Showing posts with label shows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shows. Show all posts

Friday, May 17

2 in 10 say manager hurt career, survey shows

2 in 10 say manager hurt career, survey shows
A good boss can help your career. A bad boss? Not so much.

A good boss can make your career, but a bad boss can make your life miserable – and a new survey finds that plenty of Americans have learned that lesson the hard way.

The survey of about 2,000 adults, conducted by Harris Interactive on behalf of the careers website Glassdoor, found that two-thirds of people said their boss had had some kind of impact on their career.

For about half of those people, the impact had been positive and their bosses had helped their careers. For about 20 percent, it had been negative and their bosses had hurt their careers. The remainder said the impact had been neither positive nor negative.

Experts say the results make sense, since other research has shown that being happy with a boss directly influences job satisfaction.

“Immediate bosses have a tremendous impact on both people’s job satisfaction and their careers, for good or bad,” said E. Allan Lind, a professor of leadership at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business.

Your relationship with your boss also is often a good predictor of how well you do at your job.

“People may join an organization because of pay or benefits or a charismatic leader,” said David Grossman, chief executive of the communications and leadership consultancy The Grossman Group. “How long they stay, how productive they are, how content they are, is all about their boss.”

Unfortunately, not all bosses are good at managing people, just as not all workers are good at managing their relationship with their boss.

The most common gripes among those who reported a boss had hurt their career were that their boss had slowed or held back pay raises, promotions and exposure to top management.

Lind, the Duke professor, said one of the strongest predictors of leadership talent is whether bosses share credit for success.

“Some people, when they’re relatively insecure, think, ‘I have to grab all the credit for myself.’ They don’t understand that when your people perform well, you’ll perform well,” Lind said.

That can lead to another big boss mistake: Micromanaging.

Among the people who reported that their boss had helped their career, almost half said their boss had supported collaborative teamwork. That was an even more popular response than things like supporting work/life balance or helping the employee get a promotion.

Lind said it can be really difficult for bosses to delegate tasks to others. Many bosses also have a hard time making sure they are giving serious consideration to other people’s opinions and ideas.

“The challenge for a boss is to not dominate the conversation. That kills the purpose of the team,” Lind said.

Of course, a boss/employee relationship cuts two ways, and there are plenty of things employees can do to make a bad boss relationship better.

One tactic is to think about what is keeping your boss up at night and how you can solve that problem, Lind said.

Grossman said that rather than blaming the boss, workers should spend their energy trying to turn things around. If you want a raise or promotion, tell your boss - but frame it in a way that will help your boss, too.

“Do it in a way that they can see how they will benefit from what (you’re) talking about,” Grossman said.

Of course, some boss relationships just can’t be salvaged. In the last few years, many employees have been asked to do more work with fewer people, and not every boss has done a good job keeping their remaining workers happy.

Many of the people in the survey who said their manager had hurt their career complained that their boss had reduced or eliminated support for maintaining work/life balance.

Even in a tight job market, Grossman said that may be why only 20 percent of the people surveyed said their boss had hurt their career.

“When you work for a bad boss, you don’t work for them very long,” Grossman said.

Thursday, January 5

Survey shows China manufacturing further slow down

BEIJING - China slowed production in December for a second month due to the weak demand between American and European economic problems, a survey Friday showed published.

The latest HSBC purchasing manager index added to growing signs of a burden on manufacturers and exporters in China. You have hit was, by jumping in the global demand and lending curbs, wipe the thousands of companies into bankruptcy, jobs and raise the specter of unrest have driven.

The index for December was 48.7 on a 100-point scale on the numbers below 50 a contraction to indicate activity. It said that companies reported a drop in foreign orders due to slack demand.

"Weakening external demand begins to bite," said HSBC Economist Qu Hongbin in a statement with the survey.

Add the latest data to stabilise growth pressure on Beijing on spending and credit controls and encourage job creation, Qu said to facilitate.

He said "Hard landings should be avoided, as long as measures filter relaxation in the coming months,".

