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Write You - The Era of 'Finger in the Air' Publication Strategies is Almost Over
What Can an Employee Handbook Do For Your Small or Mid-Sized Business? ff your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered.It is likely that your company already has many rules and regulations that are in effect for its employees. Whether or not it's acceptable to smoke in the building, where and when employees are allowed to eat lunch, and even as simple as what time the employee should report to work each day, there are many rules that most of the employees already know.There may also be many other rules and regulations your company has that perhaps the employees are not as familiar with, and this means that each time an issue arises, the owner, the human resources director, or a manager has to figure out what these rules are as you go along.On top of all the above, there may be laws at the federal, state, and local level with which your company is required to be in compliance, and perhaps you or your employees aren't even aware of them. An employee handbook that is researched and properly formatted and written will help Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. Prin Should We Believe the Experts? (Part I) Somewhere in most organisations is a cupboard. Inside that cupboard is stack after stack of boxes. Inside those boxes are publications – brochures, annual reports, textbooks, manuals or the like – whose only purpose seems to be gathering dust. Sound familiar? It doesn’t have to be that way, says Iain Plunkett of on-demand specialist, The Garret.D. W. Griffith is regarded by many as one of the greatest filmmakers of all time. More than anyone of the silent era, he recognized the potential of movies as an expressive medium. During that time, his achievements were momentous. In 1915 he finished the feature “Birth of a Nation,” regarded as the first masterpiece of cinema. In 1919 he finished the movie “Intolerance” (1919), which marked a new standard in filmmaking. His next two movies, “Broken Blossoms” (1919) and “Way Down East” (1920), sealed his reputation as America’s preeminent director. According to James Agee, "To watch his work is like being a witness to the beginning of melody, or the first conscious use of the lever or the wheel; the emergence, coordination, and first eloquence of language; the birth of an art: and to realize that this is all the work of one man." The great silent movie actor Lillian Gish called him "the father of film" and Ch I once stood with a company director in front of his own particular cupboard. He wanted to show me his current annual report. ‘We have a few copies in here,’ he said. His feeling of dread before opening the cupboard was palpable. Sure enough, we were faced by a wall of cardboard. A few had miraculously become a few hundred or even a few thousand. You could say it was a product of poor planning. But, more accurately, it was a product of an organisation trying to get the best possible price for producing their publication while not being able to predict demand. He, and his company, are certainly not alone. The price of prediction As with every other sphere of life, communication is the key to business. The more effectively you communicate, the more successful you’re likely to be. Stop communicating and you’re likely to disappear. But, there’s a cost associated with getting your information to the right people. When it comes to printed material that has always been an upfront cost. You have had to tie up a significant amount of capital in the publications you produced. Moreover, unless you had an incredibly well-defined target audience, you’d have to make an ‘educated guess’ about how many people would actually want the piece. When you have experience of the area – via the demand for similar publications in the past, for instance – you could get close to the correct amount to produce. However, I’m afraid 100% accuracy is incredible luck rather than planning. Even member-based organisations, such as trade associations where the size of the target readership is clearly understood, can’t be sure that every member will require a copy or estimate the number of non-members that will request it. If that’s the best case scenario, what about marketing communications or supporting technical material created for a new product launch? Even with the very best market research, demand is not guaranteed. You are going to have to rely on a degree of prediction – accept a degree of risk. Put your money where your mouth is and accept the fact that there will be some level of wastage. Turning the tables Here’s an idea: only print a publication as it’s required. Print as few as one copy at a time. Like many other parts of business, make your communications on-demand. For the first time, you can make prediction a thing of the past. If you know there are 10,000 people waiting for the piece then print 10,000. If you’re not sure there’s anyone then don’t print any. In both cases as demand grows, you can easily react. Advances in technology mean that the item resides on a server until needed, goes straight to press and out to the recipient; be that a customer, student, employee or partner. Moving from prediction to demand-based publication strategies also takes the pressure off your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered. Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. BT Glows While the Royal Post Offices are Shut Down rganisation trying to get the best possible price for producing their publication while not being able to predict demand.Within a six year period Sir Christopher Bland managed to turn around the fortunes of a then ailing BT into a possible global player in the telecoms arena. His applause during the presentation of the latest figures is well deserved. He truly took a dead government department and pushed it into a new age business.So what happened to the Post Office? Nothing, of course, but that is not the point. Of course BT was operating in an environment of telecoms which was poised to take advantage of innovation such as the internet, to move forward. Well, yes and no. Things could have been different at the creaking old telephone service operator. After all there was mobile as well as the internet competing with the standard fixed line operator.So what happened here then. Instead of feeling threatened, BT under the leadership of Sir Bland, took on broadband and integrated communication services and made it its own. He, and his company, are certainly not alone. The price of prediction As with every other sphere of life, communication is the key to business. The more effectively you communicate, the more successful you’re likely to be. Stop communicating and you’re likely to disappear. But, there’s a cost associated with getting your information to the right people. When it comes to printed material that has always been an upfront cost. You have had to tie up a significant amount of capital in the publications you produced. Moreover, unless you had an incredibly well-defined target audience, you’d have to make an ‘educated guess’ about how many people would actually want the piece. When you have experience of the area – via the demand for similar publications in the past, for instance – you could get close to the correct amount to produce. However, I’m afraid 100% accuracy is incredible luck rather than planning. Even member-based organisations, such as trade associations where the size of the target readership is clearly understood, can’t be sure that every member will require a copy or estimate the number of non-members that will request it. If that’s the best case scenario, what about marketing communications or supporting technical material created for a new product launch? Even with the very best market research, demand is not guaranteed. You are going to have to rely on a degree of prediction – accept a degree of risk. Put your money where your mouth is and accept the fact that there will be some level of wastage. Turning the tables Here’s an idea: only print a publication as it’s required. Print as few as one copy at a time. Like many other parts of business, make your communications on-demand. For the first time, you can make prediction a thing of the past. If you know there are 10,000 people waiting for the piece then print 10,000. If you’re not sure there’s anyone then don’t print any. In both cases as demand grows, you can easily react. Advances in technology mean that the item resides on a server until needed, goes straight to press and out to the recipient; be that a customer, student, employee or partner. Moving from prediction to demand-based publication strategies also takes the pressure off your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered. Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. Prin How to Share Important Documents in a Spam-Free Environment lly want the piece.An extranet is a web-based tool that provides a secure environment for the organization and exchange of documents and information among a defined group of users.Extranets are often used to support team collaboration in circumstances where the team members are geographically dispersed or are drawn from variety external organizations. Examples include a group of departments within a company that collaborate on a common project, or service companies that collaborate with a variety of outside clients, customers and partners.Access to the extranet requires a valid password with username. The permissions given to your unique username by the network administrator determines which part of the extranet you can have access to. Thus, an extranet allows you to share important documents, exchange information and conduct online collaborations in a secure environment, free from spam and un-authorized access.Sp When you have experience of the area – via the demand for similar publications in the past, for instance – you could get close to the correct amount to produce. However, I’m afraid 100% accuracy is incredible luck rather than planning. Even member-based organisations, such as trade associations where the size of the target readership is clearly understood, can’t be sure that every member will require a copy or estimate the number of non-members that will request it. If that’s the best case scenario, what about marketing communications or supporting technical material created for a new product launch? Even with the very best market research, demand is not guaranteed. You are going to have to rely on a degree of prediction – accept a degree of risk. Put your money where your mouth is and accept the fact that there will be some level of wastage. Turning the tables Here’s an idea: only print a publication as it’s required. Print as few as one copy at a time. Like many other parts of business, make your communications on-demand. For the first time, you can make prediction a thing of the past. If you know there are 10,000 people waiting for the piece then print 10,000. If you’re not sure there’s anyone then don’t print any. In both cases as demand grows, you can easily react. Advances in technology mean that the item resides on a server until needed, goes straight to press and out to the recipient; be that a customer, student, employee or partner. Moving from prediction to demand-based publication strategies also takes the pressure off your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered. Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. Prin Article Marketing 101 where your mouth is and accept the fact that there will be some level of wastage.The greatest thing about marketing your product or service using articles is that it is free. Free traffic is always good traffic. Every internet marketer who wants to drive traffic to their website should use this service. Whether you are just a newbie or already an experienced marketer, you will definitely benefit from using this tactic. Here is how it works.1. You write articles providing useful information and related to the product/service that you want to promote on your website. 