't worry, be happy, go shopping, says labour economist Jim Stanford.

Human Resources: Employee Assistance Programs
Can we really "leave it" at the office or at home? Most probably not, so when an employee is experiencing problems, chances are some of "it" will translate into low work performance or absenteeism.

Employee Satisfaction Relieves Stress
It seems like everything about life has accelerated. Personally and professionally, it's getting harder and harder to slow down enough to catch one's breath. With everyone feeling more pressure, it's clear that stress is affecting the bottom line of every business across the globe, costing an estimated $8 billion annually in Canada alone.

The 20 Activities The Top 2% of Sales Performers Do – and Do Well
Those individuals wanting and needing to be in the top 2% take charge of their own destiny. What do they do? Read on.

Special: The 'Scary Times' Success Manual
Transforming current anxieties and fears into strategic growth, progress, and achievement.

Barrelling over the falls
The Great Technology Bear Market has shocked millions of investors and pushed the global economy towards recession. To veteran market observers, this is just the most recent example of the most dreaded of all financial events, the Triple Waterfall.

Banner ads not reaching market
Bad news is out for online advertisers. Recent figures estimate that more than 99 percent of all banner ads don't get clicked. eMarketer also say that the percentage of Web users who never look at banners rose to 49 percent from 39 percent last year.

One for all, and all for golf
In the not too distant past, golf was a game reserved for the mostly rich, mostly white and mostly male.

The retreat of the blob
After decades of dumping and fingerpointing, Thunder Bay is winning back its harbour by turning 13,000 cubic metres of creosote muck into useful wetlands.

Tailor made for casual wear
Events of the last few weeks are suggesting changes around the office as it appears men in suits are disappearing. Lindsay Wood investigates.

Beyond the oxymoron: can business ethics pay?
Ethics is primarily concerned with what we ought to do. Trust is a pervasive element of social functioning. Trust is also largely independent of notions of contract. Cicero focuses upon this very practical question of what we ought to do when what is right and what is advantageous or profitable conflict with each other.

Call centre spending increasing
The call centre is set to become even more ubiquitous in Britain, despite the fact that studies show over two percent of the UK's (and indeed Europe's) population are already employed in the call centre industry.

Downsizing is bad for business
A research paper, published recently in the influential Journal of the Royal Economic Society, will finally downsize downsizing.

Charities work for disabled workers
Charity, so the proverb goes, begins at home. But in the case of organisations like Goodwill Industries and The Galt Foundation, it seems to have spread much further than the doorsteps of benevolent citizens.

Choosing a Charity
Choosing a charity or a cause to donate to is a very rewarding experience. Once you have decided where your interests lay - cancer research, youth advancement, academic study - the list is endless, then the easiest thing to do is write a cheque.

Women with their modems running
There are no celebrity endorsers at digital-women.com. Nor are you likely to trip over any media moguls or conglomerates on your way in. Yet despite this fact, digital-women.com is one of the most highly regarded women's sites on the Internet today.

Developing warehouses to meet e-commerce orders
In 1996, companies raced to launch websites. In 1997, the challenge was to keep them up and running. In 1998, online transactions became the new thing. In 1999, the overwhelming hurdle was in on-time order fulfillment. The reality of virtual reality is in bricks and mortar.

Endowment brings empowerment
"Endowment is crucial to becoming a premier institution of higher education." So says Alan G. Merten, President of George Mason University. The last decade was certainly a profitable era for university endowments, thanks to investments made in a stable economic climate. Colleges and universities currently possess in excess of $150 billion in endowment assets.

Alliances "falling short"
Companies are joining forces like never before, but most corporate alliances fail to accomplish their goals, a new study shows. The study, which involved a survey of 323 senior executives from around the world and interviews with another 400, found that 61 percent of alliances deliver disappointing results or fail altogether.

Giving on Internet Time
"An income of $50,000 per annum! By this time two years I can so arrange all my business so as to secure at least $50,000 per year. Beyond this never earn-make no effort to increase fortune, but spend the surplus each year for benevolent purposes." -Andrew Carnegie, writing in his diary

Home-working has its challenges
Telecommuting, or home-working, sounds ideal. But is life without commuting as good as it sounds? Lindsay Wood looks into the stresses involved with working from the home office.

Internet calls can be costly
Ryan Faulks thought his family would save a little money by signing up for free Internet access. He was wrong.

