Remove Collaborate Remove Customer Service Remove Health Remove Restaurants
article thumbnail

Collaborating With The Enemy: Competitive Advantage? | THE SMALL.

The Small Business Blog

Collaborating With The Enemy: Competitive Advantage? 5 Comments » | Trackback | Share This 5 Responses to “ Collaborating With The Enemy: Competitive Advantage? &# Ron Ratliff Said on January 13th, 2010 at 4:27 pm Stefan, I’m not really surprised to hear about this company doing things a bit differently.

article thumbnail

Why we need to consider switching to a 4-day workweek — now 

Ideas.Ted

The results: Increased productivity and creativity; improved recruitment and retention; less burnout for founders and leaders; and more balanced and sustainable lives for workers — all without cutting salaries or sacrificing customer service. M]y life is better off, thanks to the 4-day work week,” one employee wrote. “I

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Competitive Intelligence: Not Just For Big Business | THE SMALL.

The Small Business Blog

« Collaborating With The Enemy: Competitive Advantage? Steve Said on January 26th, 2010 at 3:38 pm I often find that CI is overlooked by small businesses especially regarding restaurants for example. Say you have a competing restaurant a few blocks away. Digg Furl Netscape Yahoo!

2007 100
article thumbnail

Up to 8 million UK jobs already at risk from AI without intervention

Workplace Insight

These include secretarial, customer service and administrative roles. The claims are disputed by Stefano Bensi, general manager at SoftBank Robotics EMEA, which specialises in collaborative robots for the hospitality industry. million job losses and no GDP gains Central scenario: 4.4

UPS 52
article thumbnail

29 Beautiful Stories That Will Restore Your Faith in Humanity

Success

The captain didn’t hesitate, despite the small chance she could never fly again if having only one remaining kidney left her too weak to pass stringent pilot health standards. There’s really no question.” But she was in luck. In July of the same year, both women were back at work on a flight to Seward, Alaska. Sally Deneen. Silent Struggles.

2017 279