China's export growth went in November for a third month, falling to 13.8 percent of 15.9 per cent in the previous month.

The decline of in global demand has destroyed export-oriented southern coastal regions, where thousands of small companies driven out of business, and the survivors have laid off tens of thousands of workers.

Smaller private companies were tough curbs affected by bank loans cool inflation and a boom in the real estate prices imposed. The Government has promised, State-owned banks give more to help struggling entrepreneurs have but says most of its curbs remains.

Copyright 2011 of the associated press. All rights reserved. This material cannot be published, sent, rewritten or redistributed.

Friday, December 9

American taxpayers get off easy, report shows

By John W. Schoen, Senior Producer

As the GOP presidential candidates rally around the battle cry of the need to cut Americans' taxes, there's fresh evidence of just how heavy that tax burden is. Compared to the rest of the developed world, though, U.S. taxpayers have it pretty easy. 


Of the 34 countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, only Chile and Mexico impose a lower tax burden than Uncle Sam, according to the latest report from the Paris-based grouping of advanced economies.


As politicians from Washington to Athens spar over how to balance federal budgets, the OECD found that the U.S. collects 24.1 cents in taxes for every dollar of gross domestic product.  Mexico's collects just 17.4 percent of its total economic output in taxes; Chile collects 18.4 percent. The average ratio inched up to 33.8 percent in 2009, the latest year available.


The latest data show that Denmark and Sweden continue to hold the top two spots as most heavily taxed.


Since 1995, the U.S. has also been cutting taxes faster than all but five of the 30 countries tracked by the OECD. As a percentage of GDP, U.S. tax revenues fell 3.7 percent from 1995 to 2009. About half of the OECD countries raised taxes during that period. Poland, Ireland, New Zealand, Israel and the Slovak Republic cut taxes more deeply than the U.S.


Overall, tax burdens as a percentage of GDP have stabilized, after falling since the recession of 2007 and the financial Panic of 2008 cut into government revenues. The average tax burden hit 35.2 percent in 2007; the record was set in 2000, when the average burden in the 30 countries surveyed was 35.3 percent of GDP.

Wednesday, September 14

Gender fair shows China's influence in the bedroom

MACAU - sexy lingerie, adult costumes, inflatable dolls, and much more are on display at an adult industry show in the Chinese territory has spread Macau, which shows, such as China's growing influence even to the bedroom.

The fourth annual Asia adult Expo began Friday with companies growing middle class of China's products is sexy. The adult industry is looking to tap mainland China and the Asian markets in the midst of the downturn in the United States and Europe.

Show exhibitors said that many Chinese have sex, now more open-minded views on the demand for their products continues. The Expo organizers said they plan similar exhibitions in other parts of China, which also from almost three-quarters of the worldwide sex toy pitchers, this year to start.

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Estimates of the size of the adult industry in China are difficult to obtain. But the State China daily newspaper said in a report that China produces 70 percent of the world of sex toys, last year, making it the world's largest manufacturer. The industry, with more than 1,000 manufacturers is worth about $2 billion per year, it said.

"The standard of living in China is rising and want to upgrade their lifestyle, so that needs of the market of these products,", said Bo Chen company's main product, when he in addition to samples of his, made a life-size and anatomically correct female sex doll rubbery, flesh-like material that sold for 16,000 yuan ($2,500).

Three years ago decided to begin sex toys, because he felt that it was an opportunity, but Chen owned a chemical factory in the Chinese province of Jiangsu.

Chen, President who Jurong Outlook toys & gifts manufacturing co., said that he and several friends pooled their money to the company for reasons.

He hopes to meet potential customers among 2,500 visitors and 30,000 members of the general public expected at the Macau fair. It was his first visit to the annual show, attended by 80 companies from 13 countries.

Chen's case is not so unusual, said Kenny Lo, Chief Executive of show organizer vertical Expo. Many Chinese manufacturers realized that they were their product lines to adults with minimal investment reap greater profits could optimize. It is decision-makers to sexy lingerie not as a big step for underwear and it is easy for companies to switch to the regular toys, sex toys, he said.

