Aunty B


I’m scared my start-up is going to fail. Help!
News imageFigures show that most start-ups continue in business and the bigger they get, the more successful they are.

Latest Features


How to make your product compelling
Tom McKaskill If you want to drive high growth, you need to offer something which customers have to have. Here's how to do it.

How will your sector fare in 2009-10?
James Thomson We reveal the 10 fastest growing industries for 2009-10 and examine how the big sectors will fare in the new financial year.

Welcome to the new tax year
Terry Hayes There are big changes involving super, depreciation and travel allowances under new tax laws that came into effect on July 1.

Entrepreneur Zone


How the iPhone rescued me
Patrick Stafford News imageThe extraordinary popularity of iPhone Apps has helped protect Melbourne game developer Firemint from the worst of the downturn.

Keeping fit to grow
Amanda Gome News imageFernwood founder Diana Williams explains how she has survived the downturn by carefully managing her brand and working with franchisees.

Maverick goes mainstream
Amanda Gome News imageCrikey founder Stephen Mayne’s talks about the future of online media and explains how his new website doubles as a marketing tool.

Going green for growth
Patrick Stafford News imageImproving customer service is one key strategy that green publisher Katie Patrick is using to navigate the downturn.

The optimising optimist
Amanda Gome News imageIBISWorld’s Phil Ruthven believes Australia will soon enter a golden age. He talks about succesion, customer loyalty and starting new businesses.

Stretching for a big goal
Patrick Stafford News imageTristan White has built The Physio Co into an impressive business, but people problems still keep him up at night.

Villa & Hut's tipping point
Amanda Gome News imageFounder Franz Madlener explains why he sold his business and the challenges he faced taking it from a small to medium sized business.

Striking the right idea
Patrick Stafford News imageHow the founders of mobile accessories company Strike Group went from failed inventors to focussed entrepreneurs.

Singing the praises of creativity
Amanda Gome News imageTania de Jong is a trained opera signer and entrepreneur who has managed to combine for-profit ventures with social entrepreneurship.

Bright Lights, Geek City
Patrick Stafford News imageYoung IT entrepreneur David Hancock won’t let the downturn put a dampener on his plans for domination. Just don’t call him a geek.

The digital native
Amanda Gome News imageDion Appel's Lifelounge Group knows the youth market backwards, and has essential engagement tips for all businesses.

Keeping business cooking
James Thomson News imageSilverChef's Allan English has used the 'rent, try, buy' model to help hospitality businesses while helping his own.

Wotif's search for growth
Amanda Gome News imageWotif principal Robbie Cooke talks about the tourism industry and his business's strategic downturn initiatives.

Coopers toasts supply success
Tim Treadgold News imageTim Cooper needed more then premium beer. It took better supply chain management to keep his brewery growing.

A recession-busting strategy
Amanda Gome News imageDarrell Wade explains how he has restructured to survive the recession, and why he's selling 20% of Intrepid.

Smart Blogs


Boss Lady

Time to get aggressive
Amanda Gome News imageThe next six months are a crucial time to be aggressively attacking the marketplace. You need to start now to get those order books filled up for 2009/10.

The Futurist

Go the extra mile for your customers
Colin Benjamin News imageExpect to be asked for smaller orders, delayed orders, faster response times and requests to carry more costs to end customers.

Get Out Of My Way

10 Questions to test your scruples
Naomi Simson News imageHere are 10 questions to test how scrupulous you are or if there are grey areas.

Ask the Experts


Online sales

Why has my site’s Google rank dropped from 1st to 2nd ?
Chris Thomas News imageBy checking a competitor's back-link strategy you'll soon get an idea if they are using any dirty SEO tricks.

Executive Coach

Should a manager go into the personal issues of an employee?
Tim Sharp News imageBosses can learn to diplomatically and compassionately broach personal issues, ensuring staff get help when needed.

Top 10 office faux pas... Electric car gets closer... P*rn loses appeal... Tourism called on to fight climate change

Print

 

Top 10 office faux pas

Businessweek has put together a list of the top 10 social no-no’s to avoid in the office:

  1. BlackBerry addiction : surreptitiously checking an email on your BlackBerry while in a meeting or while someone is talking to you doesn’t work. Everybody can see you’re doing it, and it’s not polite.

