Personal Characteristics

Personal characteristics can indicate how the candidate will approach
the job and how he or she might relate to coworkers.

Analytical and creative abilities. A candidate’s abilities in these
two areas determine how he or she assesses problems and comes
up with new approaches to solving them.

Decision-making style. Decision-making style is very individual.
Some people are extremely structured, analytical, and factbased;
others rely more on intuition. Some make decisions
quickly, while others ponder them for a long time. Some depend
on consensus, while others seek their own counsel. It is critical
to determine whether a particular style is required for success in
the job and, if so, what it is.

Interpersonal skills. Since interpersonal skills and behavior are
intimately connected, understanding a candidate’s interpersonal
skills is an important part of the hiring decision process. To
determine which interpersonal skills are most appropriate for a
given position, think about the set of tasks that will be performed
in the position.Which traits will translate into good performance,
especially in view of the superiors, peers, and direct
reports with whom the person will interact? For example, a
controller should ideally be patient and formal, demonstrating
careful, cautious, detail-oriented behavior. For a sales manager,
high extroversion and low formality may be desirable.
4 Hiring and Keeping the Best People
The Hiring Process 5

Motivation. The candidate’s personal goals, interests, energy
level, and job progression often demonstrate their level of motivation.
So ask yourself,“Does this job match the candidate’s personal
aspirations? Would he or she do the job with enthusiasm
and energy?


Free Enterprise

WHAT IS FREE ENTERPRISE?

Alan Greenspan and Dick Cheney, high above America. Greenspan flies Rothschild’s facade of ‘economy’ with a co-pilot known only by the name, ‘Representative Government.’
Alan Greenspan and Dick Cheney, high above America. Greenspan flies Rothschild’s facade of ‘economy’ with a co-pilot known only by the name, ‘Representative Government.’
John Kenneth Galbraith

“The study of money, above all other fields… is one in which complexity is used to disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it.”

FREE ENTERPRISE UNDER NATURE

Free enterprise is the innate desire of all true contributors to prosperity, because it is the singular condition by which they receive according to their doings.

Under natural conditions, prosperity is limited only by our willingness to process natural resources into production. A person working by their self acquires all that they produce, no less than what they produce, and no more than what they produce. The cost of their production is only the effort of production. No benefit exists in trading the product of their toil for less. To preclude a person acquiring the equal of their production then, is to preclude free enterprise.

Under true free enterprise alone therefore, is full prosperity realized. Under true free enterprise alone is prosperity comprised of unimpeded effort, delivering undiminished production to consumption, for the product of equal toil. No obstruction to full prosperity exists. No instability exists in trade. The value of production is neither diminished nor magnified by any unnatural influence.

FAIR TRADE AND NATURAL DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH

Under natural conditions, fair trade is the unimpeded, constant ability to exchange assented equivalents. Each party, by free and unimpeded standards, determines what quantity and quality of toil is the acceptable equivalent of their own. No concept of unearned profit can prevail, because essential toil is the measure of the value of production.

There is no qualifiable concept of justified “profit” beyond production, for if trade is determined to be fair, it has been determined to be an exchange of equivalent, essential toil. If a “fair” and therefore equal proportion of “profit” were to be applied coequally to equivalent toil, the “fair profit” of each would cancel the other’s.
CONSEQUENCES OF ALTERING WHAT PORTION OF A CIRCULATION CAN BE DEVOTED TO TRADE

For true producers, intending free enterprise, the one and only purpose of a circulation is to sustain trade.

As all wealth can only be shared from the pool of production, any existence of unearned profit precludes the desire and ability of producers to receive according to their doings. The more unearned profit is taken from the pool of production, the less producers receive according to their doings, because from the one pool of wealth (production), the wealth of the undeserving can only be unjustifiably increased at the expense of the deserving.

