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      <title>Abney, Ramsay &amp; Associates, Inc  by Abney, Ramsay &amp; Associates, Inc</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay</link>
      <description>We are an independent consulting firm specializing in the support of Higher Education business processes through Ellucian&#39;s Banner™ suite of administrative systems. Visit our site @ http://www.araainc.com/</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2013-12-27 23:50:19 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2014-02-13 03:41:53 UTC</lastBuildDate>
      <webMaster>hello@padlet.com</webMaster>
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         <url></url>
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         <title>Abney, Ramsay &amp; Associates, Inc ARAA Group Inc
Process Management Analysis and Reconciliations</title>
         <author>smithjoseph527</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/18797460</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><b>Define A</b></p><p><b>Define B</b></p><p>Implement only establishes a framework for operations.</p>
<p><b>Does A=B</b></p><p>We have developed extended <a href="http://www.araainc.com/our-solutions/process-management-analysis-and-reconciliations">analysis
and reconciliation</a> processes that go beyond delivered solutions</p>
<p><b>A=B</b></p><p>Ensuring the accurate compliance to system standards is fundamental in the assumption that information is accurately reported.</p>

<p><b><span><a href="http://www.araainc.com/">Abney, Ramsay &amp; Associates, Inc</a></span></b></p>
<p><b>Who Checked A=B?</b></p><p>We assist in implementing defined process and management procedures to ensure on-going compliance to standards.</p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-01-03 00:45:45 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/18797460</guid>
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         <title>Abney Ramsay Associates: The 5 C&#39;s of People Management</title>
         <author>smithjoseph527</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/21198088</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><a href="http://www.managers.org.uk/practical-support/management-community/blogs/5-cs-people-management"><b>Article Source</b></a></p>
<p>Traditional management models
stress the development of detailed project plans and the rigorous observation
of disciplined models. Developed by engineering and manufacturing organisations
they assume workflows with controlled variables and fixed inputs, in short they
assume that you are managing machines, not human beings.</p>
<p>Any experienced manager knows that
you can follow the Gant Chart and spreadsheet every element to the finest
degree, but the human factor will always be the element which bites back.</p>
<p>Failure to effectively engage with
people management repeatedly causes projects to underperform, miss targets and
fail, leaving managers who adhered to the traditional management models
confused and frustrated. But effective people management actually relies on
only five key skills, the Five ‘C’s:</p>
<p><b>Create</b></p>
<p>Build a team which is fit for
purpose. Don’t try to use the wrong tool for the job and then complain that the
hammer won’t make the screw work! This involves making the correct decisions on
three elements.</p>
<p>The first is recruitment, the
fundamental basis of the success of any business. If the right people aren’t
coming into an organisation how can you expect the results to be successful?
Hire the best people, hire the right people.</p>
<p>The second element is training. It
is vital that you give people the skills they need to do a good job. If you
have people who aren’t quite right, develop them. They will not only be better
suited and more productive, they will be grateful for the investment and
commitment.</p>
<p>Thirdly and finally a good manager
must create the right team structure and set the boundaries. A robust set of
measures for success, clearly explained and tracked with discipline will give
your people the framework for success, and just as important, tells them how to
succeed.</p>
<p><b>Comprehend</b></p>
<p>Understand the people in your team,
their personalities, their motivations and personal goals. A good manager needs
to be empathetic, not a slave driver. One person may be a natural
completer-finisher, another could be great at concept development. By
understanding the individuals, rather than treating them as identikit
simulacra, you will find better ways to communicate, motivate and understand
them. How do you do this? By spending time with them, the classic ‘management
by wandering around’ pays dividends here. Invest in your people and you will
gain the benefit of understanding. Once you begin to understand the people in
your team you will be able to make better judgements as to where they will be
most effective, how to get the most from them and how to develop them.</p>
<p><b>Communicate</b></p>
<p>It is essential that you can convey
your thoughts, concerns and needs to your team. You must be able to motivate
them and lead them, tell them when you’re not getting what you need, explain
when changes are made and congratulate them when they are doing well.</p>
<p>All of this requires effective
skills in communication. This need not even be overtly verbal communication,
influencing them through a simple smile or cheerful ‘hello’ can create a
positive frame of mind. By ensuring that you always come across as positive you
make your team feel positive about you and themselves.</p>
<p>When a more detailed communication
is needed your message must be succinct and clear, getting to the heart of the
matter and reinforcing your goal. To do this it is vital that your communication
is planned: what is the best approach, the best time, the right media? The key
is invariably to keep it as simple as possible. Planning not only makes
communication more effective, it also saves time; by spending a little more of
his/her time planning the manager can save a lot of both their and the team’s
time in clarifying what was meant.</p>
<p>Communicate clearly and often. If
things are going well it’s important to say so, and if not so well it’s doubly
important. A good manager should never shy away from addressing issues as soon
as they are identified. This doesn’t mean aggressive confrontation, but instead
engaging with an issue collaboratively.</p>
<p>Give feedback, and when you do make
sure you open with a positive and close with a positive. By telling someone
what you value and admire in them they can more readily accept a criticism, and
acceptance is the first step to resolution. Finally, make sure you ask for
feedback as well as giving it and you will win yourself support and loyalty,
and may well learn something of value about yourself.</p>
<p><b>Collaborate</b></p>
<p>A manager is not an island, he/she
should be at the heart of the team. Ensure that you share and delegate to get
the best results. People will respond to being given responsibility, they step
up and by allowing them to develop into doing something that previously only
you could do you free yourself to do something else and add value to the entire
process. In short you multiply the effectiveness of the team.</p>
<p>Of course not everything is plain
sailing and issues will occur, but by taking joint responsibility for any
failures in the team (after all it is your team) you show everyone that you are
all in it together, engendering respect, loyalty and commitment.</p>
<p><b>Confront</b></p>
<p>People are different, they see things
differently and engage with issues differently, and where this happens there is
invariably conflict. This can be overt, where two or more people argue over the
best way forwards or, often more dangerously, it may be hidden when someone
disagrees but does not feel empowered to criticise. Conflict can kill a team,
it can create resentment, undermine cooperation and drive great people out.
When conflict appears it is vital that the manager spots it, by having a good
understanding of the people in his/her team (Comprehend), and then engages with
it. Good communication, bringing the various ideas to the table and looking at
them openly, can turn a threat into an opportunity. A team can walk away
understanding each other better, feeling more cohesive and possibly having
discovered a better way forwards. The manager’s role is to communicate and
engage, and never be defensive, even if they are the subject of the criticism.
By taking on the mantle of management you set yourself up for criticism, and a
good manager can take it and learn from it.</p>
<p>Of course there are times when
there is no resolution. Entrenched contrary opinions may not see a middle
ground. In these instances a good manager must be able to not only walk away
themselves, but lead others to walk away too. If a decision must be made it
must be the manager’s decision. They must act as the lightning rod for any ill
feeling; never let it remain within and between the team.</p>
<p>In the most extreme cases an
individual will not back down and cannot be managed. Their actions undermine
the team and threaten the project. Early and decisive engagement is vital. The
manager must be robust and unswerving, bringing clear and irrefutable evidence
of the negative behaviour and its impact on the project. The meeting with the
individual should never be aggressive, but always be robust, explaining the
issues clearly, using the evidence to back the manager’s assertions. The
manager should be supported by higher management and HR, to reinforce to the
employee the seriousness of their actions. Finally it must be accepted that not
everyone is right for a role or a team, and sometimes the right thing to do is
to move someone out. This is never easy, but if it is right it should never be
shied away from. For a good people manager the team must always be more
important than any one person.</p>
<p>These five elements; Create,
Comprehend, Communicate, Collaborate and Confront, form the basis of an
effective people management approach. Whilst each element is important in its
own right they all interrelate with and support the others. By employing this
approach effectively a manager will not only deliver the project goals they are
tasked with, but in doing so he/she will be creating more rounded, effective
individuals, developing a flexible and motivated team and cementing their own
reputation as a manager not only of projects, but of people.</p>
<p>Jason Collings is Director of
Quarsh, a leading UK Recruitment Process Outsourcing provider specialising in
talent acquisition and HR support.</p>
<p><b>Try to visit our </b><a href="http://www.araainc.com/"><b>website</b></a></p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-02-13 03:41:59 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/21198088</guid>
      </item>
      <item>
         <title>Our Peoples - Abney, Ramsay &amp;amp; Associates, Inc</title>
         <author>smithjoseph527</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/21366499</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p><a href="http://www.araainc.com/our-people">Our Peoples</a>
Individual resumes range as follows:</p>
<p><b>Summary:</b></p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Banner Consulting, Direct Management, Project
Management, Advisory Consulting, Technical and Functional services from 4-12
years. Multi-product capabilities severing large to small higher education
clients.</p>
<p><b>Banner Consulting
Experience:</b></p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Project management, advisory consulting for
university systems, multi-year/site projects.</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Project management for multi-product
implementations for single site clients.</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Lead consulting and implementation roles for all
sizes of projects (by system module)</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Production consulting and on-going support of
production systems (all system suites)</p>
<p><b>SCT/Sungard/Ellucian
Experience:</b></p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Former SCT/Sungard/Ellucian consultants</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Former SCT/Sungard/Ellucian senior management</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Former SCT/Sungard/Ellucian clients</p>
<p><b>Other Related
Industry Experience:</b></p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Big Five management and consulting experience</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Competitive ERP product experience (consulting
and management)</p>
<p><b>Higher Education
Staff Experience:</b></p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Managerial</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Administrative</p>

