Interest in a wide range of martial arts grows exponentially each year, but few practitioners understand the scientific forces that underlie these arts. The originators of ancient traditional systems intuitively grasped the body mechanics behind their disciplines, and thus were capable of generating
Accountability : Managing for Maximum Results
โ Scribed by Sam Lloyd; Debbie Woodbury; Genevieve Del Rosario
- Publisher
- Course Technology Crisp
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 118
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Subjects
Personnel management. ; Responsibility. ; Supervision of employees.; BUS041000
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
How can busy managers hold employees accountable for results they did or did not achieve? "Keeping Employees Accountable for Results" moves beyond the far-from-ideal annual performance review - which only evaluates what has already occurred, and not what the manager wants to achieve - and shows read
"All managers want to hold their employees accountable for results, but few know how. Moving beyond the far-from-ideal annual performance review - which only evaluates what has already occurred, and not what the manager wants to achieve - "Keeping Employees Accountable for Results" contains checklis
This is a guide to building innovative, creativity-rich organizations through astute and skillful management. Whatever the end goal, this book provides a systematic process for managing focused, usable innovation - without the micro-managing that can stifle creativity. With examples from McDonald's,
INDEXING FOR MAXIMUM INVESTMENT RESULTS <p>Twenty-four years after investment managers decided to implement the S&P 500 indexing strategy, the verdict is in -- indexing is the way to go! The first indexers beat over 99% of all actively managed stock funds. In the last 10 years, funds based on
INDEXING FOR MAXIMUM INVESTMENT RESULTS Twenty-four years after investment managers decided to implement the S&P 500 indexing strategy, the verdict is in -- indexing is the way to go! The first indexers beat over 99% of all actively managed stock funds. In the last 10 years, funds based on th