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Showing posts from September, 2022

FIVERR BUSINESS MANAGEMENT CONSULTANT..

amlendu11 Fiverr Seller SAP Professional, MBA [HR & MARKETING], Entrepreneurship, MIT, US, BTEC [AVIATION,TRAVEL, HOSPITALIT] Edexcel, UK, DIGITAL MARKETING, B.A.PSYCHOLOGY [ CLINICAL, INDUSTRIAL,EDUCATIONAL] With work experience and skills in different business processes and have great and innovative ideas for business

Meet the Steve Jobs of the Megaprojects Industry

  01 The Steve Jobs Archive: 3 Key Lessons From the Inspirational Writings of Apple's Co-Founder More than a decade after his death, Steve Jobs is still inspiring entrepreneurs around the world. At Vox Media's Code 2022 conference, close friends and family members of the business icon and Apple co-founder, including his widow Laurene Powell Jobs, Apple head Tim Cook, and iPhone designer Jony Ive, announced that they had recently launched the Steve Jobs Archive, an online collection of inspirational writings from Jobs.  At the conference, Powell Jobs said that she hoped the Archive could be a "place to draw inspiration from Steve's life and work, spurring new generations to make their own contributions to our common future." Here are three key lessons for life and business from the Archive:  1. Be grateful for those around you  In an email Jobs sent to himself in September of 2010, a year before his death, he acknowledged his dependence on those around him, writing

14 Savvy Ways to Spend Leftover Megaprojects Budget

  01 14 Ways to Spend $1 Trillion Think last year produced a tsunami of red ink for the federal government? Well, a $1.3 trillion deficit is nothing to sneeze at. But the Congressional Budget Office has just come up with an estimate of how much we’ll add to the national debt in Fiscal 2011: $1.5 trillion. That means an extra $1.5 trillion will be piled atop a mountain of national debt that already exceeds $14 trillion. It’s tough for most of us to get our heads around such a colossal number. But, seriously, how much is $1 trillion? To help you wrap your head around that mind-boggling number, and to try to put deficit spending into perspective, we did some mental shopping: See our Slide Show WHAT $1 TRILLIONWOULD BUY $1 Trillion Would Buy:41,999,160 NEW CARS The 2011 Toyota Prius II wins Kiplinger’s Best in Class honors for cars in the $20,000-to-$25,000 price range. At a sticker price of $23,810 each, $1 trillion would let you buy a Prius for about 40% of all American families. $1 Tril

What NOT to Do in the Megaprojects Industry

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  01 What Lies Ahead for the Plastics Industry? Business forecasts are a tricky proposition in the best of times. Within our fraught context, one might consider them fanciful. Still, businesses need some sort of framework to plan for the future. During a press conference announcing the publication of the Plastics Industry Association’s (PLASTICS) 2020 Size & Impact Report, Perc Pineda, PhD, Chief Economist of the association, outlined three possible scenarios for the plastics sector through 2024. It turns out the outlook may not be as dire as you might imagine. The plastics and overall manufacturing sectors historically move in tandem, as shown in Figure 1. Pineda applied that pattern to develop three possible scenarios for the plastics sector in the next three years. In Figure 2 below, the first scenario shows a steep drop in shipments in 2020, as the industry gradually claws back to growth over a three-year horizon. “Assuming there are no major supply disruptions and that aggrega

20 Up-and-Comers to Watch in the Megaprojects Industry

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  01 What to Watch: The 20 Best New Movies and TV Shows From August Here’s a roundup of the month’s most noteworthy movies and TV shows, as covered by The Wall Street Journal’s critics. Bullet Train Brad Pitt doesn’t need to borrow another movie star’s entrance, yet here he struts, shoes-first, into the breakneck caper “Bullet Train,” grooving to a Japanese cover of “Staying Alive” as though he fancies himself the Tony Manero of Tokyo, another likable bum looking to better himself a smidge. This cheeky theft of “Saturday Night Fever” is the director David Leitch’s so-sue-me admission that he’s a cultural magpie. Working off Kôtarô Isaka’s 2010 thriller novel, Mr. Leitch poaches bits of other genre action flicks—katana slice-em-ups, gun-packing British comedies, sunbaked cartel melodramas—and welds them together for a careening contraption that attempts to vault over every gap in its tracks. 02 How Hemel Watches is Changing the Watch Industry and Bringing Historical Timepieces to Averag

15 Things Your Boss Wishes You Knew About Megaprojects

01 20 Things You Should Never Say to Your Boss Office culture has shifted a lot over the years. However, some workplace norms have remained unchanged throughout the decades — like the proper way to address your boss. No matter what field you work in or how close you are to your superiors, there are certain topics and comments you should simply avoid when speaking to the boss. Here are 20 things you should never say to your boss if you hope to advance your career and move beyond living paycheck to paycheck. 6 Unusual Ways Lazy People Are Boosting Their Bank Account 1. I don’t get paid enough There is a time and a place to ask for a raise. You should always be prepared with reasons why you deserve more money before heading into your boss’ office and demanding it. Many of us have had frustrating days at work where we want to tell our employers they don’t pay us enough. But it is best not to make demands during such tense moments. Success in asking for a raise is more likely if you have do

13 Things About Megaprojects You May Not Have Known

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  release lever Ice Cube trays made in Dayton. Ice Cube trays made in Dayton. On July 21, 1959, Arthur J. Frei and Raymond C. Davis received the patent for their innovation with the ice cube tray, described its purpose as a way to “minimize effort on the part of a housewife…” The Pop Top Brady Kress walks through a giant pop-top can which is part of the Dayton Reliable Tool display and a tribute to inventor Ermal Fraze. Brady Kress walks through a giant pop-top can which is part of the Dayton Reliable Tool display and a tribute to inventor Ermal Fraze. Ermal Fraze owned the Dayton Reliable Tool and Mfg. Co. when he invented the pull-top can, which replaced metal-top beverage cans that require a can opener. In 1977 Fraze modified his invention and patented the ‘push-in and fold back tab” to reduce litter and prevent cuts caused by the previous version. The Bar Code An employee at Marsh supermarket in Troy scans groceries in this image from the mid-1970s. The UPC code was scanned for the