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Dr Robert LH Lim




Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Reflections towards 2011

As we approach towards the end of 2010, many of us realise we have not grown or achieve much throughout the year. I hear many, including myself say he same thing...."so fast ar.....this year like faster, won;t be long Chinese New Year".
While many of us are really slowing down or even gave up doing anything during this time...it is best to REFLECT what we have achieved, failed, mean to do but have not or appreciate how fortunate we are to have 'some' great people that we can still call friends still around us...today or what we have against what we see people lose daily.

To me year end is not about celebrations, it is about knowing where we are and learning from our achievements and mistakes and being sure of how we want to start and end 2011.
How many of us really do that....it is time to reflect...a time to appreciate the things that we have...the people around us....the life we still have for 2011.
Cheers and have a great 2011.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Monday, July 5, 2010

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

7 key ideas for managing distributed teams - Tech Management - Techguide

How do you manage distributed teams? What is the secret? Find out more at the link below

7 key ideas for managing distributed teams - Tech Management - Techguide

What makes you and your work irresistible?

Many have tried, many have learned and many have failed or succeeded. What do you think is the greatest ingredient of making you irresistible at work?
It is just a four letter word that is closed to our hearts.....go to
to find out more

Wisdom for 2010

Monday, May 3, 2010

Should Employers Block Social websites?

How often we have contradicting replies below from Management and staff alike. Below policies of such nature are set, careful planning and consideration need to be taken. What do you think?
Before you start reacting to soon, see what the expects gotta saw below...

A new report shows that 6.8% of all Internet visits in businesses are going to Facebook. Still, TechRepublic’s CIO Jury says IT shouldn’t block social media.



On April 16, TechRepublic polled its 100-member panel of U.S. IT executives and asked, “Should IT block social networking sites?” The jury, made up of the first 12 respondents, came through with eight “No” votes and four “Yes” votes.

TechRepublic’s CIO Jury is based on the original CIO Jury concept developed by Silicon.com, where you can find lively opinions from IT leaders based in the UK.

This verdict probably surprises most of you — it certainly surprised me — since IT tends to have a reputation for preferring the command-and-control environment of the 1990s, before consumer technologies and Web 2.0 invaded the workplace.

However, there are definitely some nuances to our CIO panel rejecting the idea of filtering social media sites. There’s still a pretty big group of IT leaders who prefer to completely filter all of these sites. And, even among the ones who don’t want to totally filter it, many of them believe in some selective filtering.

The proponents of filtering believe that there’s little to no business value to any of the social media sites, and therefore blocking them is a no-brainer.

“They are predominantly used for non-business activities,” said Matthew Metcalfe, Director of IS for Northwest Exterminating.

“We block all social networking sites. There is no company or work related value in these sites whatsoever,” said Dave Schartel, Director of IT for Home Health Care Management.

“It amounts to misuse of the public’s resources. We’re a public corporation,” said Tim Stiles, CIO of Bremerton Housing Authority.

James Riner, CIO of R & R Images, said, “The risks, both security and perceptual, are far too great to allow unfettered access [to social networking sites] to all employees.  Only those whose job focus is social marketing should be accessing such sites during business hours or from business-owned resources.”

So here’s where it starts to get interesting. Even some of those who believe in blocking think there should be some exceptions, and even some of those who think blocking everything is not the answer believe that some blocking is necessary.

“IT should, by default, block social networking sites,” said Jeff Canon, CIO of Fire and Life Safety America. “IT should create a framework to manage access and work with business line managers in determining the risk and business need. For example, it may make sense for the sales team to access Linkedin. It could also make sense for the marketing and promotions department to access Facebook or Twitter. It probably does not make sense for an accounts payable clerk to have access to Facebook. Another recent survey found that some employees in their sample used social networking sites as much as two hours a day at work. Within that same sample, 87% of those using Facebook said they had no clear business reason for accessing the network.”


John Gracyalny, Director of IT for SafeAmerica Credit Union, said, “It should be done on a user -by-user basis. At our shop we have deployed a black box to control Internet use. Staff are limited to a specific ‘white list’ of sites that pertain to their job function, as defined by their department head, and all other sites are blocked. Mid-managers generally have more latitude, and execs have no restrictions other than global HR-type filters, (e.g. we block porn sites to the entire organization). Two staff members have no restrictions based on their job function, but their usages reports must be reviewed and approved both by their department head and myself on a monthly basis.”

However, Lance Taylor-Warren, CIO of H.A.W.C. Community Health Centers, brought up one of the challenges IT faces once it starts doing selective filtering. He said, “Yes, social networking sites should be blocked for personal use, but if a company is using it for business use it makes it very hard to keep them separate. This will continue to be a problem that IT staff will face for the forseeable future.”

