Category Archives: coaching

5 GREAT REASONS TO BUY AN APPLE WATCH

Okay, so I admit that I am a bit of an Apple Geek and have been since 1996 when the company looked as if it was about to go bust. It’s not that often in life that I back the right horse!

Anyway, as with most Apple Geeks, I simply have to have everything they produce. Last summer, when I bought my Apple Watch, I have to admit that this was the first item I bought from Apple that, in spite of its elegance, about which I was not so convinced of its usefulness.

A year later, I have completely changed my mind, for the following five reasons:

Health

In the last year I have paid more attention to my health and done more sport than ever before. My Apple Watch challenges me to stand up and move around if I have been sitting down for too long. It reminds me to take time out to concentrate on my breathing and inner well-being. It gives me regular updates about my diet and calorie consumption and challenges me to do more exercise. Since wearing my Apple Watch, I have lost over 10 kilos in weight and am fitter than ever before.

The Apple watch pays for itself within two years

This may only apply to certainly countries, but I have just received 200,00€ in cash from my medical insurance company (AOK) as a result of living such a healthy lifestyle last year. In short, the Apple Watch records my sporting activities and automatically records them within the AOK app on my iPhone. To my amazement, this means that the watch will have paid for itself by the end of this year, and beyond that, I will make a net profit of 200,00€ per year! As well as being much healthier.

Private sphere

Ever get tired of constant interruptions from Telegram, What’s App, Facebook, Messenger, Instagram, Snapchat, Skype, Swarm, Slack, SMS and e-mails? Well, you can set these to pop up on your Apple Watch (or not) so that you can read them, filter them and even reply to them if you wish without the sender knowing whether or not you have even received them. Okay, you can do that on your phone with most apps too, but somehow the ongoing contact with the outside world is less intrusive on your watch than on your cell phone.  Maybe because you don’t have to take it out of your pocket? And filtering becomes more radical too.

Superb for sport

Whether you want to go for a jog or a serious workout in the gym, you don’t need to take your phone with you any more. Nor that uncomfortable sweaty strap thing that your phone sits in on your arm. With wireless earphones (I can recommend Wireless Beats by Dr Dre or of course Apple’s Airpods), you can listen to your music at the same time that the activity app tracks your pace, route, heartbeat and calories burned. So much easier.

Cool fashion

The Apple Watch is beautifully engineered and looks, well … classic, especially a combination such as stainless steel with a black leather strap. All in all, I’d say it’s a good purchase after all. Within a few months, as with so much of the best technology, you will wonder how you ever got along without out it. Even in this respect, the Apple Watch is slightly different because it is attached to your body: technology that is integrated with who you are and what you do. You’ll never walk alone again.

Worried about Germany

For several days I have developed a real concern for the future of my adopted country.

I don’t think there can be any doubt that Germany is leading the way in Europe in terms of economic prosperity, a vision for the EU and a readiness to support refugees.

Angela Merkel last week received almost 90% backing from her CDU party and she is prepared to lead the country, if elected, through the next four years.

My big concern is, what happens after that? Where is her successor? Even the CDU admit that they have no real candidate other than Dr. Merkel.  So the danger is, particularly if the German economy struggles or the integration of refugees proves more challenging than expected, she will not only be replaced, but replaced, possibly, by exactly the kind of politician we do not want. Exactly as has just happened in the USA.

My plea to all good political leaders, irrespective of the party they belong to, is to begin to look for the best, young aspiring women and men in their ranks, to train them in the role of national leadership and to promote them on the political stage so that both the public and the government can already see the next generation emerging from the wings.

Many Germans would say that the recent success of their football team in the World Cup could be ascribed to the skills of Jögi Löw in encouraging those players in their late teens a few years ago and investing seriously into their future. This has paid tremendous dividends and it is exactly what, in my opinion, the leading politicians of the older generation need to do now. In this way we can best ensure that we do not end up with people like Nigel Farage, Marine Le Pen or Donald Trump leading our nations and it may even result in the younger generation engaging more constructively in the political agenda.

Mini-series: Business Management 12

Marketing

mobile-phone-426559_1920

The world is changing fast all the time and the marketing that worked five years ago probably won’t work today. Right now the two most successful marketing strategies for most companies are internet presence and word-of-mouth recommendation. This means that, whatever else you might be doing, the following are critical:

  • when you google your product or area of the market, how high up the Google pages do you come? It makes complete sense to give everything you can to getting yourself to the top of that list. Find out all you can about SEOs.
  • think creatively about as many ways as you can to increase the possibility of your product being recommended from person-to-person. Can you use an app, social media or even financial incentives to improve on your current situation?
  • the above two bullet points should have an effect on your use of other media. For example, very few potential customers will read a press release but many will read an interesting story about a customer who has seen success or something interesting happening as a result of using your product.

Links:

Tips for developing a marketing strategy 

Best practice: content marketing

Mini-series: Business Management 11

Carry out a regular SWOT analysis

workplace-1245776_1920

Life is very busy and very quickly unimportant things begin to feel like genuine priorities and we lose sight of the main goal. Therefore it is good practice to carry out a regular SWOT analysis, looking with a very critical eye at your company’s and you team’s Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. Once you have done so, take appropriate action in any relevant areas.

