1. IPC
2. CrPC
3. IEA
4. Local laws
5. books - power
some habits i need to develop
6. dale carnegie and robin sharma books - follow in daily life
7 folow 2 min rule
8. not be careless
9.be a doer not a dreamer - start the thing
10. spend time like an athlete - most imp and not urgent , have foresight
11. make a healthy snack box to munch whole day
12. be disciplined stick to your routine and targets :) . you were the best and you are the best!



2. CrPC
3. IEA
4. Local laws
5. books - power
some habits i need to develop
6. dale carnegie and robin sharma books - follow in daily life
7 folow 2 min rule
8. not be careless
9.be a doer not a dreamer - start the thing
10. spend time like an athlete - most imp and not urgent , have foresight
11. make a healthy snack box to munch whole day
12. be disciplined stick to your routine and targets :) . you were the best and you are the best!
Win-Win Negotiation Tips for Managers
As managers, the ability to use win-win negotiation skills can make all the difference in negotiating success. Likewise, it can be essential when influencing coworkers and facilitating constructive, positive relationships. Here are 6 things that managers should think about when preparing for a negotiation.
- Know what you want - As a manager, it's important to go into a negotiation knowing what you want your end result to be. Make sure you put a lot of time and thought into what you want and why you want it. Remember that it is important for you to consider what's in it for you financially, emotionally, intellectually, physically, etc. It also helps to know what you don't want as you go deeper into negotiations.
- Know what your counterpart wants - Your counterpart will also have an agenda when he or she enters the negotiation. Make it a point to understand beforehand what he or she wants the conclusion of this negotiation to be. Understand the financial, emotional, intellectual or physical resolution that he or she is looking to walk away with.
- Anticipate objections - The negotiation process is not always easy. As a manager, you have to understand that you will meet some objections from your employee along the way. You need to prepare yourself for this by doing your due diligence prior to the negotiation. Make sure that you have relevant evidence at your fingertips with which the other party can identify and relate to.
- Identify concessions - Determine your absolute non-negotiable items and desirables and what you are willing to give and take. You are certainly not going to walk away from every negotiation with all of your needs satisfied. Negotiations are all about the give and take, and as a manager you need to be prepared to meet your employee half way.
- Determine your "walk-away" - When you determine your "walk-away," you define the point at which there is no need to proceed with the negotiation. Prior to the start of the negotiations, you must ascertain your own "walk-away" point. This will be your single most important source of negotiating power, so once your "walk-away" point is met, you need to make sure you take action.
- Practice with a partner - As is the case with any important presentation you have ever made, you always want to practice. You could be faced with a difficult discussion and it is always best to make sure you rehearse possible outcomes. By practicing with someone else you will build your confidence with the situation and it will ultimately help the negotiation run as smoothly as possible.
Control Your Stress in the Workplace
Pressure situations are present during both good and bad economic times. However, when times are tough the situations can be magnified. Problems at home can directly influence issues in the workplace. It is important as a manager to recognize that your team might have outside stressors affecting their job performance. It is your job to create an environment that reduces stress and promotes engagement. In a workplace environment like this, employees will be more apt to reach their full potential and drive results. Here are 8 tips to help you and your team control stress and worry in tough situations:
1. Live in a compartment of the present.The professional with a commitment to service seals off each interaction with a customer so that negative experiences don't poison future interactions. Don't allow past successes or failures or future anticipated success or difficulties influence your current performance. When it comes to customer service, live in the moment.
2. Don't fuss about trifles.A "trifle" is something that is insignificant in comparison to other things in your life. When you focus on trifles, you lose perspective. Keep the big picture in mind. Doing so will help you objectively sort out the small stuff from the important issues.
3. Cooperate with the inevitable.Realize when your situation is inevitable. If you can learn to recognize situations where you have no control, you can gain some control over the emotional aspects of the situation. By cooperating with the outcome, you are making a conscious choice about how to respond to an inevitable situation.
4. Decide just how much anxiety a situation is worth and refuse to give it any more of your energy. Once you make this decision, it is easier to find ways you can improve on the situation or let it go and move on.
5. Create happiness for others.This principle appeals to your nobler motives. It is difficult to sustain a negative attitude when you are doing something good or helpful for someone else. Simply put: Doing good for others makes you feel better.
6. Expect ingratitude.In your job, you provide many diverse services. When you do so, you probably expect in return some signal of gratitude for your assistance. This expectation is rarely met. If you do receive heartfelt thanks from someone, you should count yourself lucky; you are dealing with a grateful person. Most people are simply not accustomed to being grateful, even when you provide them with excellent service. You shouldn't let ingratitude deter you from providing top-quality service.
7. Put enthusiasm into your work.Enthusiasm is the positive energy and sustained effort that keeps you driving toward your goals. Making a decision to have a positive outlook can be critical in enjoying your job and working with your internal and external customers.
8. Do the very best you can.It can be difficult to deal with criticism, especially if you feel it is undeserved or if it hurts your self-esteem. One way to put criticism in perspective is to ask yourself if you are doing the very best you can with what you know and are able to do. If you are, then you can avoid taking the criticism personally. If there is room for improvement in your performance, you can look at the criticism objectively and take responsibility for improving your performance.
5 Tips for Conducting a Successful Team Presentation
Now more than ever, business professionals are being asked to give presentations with teams. Everyone on your team must hone their presentation and preparation skills for these types of team presentations to be effective. Professional team presentations involve thorough planning, smooth transitions, logical sequencing of subject material, and the ability to create a coherent professional message. Here are 5 steps your team should follow in order to have a successful presentation.
1) Powerful Opening - Open up with a bang. You want to immediately engage your listeners and set the tone for the presentation. Make sure to plan your statement carefully and deliver a startling statement (statistic or fact) that you can drive home with sincere appreciation.
