Making Yourself More Valuable at Work
Sam Parker from BNET.com sent out a short email primer to subscribers on seven things he believes an employee can do make himself or herself more valuable at work. A friend passed
Bradd C. Hayes is the active editor of this blog.
Sam Parker from BNET.com sent out a short email primer to subscribers on seven things he believes an employee can do make himself or herself more valuable at work. A friend passed
I first wrote about the so-called “innovation gap” back in September 2008 in a post entitled: Another Slowdown to Worry About — Innovation? In that post, I wrote: “Using the word ‘gap’
A recent article in the Los Angeles Times discussed efforts to convince veterans to consider vocations in farming and other food-related businesses [“From swords to plowshares: Introducing military veterans to farming,” by
Last year about this time, I was reporting on the financial hit that the shipping industry had taken as a result of the Great Recession [see Shipping Woes]. The blow was especially
In a number of past posts about the Enterra Solutions® Development-in-a-Box™ approach, I’ve noted the importance of business clusters. In one of those posts, I discussed a concept called “geographical stickiness” in
In brief post about the amount of infrastructure that needs to be built over the next couple of decades [Chart of the day: Buddy, got $40T to spare?], my colleague, Tom Barnett,
As this year’s college graduates desperately search for jobs, New York Times‘ op-ed columnist Thomas Friedman asserts that that the best gift they could be given is a position with a start-up
I have written a couple of posts in the past about innovations in lighting. In a post entitled LED to the Future, for example, I discussed how light emitting diodes (or LEDs)
Last May Enterra Solutions® sponsored a Web seminar entitled “Retailer Compliance: Accentuate the Positive, Eliminate the Penalties.” Consumer Goods Technology (CGT) published highlights from that webinar that I republished in a post
I have noted in past posts that for an idea to become an innovation it must have three components. Put in a mathematical formula it would look like this: innovation = new
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