Michael Spears, CIO of the NCCI, argued against this type of blocking as a general policy. He said, “Absent applications that raise security concerns, you need to manage productivity by managing - not through security. Let’s not treat this like the advent of the phone or the internet. ”

Another naysayer of blocking, Jerry Justice, IT Director of SS&G Financial Services, said, “No. We must monitor and adapt security models to a Web 2.0 world.”

Scott Lowe, CIO of Westminster College, added, “No to blocking, but there should be a ‘reasonable use’ policy in place.”

Chris Zalegowski, Director of IT for DEKA Research & Development, suggested a more specific approach: “I think you should find out first what the percentage is in your company (and equate that to dollars and/or lost time). Looking at an estimated national average is not a call to action to block the site but it should be reviewed internally. If you find out the average employee is spending an overabundance amount of time on social networking sites (and/or there is proven productivity loss), then yes blocking the site should be a consideration. If your company uses these sites as a marketing tool or customer interaction tool, then blocking it becomes harder to warrant.”

TechRepublic’s CIO Jury on this topic was:

Laurie Dale, Director of IT for Ability Beyond Disabilty Randy Krzyston, Director of IT for Thomas Jefferson School of Law Michael Spears, CIO of National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) James Riner, CIO of R & R Images David Van Geest, Director of IT for The Orsini Group Michael Hanken, VP of IT for Multiquip Inc. Lisa Moorehead, Director of IT for MA Dept of Public Utilities Mitchell Herbert, IT Director for McCormick Barstow Scott Lowe, CIO of Westminster College Joshua Grossetti, Head of IT for Triumvirate Environmental Edward Beck, VP of IT for Line 6, Inc. Joel Robertson, Director of IT for King College

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Critical Rules for New Business Environment

5 rules for the new business environment
John M. McKee, TechRepublic on April 14th, 2010@ ZDNet


Today, perhaps more than at any time since World War II, leaders and employees don't seem to agree on many things.

Perspective, as they say, is everything. Subtle changes in the markets that encourage management may be of little importance to those at lower levels. Increasing headcounts regarded as a positive by one group may be a concern to another. Productivity improvements hailed by executives could be looked at by those performing the work as just more work.

I believe we have entered into an era of a "new normal". In August 2008 I wrote this column in which I cited four "megatrends" I expected to make life more difficult. As a result of them (and before the stock markets collapsed) I said it would become much harder to maintain a good standard of living. I noted that many jobs were destined to move elsewhere, perhaps forever.

Now, with things looking up (at least modestly) for many organizations, it's time for leaders to act accordingly. Trade in old behaviors and approaches that aren't going to be effective in this new "normal". In their place consider:


Rule #1: Results, first and foremost

Do whatever it takes to get your employees and teams entirely focused on getting the job done. That may mean throwing out old pay grades, promotional schedules, and hiring and training programs. Consider moving to a ROWE (results only work environment) model like Best Buy did nearly two years ago. They're not concerned with how long or when someone's at the office--as long as they do the task. And Best Buy is thriving.


Rule # 2: Competition will only increase

That may be either obvious or "indirect" competition. With less money, many organizations are being forced to choose between non-similar purchases;for example, "Will it be office supplies or shipping costs?" or "Do we spend on executive bonuses or furniture?" Keep in mind that no economists are sure this fragile economy is going to stick, let alone grow.


Rule #3: Keep an eye on Elance. And the rest

I am constantly surprised by how few leaders in most industries are aware of the impact of sites like Guru.com, Elance, or EGuru. These networks match jobs, projects and tasks up with freelancers or people who are "daylighting" while still employed. The "employer" gets her or his work completed quickly and at very competitive prices. The established company is left wondering why revenues are still not picking up.


Rule #4: Those "sure things" may not be

Two years ago, who would have bet that Ford would sell the most cars in the United States in February 2009? Or that Toyota, top-ranked for quality for years, would be under pressure because of product deficiencies it couldn't identify, let alone fix? Make good plans, execute well, and always anticipate the downside.


Rule #5: Everyone is in the marketing game

For many executives, the whole concept of marketing is a bit distasteful. I've had clients tell me that marketing is simply "BS, smoke and mirrors, or boondoggles". Whether or not you agree, recognize that this new environment calls for new thinking. Andrea Jung, CEO of Avon, believes only 13 percent of people who are trading down will go back to their old spending levels. This applies equally to business purchases too. Act accordingly.


John M. McKee is the founder and CEO of BusinessSuccessCoach.net, an international consulting and coaching practice with subscribers in 43 countries. One of the founding senior executives of DIRECTV, his hands-on experience includes leading billion dollar organizations and launching start-ups in both the United States and Canada. The author of two published books, he is frequently seen providing advice on TV, and in magazines and newspapers.

URL:http://www.zdnetasia.com/5-rules-for-the-new-business-environment-62062554.htm