Friday, December 30, 2011

DON’T ANSWER THAT EMAIL! BLOGGING FOR SEO

BY:–Rich Brooks

President, flyte new media


What do I blog about?” “how can I blog for search engine visibility?” and “how do you get your hair to do that?” are just some of the questions I field on a typical day. Luckily, there’s a simple trick I use that will help address the first two issues. There’s also a simple trick for the last item, but that’s between me and my hairdresser.
Never forget this: you are an expert at what you do. You have forgotten more than most people will ever know about cat training or electric boats or building a business.
Chances are that when you’re in front of a customer or prospect, most of the questions they’re asking have been asked before. I’m sure the same is true when it comes to the questions you get via email from prospects.
Well, if you’re fielding all those questions, how many more people are asking the same questions at Google?
  • How do I cook gluten-free meals?
  • What do I need to start an alpaca farm?
  • How do I survive a zombie apocalypse?
When you receive the next email asking for advice or help, don’t respond. Not immediately, at least.
Take the question and copy & paste it into your blog. You may need to doctor the question: broaden it to make it more helpful to a wider audience or remove any reference to whomever sent you the email in the first place. (They may not want to see their name at the bottom of a question about how to buy a toupee.)
Once you’ve crafted the question, go ahead and answer it in the most helpful, non-salesy way possible. As appropriate you can create keyword-rich links to a page on your website that offers a solution to the person’s need. Answering a question on closing techniques? Link to the page on your upcoming sales courses.
When you’re all done, create a keyword-rich title for your post. There are a few ways to do this:
  • Create a shortened version of the question: How do I choose the right DSLR for me?
  • Phrase it as a how-to: How to Coook for a Diabetic
  • Frame it as a tips post: Networking Tactics for Your Inner Wallflower
After you publish your new post, send an email with a link to the person who asked you the question, letting them know that it was such a great question you published it. I’ve never had anyone get upset with this, and almost everyone has been psyched to see their question get posted to my blog, even if I renamed them “Puzzled in Portland.”
What I’ve discovered is that it’s these posts that answer a specific question that often bring the most qualified traffic to our website and web marketing blog.

In Conclusion

To succeed online in a competitive industry, you need to create lots of quality content. To that end, don’t hide some of your best, most relevant material in an email that reaches just one prospect.
Leverage the power of blogging and SEO to attract, help and engage a wider audience, who will recognize you as the expert in your field.
If you have any questions on how to build a blog that attracts and converts more qualified customers PLEASE CONTACT US!!
Janet Furr and the Virtuale-Staff

Virtual eStaff is a contract staffing company that helps U.S. businesses reduce expense and retain talent for administrative jobs by recruiting highly skilled employees from, and maintaining infrastructure in the Philippines. Virtual eStaff works with customers to identify tasks that are suited for out-tasking with our workforce skillsets. We recruithire and manage a solution team from our headquarters in the Philippines  and  United  States.  

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

How To Find The Right Employee

Employing the right candidate for your company can be a hard task to master – somebody that looks perfect on paper may not necessarily be the right person to employ. Here are some easy steps that will take you through from advertising a role to hiring your new employee.

Where To Advertise

There are tonnes of places where you can advertise your vacancy but the majority of these will have a fee attached. To get maximum potential from your ad with minimum cost, look for newspapers, magazines or websites that are centred around the area in which you want to employ – such as specialist accountancy journals, creative websites etc. This will determine that your ad is seen by the people who are qualified to do the job you want done.

Structuring Your Ad

When writing your advertisement, be as detailed as the space given will allow you to be. Thoroughly explain the job specification that the candidate will have to work towards, detail the skills that are needed for the job and also the salary range. This will ensure that you won’t waste time receiving CVs from, and calling, candidates that are under/over qualified or that are above your salary range.