Links:

SWOT analysis

Tips on carrying out a SWOT analysis

Mini-series: Business Management 10

Jettison everything you are doing that is not genuinely productive

rocket-launch-67723_1920

Many run the danger of continuing to do things simply because that is the way that they have always been done or because they have seen others doing things in a certain way. Please be aware that a strategy that works for a very similar company to yours may not work for your company at all. Resist the temptation to copy. Focus on your USP(s).

If you want to see something you’ve never seen before, you are going to have to do something that you have never done before.

Links:

Thinking outside of the box

5 hot tips on how to break out of habitual methods

Mini-Series: Business Management 9

boy-882338

Always invest in younger people

This is important not only because of the reasons given in the paragraph above, but also because young people will keep your company feeling young and dynamic and it will make it attractive to young and old alike. Furthermore, amongst these up-and-coming employees you will most probably find the most loyal and talented future leaders of your company.

Nowadays, it is also possible to work with younger people by offering them a short to medium-term placement as part of their training/university degree. If you do this, please be aware that you will need to look after them properly and not to use them as cheap labour. Ideally, they should have a pre-arranged, formal training programme that includes time with you, professional development on the job, a mentor (not you) who looks after them pastorally and they should also work shorter hours than your paid staff so that they have time for other aspects of their personal and professional development.

Mini-Series: Business Management 8

ipad-907577_1920

The future is always ten years younger than the age of your average customer

This may sound strange, but it is an important business maxim. The main challenge is that life moves on faster than we like to think. Many managers, including their friendship circle, are already at least forty years old, so when they think about how to develop their product, they think about what they would like. The reality is, however, by the time the product is on sale, several years have elapsed and in any case, the next generation of customers have already moved on to something different. So, the rule of thumb is, if you want to develop a new or existing product, find out what people at least ten years younger than your current average customer are looking for.

Links:

Apple’s target audience

Nike’s target audience

 

 

Mini-Series: Business Management 7

champagne-1500248_1920

Create a culture of encouragement and celebration

Almost all human beings work best in an environment of encouragement. It is therefore very important that you create a culture of encouragement. Criticism and honest feedback are of course essential, especially with colleagues who are not performing quite as well as they could. However, any negative feedback or constructive criticism should take place within the following parameters:

  • do not communicate negative feedback in the heat of the moment
  • take time to check that you have got your facts straight beyond you launch out
  • never communicate negative feedback to the employee in front of other employees of a similar standing
  • once you have introduced the theme of your feedback, give the employee ample opportunity to explain things from his/her angle first
  • then couch your criticism in a very clear, factual structured way
  • end by giving the employee an opportunity to ask any questions and with an encouraging comment about a more positive aspect of the employee’s work.

It is also best practice to offer employees regular appraisal, at least once a year. This should be done formally and with the outcome linked to professional development and, where possible and if appropriate, a pay increase. Apart from the fact that such a procedure will great benefit your company, it will also make it very attractive to other highly qualified and motivated professionals.

Links:

10 tips on empowering your staff

16 clever ways to show employee appreciation

 

Mini-series: Business Management 6

Meetings, agendas and minutes

notes-514998_1920

Meetings are essential in any organisation but you need to monitor whether or not they are serving any real purpose. If they are not, they should be dropped or radically changed. Every meeting, especially a regular meeting, should have a very clear purpose, not only to you, but also to your team. Then, in order to make its importance clear to your team, you should ensure the following:

  • an agenda should be sent out in advance, where possible giving your team members the opportunity to contribute to it. The number of items should be clearly manageable and not overwhelming. There should also be at the beginning a brief review of the action points from the last meeting.
  • items on the agenda should have a time-limit and a designated person responsible for them. There should also be an appointed  chair (not necessarily you as the manager but the person who can best chair a meeting in your team), a minute-taker and a time-keeper.
  • The minutes should be brief and to the point with action points and a named person responsible for each action point and a deadline by when the item should be achieved. The minutes should be distributed promptly to everyone as soon as possible after the meeting.

 

Useful links:

http://www.practicallyperfectpa.com/2012/tips-on-good-minute-taking/10/03/

Mini-series: Business Management 5

Work smart, not harder

IMG_1153

One of the most common mistakes made by managers and leaders is to keep working more intensely and for longer hours as the stress increases. This is fatal, for many obvious reasons, such as the danger of burnout, but most importantly because it causes the manager to lose sight of what is going on in the company. Ways of working smarter, not harder have to be found, for example:

  • take a radical look at your working day and jettison everything that is not important
  • re-visit your company vision and check that you are not spending time doing things that do not, or no longer, line up with your vision
  • audit your tasks into the four categories of urgent and important, urgent and not important, important and not urgent and not important and not urgent and plan your diary well in advance with this audit in mind
  • look to delegate as much as you can to members of your team

One of the best and most well-known books on self-management is “The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People” by Stephen Covey.