  1. Lunch snootiness: if you want to have a private lunch with a workmate, send them an email and meet them off-site. If you want to shout the invitation across a crowded office, be prepared to invite everyone.

  1. Some things shouldn’t be done in the office: brushing your hair or applying a bit of lippy is fine – but flossing your teeth, tweezing your eyebrows or clipping fingernails at your desk is just not on. Ever.

  1. Money talk: serious talk about wages and conditions is fine, but gratuitous bragging about the huge and very expensive boat you just bought with your new pay rise is not.

  1. Avoid email spam: “reply all” is an email function that should be used with the utmost discretion. If you feel like sharing you’re oh-so-witty retort to someone’s email with the office – don’t.

  1. Keep your dodgy schemes to yourself: what you do in your own time is your own business, fine. But asking your workmates to tell your significant other that you were away at a work event that weekend when you weren’t, that’s going too far.

  1. Office campaigning is out: people don’t need to be hassled to support your political or religious cause. If they’re interested, they’ll ask.

  1. Offer advice sparingly: nothing is more annoying that superior sounding, un-asked for advice. Say something if your workmate is about to make a huge blunder, but otherwise keep your views to yourself – unless, of course, it’s your job to give advice.

  1. Tone down the scent: a little something is fine, but vast clouds of the latest pungent smelling deodorant actually count as office pollution.

  1. No yelling: The oldest, simplest and most important rule. Yelling is for cave men, or when you’re warning someone they’re about to get run over by a bus. That’s it.

 TOP OF PAGE

The infrastructure’s coming, but where are the electric cars?

Electric vehicles may no longer be pie-in-the-sky, thanks to US entrepreneur Shai Agassi, who plans on creating a network of battery-charging stations in the US, Europe and the developing world.

Agassi is leaving the manufacturing of the cars up to the auto experts and green car developers like Tesla, but in the New York Times , the Silicon Valley technologist talks about his new system to sell electricity on a subscription basis and subsidise vehicles through leases and credits.

Agassi’s idea may be ahead of the times for our little corner of the world. Electricity-propelled cars aren’t in Australia yet, with the automakers citing high cost, lack of infrastructure and poor battery technology, but they may become more viable as the price of petrol rises.

 TOP OF PAGE

Online Gen-Ys prefer socialising to s*x

Thank goodness someone is restoring standards after the downward slide we saw under those morally decadent baby boomers. According to Hitwise figures reported by Time , p*rn, which in general comes in first or second (after search engines like Google) in these kinds of surveys, tumbles down the list of most viewed content by Gen-Ys.

Instead, the study found, Gen-Ys spend the biggest chunk of their online time perusing social networks like Facebook and MySpace. Search engines come in second, then web-based email, with p*rn all the way down the list at number four.

Interestingly, according to Hitwise, a study of viewing figures for the last two years shows that as visits to social networks have gone up, visits to adult sites have declined – in fact, visits to p*rn sites have dropped from 16.9% of all site visits in the US in October 2005 to 11.9% as of last week, a 33% decline. Seems Gen-Ys get their kicks more from chatting than online voyeurism.

 TOP OF PAGE

Tourism not necessarily going under as the ocean rises

You might want to get away from it all over Christmas, but climate change isn’t going away and the tourism industry will suffer just as much as any other, reports Canadian newspaper Globe and Mail .

A recent international conference on the global challenge revealed tour operators who don’t own infrastructure and are flexible to respond to clients will cop the least, while communities and tourism operators with large investments in fixed infrastructure will suffer more.

A United Nations World Tourism Organisation report calls for operators in the tourism sector to take charge in overcoming climate change.

TOP OF PAGE

Read more on:
Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
You must be logged in to post a comment. Please register if you do not have an account yet.

busy
 

SmartCompany Newsletter

SmartCompany Newsletter News and advice for business owners and managers every weekday at lunchtime.

The Fair Work Act

FREE Webinar

Implications for your business on the new workplace relations changes.

Our Partners