The United States and Europe have traditionally the biggest markets for the adult industry. But there is prohibition growth and competition and low margins are difficult for business life, said Lo slumping economy.

In Asia the market is so "there is much potential for growth," much more undeveloped Lo said. Adult product manufacturers have told him that in America and Europe, "it is a very hard time now, but in China and Asia, it is good."

Lo has said demand from suppliers his Hong Kong based company start with new exhibitions in other parts of China, starting with a show in October in Shenzhen, just across the border from Hong Kong asked branch. It shows in Fuzhou on China's East Coast and Qingdao follows in the Northeast. It is considered also in Taiwan and Singapore.

Other emerging markets are also the sources of growth. Renata Bertacini came from Sao Paulo, Brazil, which source elements for their boutique and online store Mimosexy.

«I have come to import new products from China to Brazil, new things, to find,» she said. Many products were elements, the they already shares, but at half the cost, their intermediaries secure at home for free, they can save money by to buy them directly.

At the Expo, vibrators in all shapes and colors, condoms, lubricants and enlargement were male and female dolls. A company was to sell coffee-tables, the erotic statues from.

"They are the Mainland of Chinese, very open for these sexual things," Lo said. "It is not something a taboo" more.

It is a sign of how new companies drive rapid social change in China. Before some decades men and women were strictly separated in many parts of life and clothing, which reveals little monotonous carried most of the people. There are today, shops, sexual AIDS in many cities and pornography, while officially banned, is often found on the Internet.

Is China is booming, that economy of driving the world's second largest, most part is these changes.

"Many of these people have money of the first generation." Before it was old money, was to show shameful, ", said Zach Goode, sales manager at electric eel, the global license to Hustler lingerie includes."

Now, China's nouveau riche want not only BMW's and Gucci, "they want to express themselves and have sexy shoes and laundry and have fun with him." "You are not so oppressed as the last generation."

Copyright 2011 of the associated press. All rights reserved. This material cannot be published, sent, rewritten or redistributed.

Monday, March 21

Quake shows weak link in global supply chains

The disaster in Japan has a problem with such multinational companies as business suspended: the system they use to roles to keep deliveries is slim and low-cost - still vulnerable to sudden shocks.

Factories, ports, roads, railways and airports in Northern Japan have been shut down or damaged due to one he affected the nuclear power plant in the region. So, auto and technology companies are cut off from suppliers in the disaster zone. Some had to stop or slow production.

"When you're running incredibly slim and you're going global, very prone to errors, become Wheatstone", says Stanley Fawcett, Professor of global supply chain management at Brigham Young University.

The risks are higher, because so many companies keep inventory them low, to save money. You can maintain without new supplies not production for long.

Subaru of America has suspended overtime in the only North American in Lafayette, Indiana Toyota Motor Corp. canceled production overtime and Saturday in their 10 North American plants. The two companies try to save their existing supplies.

The auto plants damaged by the earthquake one was located in Miyagi, providing parts for hybrid batteries in Toyota Prius, Camry and Lexus hybrids. It is unclear if a joint venture between Toyota and Panasonic, start the plant running again.

Story: plant shutdowns expand Japanese automakers

Even companies whose Japanese Lieferanten have escape damage encrypted to ensure, supply lines remain intact. Ford, based on a Japanese plant for hybrid batteries for the merger, the flight and the MKZ hybrid vehicles. This work was damaged in the earthquake. But Ford is transportation in Japan no chance because of the troubles. It is on the lookout for alternative supplies and seeking parts in centrifugal casting process when shipping is finished.

"The whole thing overnight could change", says spokesman Todd Nissen.

Story: Japan crisis could squeeze car world production

Car manufacturers all over the world tried to copy the Japanese car manufacturing system, the so slim and cost-efficient is considered. It is built to close links between Ministry of war car manufacturers and suppliers. But if a kink in this system, known developed line to an entire Assembly as the supply chain shut down within hours.