2) Introduction - After your opening, you should always briefly overview your agenda for the presentation and introduce all the members of the team. There are two different ways you can go about your introductions. The team leader can briefly introduce each member of the team and their respective role in the project, or each person can briefly state their own name and what their role will be in the project.
3) Handoffs - Part of your preparation for the presentation should go towards planning your handoffs. A poor handoff may slow down the flow of your presentation and confuse the audience. To help ease the transition, you should keep to a strict time frame for each speaker and use verbal cues to indicate that the next speaker is coming up: "In a minute, Bob will tell us how the timeline will work." As a presenter, make sure you are listening so that you hear your cue.
4) Team Question and Answer Session - An effectively facilitated question and answer session will leave a lasting and positive impression on your listeners. It is important in a team presentation to plan and prepare for this session. Take some time to predetermine which questions/subjects of questions will be answered by which team member. Also, determine a cue that will let your team members know to add on to your point.
5) Close with an Impact - It is important that you end your presentation on a high note. The closing of your presentation will reinforce the message you want your audience to take away with them. You want to have one person, typically the leader, close for the team. At the conclusion of the closing, make sure that you efficiently gather any materials and equipment that you used.
Time Management Skills Are Stupid. Here’s What Works.
Put the schedule down for a second.
Consider something I read in The Power of Full Engagement: Maybe it’s not about time. It’s about energy.
Energy, not time, is the fundamental currency of high performance.
It’s a qualitative lens instead of a quantitative one. Focusing on your time management skills sounds great but all hours are not created equal.
We’re not machines and the time model is a machine model. Our job isn’t to be a machine — it’s to give the machines something brilliant to do.
Do you accomplish more in three hours when you’re sleep-deprived or in one hour when you feel energetic, optimistic and engaged?
This may sound fluffy but it’s an important perspective to take: 10 hours of work when you’re exhausted, cranky and distracted might be far less productive than 3 hours when you’re “in the zone.”
So why not focus less on hours and more on doing what it takes to make sure you’re at your best?
Work Like An Athlete
For most people, good work happens in sprints, not marathons. Time management skills don’t address that.
Use the analogy of an athlete. They might train for long periods of time but the focus is not on monotonous hours of uninspired grind.
For athletes, it’s a focused explosion of effort followed by rest and planning before another all-out push.
Their entire lives are designed around expanding, sustaining and renewing the energy they need to compete for short, focused periods of time. At a practical level, they build very precise routines for managing energy in all spheres of their lives–eating and sleeping; working out and resting; summoning the appropriate emotions; mentally preparing and staying focused; and connecting regularly to the mission they have set for themselves.Although most of us spend little or no time systematically training in any of these dimensions, we are expected to perform at our best for eight, ten, and even twelve hours a day.
Forget the stereotype of the dumb jock. The athlete metaphor is actually quite good for the modern day worker.
Who is more concerned with results over theory than athletes? Who looks at metrics more than they do?
They aren’t satisfied with inspirational messages or clever theories about performance. They seek measurable, enduring results. They care about batting averages, free-throw percentages, tournament victories and year-end rankings. They want to be able to sink the putt on the eighteenth hole in the final round, hit the free throw when the game is on the line, catch the pass in a crowd with a minute to go on the clock. Anything else is just talk.
The Research Agrees
A lot of research on self-control and willpower aligns with what The Power of Full Engagement says about focusing on the proper use and renewal of energy.
In my interview with Roy Baumeister, author of the New York Times bestseller Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength, he made clear that every decision you make depletes your self-control:
Making choices depletes willpower and afterward your self-control is impaired. If you have people exert self-control and deplete their willpower and later on have them make decisions, then their decision-making is of poor quality.
President Barack Obama makes deliberate efforts to limit decision fatigue so he can devote his mental energy to things that matter:
“I don’t want to make decisions about what I’m eating or wearing,” he told Michael Lewis. “Because I have too many other decisions to make.”
So when you perform different types of work is key.
Do you wake up fresh and renewed — only to respond to thirty depleting emails solving someone else’s problems?
Jealously hoard your prime hours for important work.Respond to email when your brain is already taxed.
It’s Not Just Physical
It’s not merely an issue of physical energy. The book also discusses softer things like relationships, optimism and meaning that bring energy to our work days.
Work metrics get measured and analyzed but we’re terrible about being as accountable in our personal lives — even though the latter can make a huge qualitative difference in performance.
“It’s great to know how to recharge your batteries, but it’s even more important that you actually do it,” Vinod Khosla, a partner at the venture capital firm Kleiner, Perkins, Caulfield and Byers told Fast Company. “I track how many times I get home in time to have dinner with my family. My assistant reports the exact number to me each month. Your company measures its priorities. People also need to place metrics around their priorities…”
Personally, if I don’t schedule significant social time into my weekend, Monday hits me twice as hard. It feels like I never really “got away.”
A 40-hour week after a weekend getaway is quite different from a 40 (or 50) hour week without it.
Research shows vacations increase productivity at work for up to a month afterward. All hours are not the same.
What To Do Next
If you want to work like an athlete, here are things to take into consideration:
- Get enough sleep: Nobody is at their best when exhausted.
- Know your prime hours and use them strategically.
- Time meals and snacks to make sure you have the energy to do solid work and you’re not hungry or sluggish when you need to perform.
- Strategically use rituals that keep you positive and energized. Does social time rejuvenate you? Does a video game session help you relax?
No doubt, time management skills are necessary. But just as with your relationships, “quality time” matters and right now there’s little focus on that.
We’ve become a more, more, more society and occasionally we talk about “working smarter, not harder” – but it’s time to think about how to work better.
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