"Cyber-venting" on the Internet
"Hey! Whiny bosses! ... if you want your entry deleted, you must allow 48 hours AND fill out this form ... Thank You, The Gang at MYBOSSSUCKS.COM."

Investing for women on the Net
The New York Times, in 1995, reported a National Association of Investors Corp. (NAIC) study that found, since 1980, all-women clubs have earned higher returns than all-men clubs. And the number of women-only clubs has continued to grow.

Loves labours lost through stress
Workplace wellness in the 21st century is a serious issue. Today's employees face unprecedented challenges to their well-being, and employers who want to boost the bottom line must act to tackle negative forces such as workplace stress.

Managing your credit
Credit scores can be the scarlet letter or golden halo that follows you around from the day you get a credit card to the day you send in your last mortgage payment, largely because these scores affect an overwhelming number of today's lending decisions.

The Moo Moo Thing
Plowing the land and surfing the Internet, today's farmers are going global. Lindsay Wood reports

Small Investors Boost Online Trading
Perhaps the most striking feature of these 10 years of astounding stock market performance was the emergence of the small investor.

Regional accents can hurt job opportunities
Does how you talk hold you back at work? Or prevent job seekers' from getting work? Can someone's accent even affect the type of job they get? Lindsay Wood investigates.

Some buildings could be hazardous to your health
A World Health Organization report suggests that as many as 30 percent of new and remodeled buildings worldwide may generate excessive complaints related to indoor air quality. In a nationwide random sampling of office workers, 24 percent perceived air quality problems in their work environments, and 20 percent believed that their work performance was hampered accordingly.

Open your eyes before you close a sale
Type 'auction' into your search engine and stand back. There is a whole plethora of sites where you'll find anything from antiques to professional cleaning services available to the highest bidder. Some sites are highly specific, such as Yahoo's archery auction site to be found within www.auctions.yahoo.com, and www.ccbid.com which caters for the global Christian community.

Poor people? Surely not here?
College campuses' have been the voices of many political movements, such as civil rights, the Vietnam War, and the anti-apartheid protests. While these protests were known for their volume the newest concern, sweatshop labor, is gaining ground among college students.

TV-style commercials pop-up on the web
You might not have ever heard of interstitials. They account for only about three percent of U.S. Internet ad revenue, far behind banner ads' 58 percent, according to International Data Corp. But advertisers are looking for more effective ways to get their messages across.

Investing your money with your heart
Social investing is one of the most powerful emerging trends in society today. Actually its more than a trend, its a wave which may one day deposit us on the shore of a better future. "Social investing" describes the integration of personal values and societal concerns into investment decision making.

Old PCs toxic in landfill sites
Landfill and incinerator facilities are often the final resting-place for electronic waste. Computers, cell phones, electronic games, television sets - are piling up with increasing rapidity, ready to be burned or buried. But are you aware that these leftover gadgets are loaded with toxins that can leak into the groundwater or produce carcinogens and toxins?

Exposing the limits of thinkable thought
In societies that like to call themselves open and free, liberty is usually defined in contrasting terms. State propaganda and indoctrination, for example, are said to be exclusive characteristics of unfree or totalitarian states at both ends of the ideological spectrum.

Thirtysomething women take the lead
Forget the boardroom boys and macho managers, Lindsay Wood looks at research that reveals young women supervisors are the best bosses.

Stock Screeners: finding the next hot stock
Investing, like most other things, requires that you have a general philosophy about how to do things in order to avoid careless errors. Many quantitative analysts use "screens" to select their investments, meaning that they use a number of quantitative criteria and examine only the companies that meet these criteria.

Workplace childcare centers increasing in numbers
Great news for working parents. On-site, corporate-sponsored childcare - once thought of by employers as an expensive liability -- is on the increase.

Virtual votes may lead to increase in count
The stage has been set for the 2000 elections. Television programs are interspersed with ads by candidates, debates are being scheduled and placards and bumper stickers adorn front yards and cars.

Vouchers let workers choose
Frustrated with managed care and concerned over pending health care legislation, U.S. companies are interested in a new approach to delivering health care.

The way of a will
One of the main difficulties with creating a will is facing up to your own mortality. Planning who inherits what from your estate can be awkward enough, but imagining life for your family without you can be enough to make people put off the will-making process. This, however, can lead to many problems in the event of a death.

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