<p>·<span>&nbsp;
</span>Technical</p>
<p>Visit our website at <a href="http://www.araainc.com/">Abney
Ramsay Associates</a></p>
</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-02-15 07:27:37 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/21366499</guid>
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         <title>Abney
Ramsay Associates: Forretningsprosess forbedring</title>
         <author>smithjoseph527</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/25259027</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>

<p>•
Vi ser BPI som definerer og oppnå et sluttresultat som er "bedre" enn
før.</p>

<p>•
BPI er en prosess for seg selv og er resultatet av <a href="http://abneyramsayassociatesinc.obolog.com/abney-ramsay-associates-inc-araa-group-inc-business-process-improvement-2319827">en samling av aktiviteter.</a></p>

<p>•
Vi har bestemt og definert metoder og bompenger støtte analysen, utvikling,
implementere aktiviteter.</p>

<p>•
Vi bistår klienter med noen og alle disse aktivitetene gjennom våre løsninger
og konsulenttjenester.</p>

<p>•
Klienter har fortalt oss at vår totale tilnærming er unik for noe de har sett
eller brukt og har vært en viktig komponent i vår klient suksess.</p>
<p><b>Besøk oss på <a href="http://www.araainc.com/">Abney
Ramsay Associates</a></b></p>

</p>]]></description>
         <enclosure url="" />
         <pubDate>2014-04-04 06:09:11 UTC</pubDate>
         <guid>https://padlet.com/smithjoseph527/abneyramsay/wish/25259027</guid>
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