Mentoring inside builds a business; doing so outside lifts a community
During the summer I got calls from two organizations. Both were considering a mentoring program.
During the summer I got calls from two organizations. Both were considering a mentoring program.
Three, two, one — it’s Monday morning again! The weekend was too short, your list of chores was too long and your alarm is buzzing you out of delicious, deep-sleep oblivion, driving you into another workweek.
For the retail and service sectors of the boating industry, it is likely known as a hoped for “fireworks weekend” — for the bottom line.
Attending a business conference can be a lot like watching planned pandemonium. Hordes of humanity with their heads down, checking cellphones and exploring lists of breakout sessions — or heads up, happily greeting colleagues.
The week of Independence Day is a time for parades and celebrations and picnics and it’s a time to remember the past and how much we owe those who have gone before us.
Every week certain sounds, such as the trash truck rumbling down the street, signal that it’s finally Friday again. Anticipation echoes across office break-room banter, rowdy radio DJs and cheerfully chatty shoppers at the grocery store.
We all stay abreast of the news, and many of us also read such business publications as the Wall Street Journal, Business Week and Fortune and marine industry publications.
It was cloudy and rainy — perfect. The sky and my attitude were completely in sync. I was in a funk, a slump, a pile
‘Tis the season — yep, Halloween (giving to everyone who asks) and Thanksgiving (giving thanks with family) are behind us, and looming ahead is the
I looked down at my seriously seasoned sneakers and knew it was time. Entering the footwear department at a nearby store I felt as if
During the summer I got calls from two organizations. Both were considering a mentoring program.
Three, two, one — it’s Monday morning again! The weekend was too short, your list of chores was too long and your alarm is buzzing you out of delicious, deep-sleep oblivion, driving you into another workweek.
For the retail and service sectors of the boating industry, it is likely known as a hoped for “fireworks weekend” — for the bottom line.
Attending a business conference can be a lot like watching planned pandemonium. Hordes of humanity with their heads down, checking cellphones and exploring lists of breakout sessions — or heads up, happily greeting colleagues.
The week of Independence Day is a time for parades and celebrations and picnics and it’s a time to remember the past and how much we owe those who have gone before us.
Every week certain sounds, such as the trash truck rumbling down the street, signal that it’s finally Friday again. Anticipation echoes across office break-room banter, rowdy radio DJs and cheerfully chatty shoppers at the grocery store.
We all stay abreast of the news, and many of us also read such business publications as the Wall Street Journal, Business Week and Fortune and marine industry publications.
It was cloudy and rainy — perfect. The sky and my attitude were completely in sync. I was in a funk, a slump, a pile
‘Tis the season — yep, Halloween (giving to everyone who asks) and Thanksgiving (giving thanks with family) are behind us, and looming ahead is the
I looked down at my seriously seasoned sneakers and knew it was time. Entering the footwear department at a nearby store I felt as if