Toyota says that his 20,000 to 30,000 vehicles contain parts. Most come from about 600 suppliers. And the chain not everything. The 600 suppliers even rely on hundreds of other companies to provide raw materials and components.

Use vehicles for many interchangeable parts - of tubes and pipes, screws and nuts. But thousands of other parts are specifically designed for certain vehicles. Steering wheels, seats and even rear-view mirrors to distinguish from vehicle to vehicle.

"A car if you can create only 98 percent of the parts are," says Fred Hubacker, executive Director of restructuring company Conway MacKenzie in Detroit car. "Many of these parts are high-tech products that are not easily replicated."

The disaster threatens the delivery of Japanese of manufactured chips for consumer electronics, from washing machines to television sets to iPads. Factory shutdown and crippled shipping routes pose a security risk for companies that rely on chips for storing data. Japanese semiconductor Giants Toshiba Corp. and Renesas Electronics Corp. have temporarily closed facilities because of the quake.

The electronics companies, which depend on chips from Japan try that assess depth of supply disruptions. Chip prices have already jumped on fear of shortages. The price for a type of memory chip NAND Flash, often in portable electronic devices, used has called more than 10 percent increased since the disaster, analysts say.

For consumer electronics, supply chains are complex. Some phones have dozens of chips. Apple Inc. iPad requires parts from all over the world. The inside of the device show are how much coordination Apple must have enough parts with suppliers all over the world to ensure.

The Wi-Fi version the iPad uses a Toshiba chip data store, analysis of iFixit.com. The chips, the control communications of Broadcom Corp., in Irvine, California comes memory comes from Samsung Electronics Co., Korea. Texas Instruments Inc., power used for the touch screen a chip in Dallas. The processor is designed by Apple, based in Cupertino, California,

These are only the most important semiconductor guts of the machine. A variety of other chips that do other companies, other things in the iPad: activate the compass, for example, and detect if light the screen hits. All other iPad parts, from the glass touchscreen on the screws and cameras, come from a variety of suppliers.

Toshiba one of the companies was forced, after the quake factories closed. So, it is possible to delay that could disturb the delivery of chips for Apple and iPad shipments.

Apple declined comment. Toshiba representative back not immediately one message from the associated press on Wednesday.

HP new CEO, Leo Apotheker, the AP said that his company's infrastructure in Japan is "more or less intact", but that it takes longer to find out the extent of the damage in its supplier network.

Market research firm IHS iSuppli estimates that Japan is to make world's largest supplier of Silicon of semiconductor chips. Its deliveries around the world form about 60 percent.

Japan is also one of the main suppliers of "wafers", are the building blocks of computer chips.

Barclays Capital wrote in a note to investors, that a lack of large wafer consumers such as Intel, the world's largest semiconductor company and Texas instruments could squeeze analysts.

Multinational companies have built in the last two decades and closely managed supply chains that span the world. These chains associate low-wage factories in countries such as China with offices in Europe, Japan, and the United States. BYU Fawcett says, is highlighted, is "lean and global."

Companies have kept to an absolute minimum cost-cutting supplies. As many have to leave what quickly has "just in-time" deliveries with sales management according to.

But the efficiency conducted a risk: the lean, far-flung supply chains left multinational companies vulnerable to shocks provide. And the shocks come, one after the other.

The 2001 terrorist attacks in New York and Washington froze global transport. The 2003 SARS outbreak production in South China down. In Iceland stopped air traffic in Europe the eruption of the volcano in the last year. And now a Japan disaster unfolds.

Fawcett says that companies begin to completely rethink the wisdom of supply chains that will have to cross oceans. In the middle of the 2000s, he says, some US companies started factories from China after Mexico. There, they could use still cheap labor without fighting with ocean crossings.

He says he suspects the trend - called "in the close sourcing" - more will become after the disaster in Japan popular.

Copyright 2011, the associated press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or distributed.

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