In free enterprise therefore, ALL of a circulation is always devoted only to trade. This applies as well to products or services ostensibly provided by government. In true free enterprise, the cost of government must be kept to the true cost of essential toil involved in providing government. The cost of government cannot be multiplied, or free enterprise cannot exist.
[CENTRAL BANK] “CAPITALISM” AND FREE ENTERPRISE ARE MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE
Look into my eyes. ‘The study of money, above all other fields… is one in which complexity is used to disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it.’ — John Kenneth Galbraith

In the wake of Rothschild, and in the strict tradition of non-disclosure characterizing history’s usurers, Alan Greenspan tells the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the ostensible truths which perpetuate usury. What after all is the nature of “economy”; and why after all is it, that under the “central banking” systems of the world, debt is multiplied in proportion to commerce and the circulation, that consequently, true producers cannot acquire the full measure of their work, and the productive capacities of the world itself are perched at the brink of insoluble debt?

Because interest multiplies debt in proportion to a circulation, maldistribution of wealth is an inherent and intended characteristic of central banking systems. All resultant instability and iniquity are artificially imposed, and manifest entirely from the fact just economy is prevented from existing. Because central banking systems multiply debt in proportion to the circulation, not only are “capitalism” and free enterprise mutually exclusive; capitalism makes central bankers the owners of all enterprise, and imposes but one ultimate reward on the producers of wealth: collapse under insoluble debt.
mike montagne — PEOPLE For Mathematically Perfected Economy™.

mike montagne — PEOPLE For Mathematically Perfected Economy™


Whether you’re too busy to do it yourself or want to make some extra money on the side, this new online marketplace has you covered.

By Sarah Pierce | April 24, 2007

Who: Darren Berkovitz, 23; Omri Cohen, 24; Stacy Stubblefield, 25; David Gonen, 26
What: DoMyStuff.com, an online marketplace that outsources chores, errands, projects and other tasks to local help
Where: Beverly Hills, California

Like most people, Darren Berkovitz and his partners were experiencing a common dilemma: too much to do and not enough time to do it. They did, however, find the time to create a solution. The result is DoMyStuff.com, an online community where busy people can quickly find assistants to handle their errands and tasks. “Outsourcing is a huge buzzword right now,” says Berkovitz, who owns an internet incubating company with Omri Cohen, Stacy Stubblefield and David Gonen that outsources projects to other businesses. “We thought, we outsource so many things, why not outsource our daily tasks?”

Here’s how it works: Busy people–known as buyers–post a task they need completed on the site. Everything from mowing the lawn to chartering a private jet is appropriate; no job is too big or too small. Local individuals or businesses then bid on tasks by providing information, such as how much they’ll charge, when the task will be completed and details about the service they’ll provide. Buyers review bids and choose the best assistant to help them. The site is free for buyers, while DoMyStuff.com keeps a percentage of the assistant’s winning bid.

As an example, Berkovitz described a recent situation in which he needed to move but had no time to search for apartments. So he posted the job on DoMyStuff.com. He received eight bids, with one person going so far as to make an Excel spreadsheet detailing all the apartments in the area including rent, amenities and other pertinent information. The person won the bid, and Berkovitz had a new place to live without spending any of his own free time looking.

“The great thing about DoMyStuff is that it affects every single person; everyone can relate to the problems we’re trying to solve,” says Berkovitz, who points out that most people fall into two categories: those who don’t have enough hours in the day and those who want to make more money. “With this company, we’re bringing those two groups of people together.”

Berkovitz and his partners put approximately $50,000 of private funding into the startup for website construction and initial marketing, but have spent virtually nothing on marketing since then. “It’s been really spreading virally, which is the hallmark of a great idea,” says Berkovitz. The site, in fact, is averaging 600 new signups a day–all, Berkovitz notes, with mainly word-of-mouth marketing.

Unlike Craigslist and other online communities that bring job posters and seekers together, DoMyStuff.com has taken several measures to prevent fraud and other user problems that have plagued other sites. In addition to engineering a feedback system, similar to those of eBay and Amazon, that rates assistants, DoMyStuff.com provides an online escrow account where buyers can forward their payment. The escrow account benefits both parties in that the funds aren’t released until the job is completed, and assistants can see that the account has been funded and their payment is waiting.

In addition to providing a service to busy people, Berkovitz feels the site is a great opportunity for entrepreneurs who want to start their own business on the side. Depending on how much time they’re willing to put in, assistants can turn the extra work into an easy weekend gig or work up to the point of becoming a contractor and subcontracting tasks to people below them. “You can literally go on [to the site] this afternoon and start making money,” says Berkovitz. “It’s an incredible opportunity for people on both sides of the fence.”

Source: here