Filtering Through Candidates

To save time, it’s probably better that you filter through the CVs you receive, as you receive them – this will mean that when the closing date comes, you don’t have heaps of CVs to go thus through speeding up the interview process.
When you are reviewing candidates CVs, scan through and pick out their attributes, skills and qualifications that suit the role in question - if they tick all these boxes then shortlist them for interview. Filtering through CVs can be a very ruthless task but if the person does not have the skill set you need, then inviting them for an interview would be a waste of time for all the parties involved.

The Interview Process

Once you have shortlisted the candidates, it’s time to start the interview process. It’s important to bear in mind that although a candidate might seem perfect on paper, they might not fit into your company or the team that they will be working on. Trust your gut instinct, if you feel they are not right for the job then go with that.
You will already know most of their employment history from their CV so ask questions about their personality, what kind of things they’re interested in, if they have any hobbies or not. This will let you find out more about them as a person and if they’re right for your company.
If you are undecided between more than one of the candidates, invite them back for a second interview to form a better opinion of them.

Reference Checks

Once you have decided on a certain candidate, conduct reference checks with previous employers. Ask them questions about their time-keeping, work ethic and how they integrated with the team they were working within. This will give you an idea of how they will work within your company.


Janet Furr and the Virtuale-Staff

VirtualeStaff is a contract staffing company that helps U.S. businesses reduce expense and retain talent for administrative jobs by recruiting highly skilled employees from, and maintaining infrastructure in the Philippines. VirtualeStaff works with customers to identify tasks that are suited for out-tasking with our workforce skillsets. We recruithire and manage a solution team from our headquarters in the Philippines.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Easy Ways to Add the Christmas Spirit to Your Home

