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Sunday, October 20, 2013

Check out 'How To Make Your Own Books From Wikipedia' on Learnist

I was viewing this Learning on Learnist and I thought you might like it.

How To Make Your Own Books From Wikipedia

The article is three years old, but I logged into Wikipedia and confirmed that the "Create a Book" option is located in the Print/Export menu. Given the efforts that Wikipedia is putting into making their content more reliable, this may be a way for teachers to create a "jumping off" point for a new topic - circumventing students' inclination to rely on it as their main reference.



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Sent from David Wood

Friday, July 19, 2013

HA

Hospitality Assured

Check out this application on the App Store:

Cover Art

Hospitality Assured

The App Garden Ltd

Category: Business

Updated: 10 Jul 2013



iOS Applications
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Sent from David Wood

Sunday, March 31, 2013

A Social Media Toolkit for Admissions | Higher Ed Live

This post is purely for my MBA students studying Six Sigma this semester.
This is a background video which might suggest some DOE strategies for this semesters problem.

A Social Media Toolkit for Admissions | Higher Ed Live
http://higheredlive.com/a-social-media-toolkit-for-admissions/

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Sent from Zite, available for free in the App Store.


Sent from my iPhone

Friday, March 29, 2013

HEAT complaint handling method

Hear: The first step is to listen to the customer. Hear them out. Don’t interrupt. Sometimes a customer just wants to vent. Of course, other times they have a real problem that needs solving. Try to listen for cues about what’s really bugging them. Is it the problem with their meal or their room? Or is it that they are now running late? If the real problem is time, then that takes a different twist to your solution; you have to solve the problem fast.

Empathize: Empathy is defined as the ability to imagine oneself in another's place and understand the other's feelings, desires, ideas and actions. Over the years, I have found the best way to do this (and teach team members how to do it) is by naming the emotion. You have to articulate to the customer what they are feeling and validate it. “I understand how you feel, I’d be frustrated too.” Or, “I completely understand and if that happened to me, it would make me very upset.” By naming the emotion, expressing understanding and placing yourself in the customer’s place, you begin the process of diffusing the situation.

Apologize: This is a big one, and easy. It goes like this: “I’m sorry.” It can be that easy. Unfortunately, many line-level team members tend to take this sort of thing personally and feel apologizing for something they may not have had any control over to be uncomfortable. My advice: Get over it. Nobody said it was your fault. We aren’t blaming you, so apologize already. To be more powerful, add a little of empathy. “I’m sorry for the inconvenience this has caused you. I’m really very sorry this happened.”

Take action: Going from apology to taking action should be seamless. The very next sentence out of your mouth should be what you’re going to do about the customer’s complaint. The customer deserves to know what is going to happen next and what they can expect. The foundation to most customer complaints is the disconnect from what was expected and what actually happened. This is your chance to reestablish an expectation and deliver on it. Taking the appropriate action can only be done if you really hear the problem, fully understand the customer’s feelings and combine it with a sincere apology.

Thursday, January 3, 2013