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Las Hallacas de Ramon Francisco Esteves (hallacas al whisky)

Las hallacas project Executive Producer Gustavo Adolfo Higuerey Gonzalez

INFORMATION BELOW: Pinnacle Electrical — 1st Place Team Members: Kelly Kennamer — President – 4th Semester Professional Program Alex Behringer — Project Executive – 4th Semester Professional Program Bentley Windle — Senior Estimator – 4th Semester Professional Program Drew Scott — Project Manager – 4th Semester Professional Program Wesley Sims — Professional Engineer — 3rd Semester Professional Program Bradley Clark — Project Superintendent – 4th Semester Professional Program Shadow: Brent Smith — 3rd Semester Professional Program Coaches: Mark Tatum, PE

Colorado Clean – Air Clean Jobs from Xcel Energy

Colorado Clean - Air Clean Jobs from Xcel Energy

A brief explanation of the Colorado Clean Air – Clean Jobs Act, featuring Frank Prager, VP of Environmental Policy, Karen Hyde, VP of Rates and Regulatory Affairs and Steve Mills, Project Executive, Clean Air – Clean Jobs Project.
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Oh No It's The Bully

www.myfoxdfw.com Oh No It’s the Bully is a visual musical expression created by the 4 & 5th grade students at Nathan Adams Elementary within Dallas ISD. The video was created to help stop bullying within schools. It was created over a 6 week period as an after-school project. Executive Producer, Eric Williams www.myfoxdfw.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5

The Cost of Project Conflict

Article by Steven Alston

The Cost of Project Conflict – Business – Productivity

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During my past 24 years of telecommunications experiences, I have often wondered what the real agenda was of some corporate executives. A recent conversation with a former colleague revealed a belief that is widely accepted in his work environment but never openly talked about. This belief is that for some corporate executives, profits are not as important as maintaining the status quo. According to him, these leaders believe that the appearance of ‘being strong’ and ‘in control’ is more important than being responsible to the bottom line. If this is true, then it is one explanation for why one would observe day-to-day decision-making that results in poor company performance.

This was in part the response my former colleague shared with me after I presented the opportunity that my project mediation service provides for removing costly conflict from the work environment. He believes the corporate leaders in question thrive on conflict and use it to improve their position of power within the company structure. The perception is that conflict leads to blame, which triggers organizational restructuring, ultimately resulting in promotion opportunities. After receiving this insight, I decided to evaluate the cost of ‘appearing strong and in control’.

This simulation uses the Dana Measure of Financial Cost of Conflict tool, designed by Dr. Daniel Dana, author of Managing Differences and founder of Mediation Training Institute International.

The simulation is a realistic situation for one (1) project overseen by a corporate executive (Project Executive). The leaders involved in this project are a Project Manager, a Sr. Software Developer, an Operations Manager and an IT Manager. In addition there are two (2) Software Engineers working at the direction of the Sr. Software Developer. A Customer Service Representative, Installer, Specialist and Electronics Technician are all working at the direction of the Operations Manager. A Computer Technician is working at the direction of the IT Manager and an Administrative Assistant is working on behalf of the entire project team. There are a total of 13 people, including the Project Executive. The average compensation used in this simulation is from PayScale, Inc. under United States Telecommunications, updated July 18, 2008.

Assume that an unresolved conflict develops between the Sr. Software Developer and the Operations Manager one month after the project start. This conflict is allowed to persist for 2 months (10 weeks). The conflict is resolved when the Sr. Software Developer leaves the project. Upon leaving, the individual is frustrated and communicates that his skills have been requested on another project. The cost of this conflict as is as follows:

#1: Wasted time: $ 3,772#2: Opportunity cost of wasted time: $ 5,658#3: Lowered job motivation and productivity: $ 189#4: Lost performance due to conflict-related absenteeism: 0#5: Loss of investment in skilled employees: $ 193,866#6: Conflict-incited theft, sabotage, vandalism, and damage: $ 5,389#7: Restructuring around the problem: $ 10,778#8: Health costs: $ 450#9: Degraded decision quality: $ 112,090TOTAL COST of this conflict: $ 332,192This simulation assumes:

Banff experience inspires values project.(Executive Insights)(Roger A. Wentz ): An article from: Association Management Reviews

Banff experience inspires values project.(Executive Insights)(Roger A. Wentz ): An article from: Association Management

Banff experience inspires values project.(Executive Insights)(Roger A. Wentz ): An article from: Association Management

This digital document is an article from Association Management, published by American Society of Association Executives on October 1, 2003. The length of the article is 564 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

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Title: Banff experience inspires values project.(Executive Insights)(R

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