2. Distribute these articles to top ranking article distributors. Search Google to find them, there are tons of these. 3. Near the bottom of the article, there is something called an “Author Resource Box”, some sites called it by other names such as Signature (Sig). You can provide a description of your product/service here. Most websites will allow you to add a hyperlink to your own site. Also, give visitors a gift, Turning the tables Here’s an idea: only print a publication as it’s required. Print as few as one copy at a time. Like many other parts of business, make your communications on-demand. For the first time, you can make prediction a thing of the past. If you know there are 10,000 people waiting for the piece then print 10,000. If you’re not sure there’s anyone then don’t print any. In both cases as demand grows, you can easily react. Advances in technology mean that the item resides on a server until needed, goes straight to press and out to the recipient; be that a customer, student, employee or partner. Moving from prediction to demand-based publication strategies also takes the pressure off your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered. Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. Prin Record Management ff your cupboards. There is simply no need to be stockpiling those boxes. No need for the publications to spend a life of forlorn darkness. Fulfilment can be handled at the point of print. All you need to know is that there is acceptable turnaround between an item being requested to it being delivered.Record Management is the practice of identifying, classifying, archiving, preserving, and sometimes destroying records. There is an International Standard on records management, ISO 15489: 2001. This defines record management as, "The field of management responsible for the efficient and systematic control of the creation, receipt, maintenance, use and disposition of records, including the processes for capturing and maintaining evidence of and information about business activities and transactions in the form of records".The ISO defines a record as "information created, received, and maintained as evidence and information by an organization or person, in pursuance of legal obligations or in the transaction of business". It is a distinct piece of recorded information derived, accumulated or received in the preliminary, execution or completion of an activity and that constitutes sufficient composition, signifi Doing the maths Of course, to state that the ability to print on-demand is a new thing is slightly misleading. You have always had the ability to print one copy at a time. It’s just that the cost would have been so astronomical, no sensible person would have considered it. What’s changed is simply that short run and single copy printing has become cost-effective. Not for everything but for enough of your communications to make it worth doing the maths prior to any project. Printing 20,000 copies will always mean that the unit cost is less than printing a single copy. But what if you end up with 6000 unwanted copies? What does that do to your figures? And, it’s not just straight print costs. There is that horrible phrase ‘Total Cost of Ownership’ to consider. What are your storage costs? How do you handle a request for information? Who despatches the information when it’s requested? How do they do it? How long does that take? Is that their job or is it a distraction from their proper business role? More importantly, are you putting a financial cost against this time and effort? Coming out of the closet Back in the cupboard, the director rips open a box and proudly hands me a copy of his annual report. Glossy, well designed, very professional. I start to flick through the pages. “Don’t pay too much attention to that,’ he says. ‘Most of it is out of date.’ 10 reasons to go on-demand: 1. Print as few as one copy: Using advances in digital technology, it is possible and economical to print in single copies. This reduces the need to produce publications in bulk. 2. Print only when required: There is no need to try to estimate demand prior to printing. The publication can be printed only as it is required. This virtually eliminates inventory and stock control issues. 3. Release limited budget: By reducing upfront investment, organisations can free up capital for other projects. In fact, if the publication is for sale, the customer covers all costs prior to printing. 4. Keep publications up-to-date: Many publications begin to lose value as soon as they are printed. By creating publications on-demand, they can be updated as required so that the publication is always correct when printed. 5. Keep publications in print: Rather than retiring publications when the stock is depleted or order a reprint knowing demand will be small, an organisation can keep the publication on the system indefinitely – creating a virtual warehouse. 6. Reduce production timescales: Developments in publishing systems allows the creation of unique templates that speed page lay-out. Once ready, the digital file goes straight to press reducing the time taken to produce the publication. 7. Explore new publishing opportunities: By reducing the cost and eliminating the need for a large inventory, organisations can develop publications where there is only a small target readership – even a readership of one. 8. Relieve the despatch headache: Many organisations end up fulfilling requests for publications internally. This is time-consuming and can easily become a hidden cost of providing information. An on-demand service can take care of this without the expense of employing a mailing house. 9. Work closely with partners: Using an on-demand approach makes it more efficient and cost-effective to provide materials to partners and suppliers. An organisation can make a publication available for partners to amend and print while maintaining control. 10. Superior customer service: Some organisations have cancelled publications or offered PDF-only versions in order to control costs. However, ma
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