If you're like most people, you don't have much time left at the end of a busy day to do anything extra. But at this time of year, you want to do something to make your home look festive and special and create the wonderful Christmas holiday atmosphere. You'll find some ideas here for quick and simple ways to add a festive look to your home without spending a lot of time or money. And you'll have time left over to really enjoy Christmas!
Most are our ideas are very easy, many are free, and none takes more than a minimum of time and effort.
1. Decorate Everything With Bows
  • Tie generous ribbons to chair backs, candlesticks, picks in plants, wreaths, garlands, basket handles, drapery tie-backs, stair railings, and doorknobs.
  • Bows look festive and the ribbons you choose should tie together with the rest of your decorating. Choose ribbons in colors and patterns that coordinate with your decorating scheme.
  • You don't have to stick with red and green. Choose plaids or florals that tie in. If you can't find anything that looks quite right, then choose metallic silver, gold, green, or red.
  • Choose a ribbon that you can untie and re-tie each year. This will save money in the long run, and you'll end up with a good collection.
  • When the holidays are over, untie the ribbons and press them lightly. The bows won't get crushed and the ribbons will be ready when you want to take them out the next year.
  • See instructions on how to make your own floral bows of all sizes using wire. By using wire to make your bows, you'll be able to attach them to many objects.
2. Use holiday tableware for every meal in December.
  • Look through your cupboards and get out any dishes that look festive.
  • Discount stores often carry seconds of name brand china, as well as fun designs that are not so common.
  • Start a set of holiday dishes with dinner plates that coordinate with your everyday dishes. Add new pieces each year, like salad plates and mugs. Note: Be sure the pattern you select will be continued from year to year.
  • Buy 1 or 2 place settings each year. Before long, you'll be able to serve a feast.
  • If you're adventuresome, choose a different pattern and one place setting each year. Arrange the different dishes around the table and get lots of comments and rekindle memories. When they're not in use, the dishes can be displayed around the room.
3. Turn off the lights.
  • Arrange lots of candles on the dining table and dine by candlelight, even if you're just having leftovers. Every meal will feel special.
  • Burn a fire in the fireplace each evening and encourage family members to gather around and read, do homework, write Christmas cards, or snooze.
  • Arrange pillar candles in your bathroom, on the sink or around the tub. Take time to soak and enjoy! If you have little children in your home, you should be very careful with candles around the house. Always have an adult in the room.
4. Hang holiday wreaths.
  • Put a wreath or swag on every door you have. Of course, start with the front door to welcome guests.
  • Go on to the back door, inside and out. Remember over the mantle, and in all your front windows. Don't forget bedroom doors, inside and out.
  • Use real pine, holly, or grapevine, decorated with bows, berries, fruit, pinecones, raffia, ornaments, birds, photos, or candy.
  • To keep wreaths year after year, buy artificial wreaths that will last. Remember, you'll need room to store them!
5. Use lots of special color.
  • Don't even think about not putting up the perfect Christmas tree.
  • Drape garlands, either real or artificial, on railings, over mirrors, on the top of armoires, and along the mantle.
  • Use ribbons and ornaments to put wonderful color around your home for this special season.
6. Do you hear what I hear?
  • Whenever you're home, turn on a CD or the radio and listen to Christmas music.
  • Tie some sleigh bells onto the front door, and listen to the cheery welcome.
  • When you go into your children's room in the morning, wake them with jingling bells or a jolly "ho, ho, ho".
  • Check the schedules ahead of time so you don't miss the Christmas specials on TV. Make it a family time to share these wonderful shows.
  • Collect the classic movies with Christmas themes, such as "A Christmas Story", "It's a Wonderful Life", "Scrooge", or "The Santa Clause".
7. Have something sweet around the house.
  • Prepare a bowl of fresh fruit or holiday cookies to put out as soon as guests arrive.
  • Bake little loaves of tea breads and wrap them in holiday wrap. Set them in a pretty basket for decoration, then take one when you go visiting and give one to guests who visit your home.
  • Make a wreath with candies tied on. Have a small scissors handy to cut off candies for guests.
  • Fill a pretty basket with traditional candy canes and set it on the coffee table or entry table.
  • Make or buy a gingerbread house for decoration and snacking.
  • Put goodies in your guestroom to make your house guests feel really welcome.
8. Add gifts of nature.
  • Use leftover greens from your Christmas tree to make a few quick arrangements in simple bowls.
  • Place a simple arrangement in a bookcase, on the bath sink, on the kitchen window sill, and on occasional tables.
  • Pile pine cones with ornaments and bows in a bowl or basket.
  • Gather sprigs of holiday greens together with a bow and hang them from the inside of your windows.
  • Decorate your bathroom or kitchen with a small poinsettia.
  • Collect branches of evergreen and make a simple swag for your bedroom doors.
  • Tie evergreen sprigs onto candles with a pretty ribbon. Add colorful, small ornaments.
9. Add shine and sparkle to everything!
  • Sprinkle artificial snow across your tabletop or buffet or on house plants.
  • Place shiny ornaments in a clear glass bowl or vase.
  • Embellish indoor plants or trees with shiny ornaments.
  • Set up a menorah celebrating Hanukkah, the Festival of Lights.
10. Create memories and bring happiness.
  • Plan a time in the day when the whole family is home to open the doors of an advent calendar.
  • Make a ritual of lighting the Christmas tree each evening.
  • Remember friends or acquaintances who cannot go out and offer a small, decorated Christmas tree.
  • Make a family time of preparing Christmas or holiday cards, taking a family picture, and addressing the cards. Offer to help a friend who cannot do this task alone.
By keeping things simple, you'll find that you can enjoy the season, the lights, and the traditions with family and friends without getting tired out in the process. Merry Christmas!
Janet Furr and the Virtuale-Staff


VirtualeStaff is a contract staffing company that helps U.S. businesses reduce expense and retain talent for administrative jobs by recruiting highly skilled employees from, and maintaining infrastructure in the Philippines. VirtualeStaff works with customers to identify tasks that are suited for out-tasking with our workforce skillsets. We recruithire and manage a solution team from our headquarters in the Philippines.


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

How to Get a Job

Whether you're looking for your very first job, switching careers, or re-entering the job market after an extended absence, finding a job requires two main tasks: understanding yourself and understanding the job market. Presuming you've already chosen a career and are currently searching for jobs, here are several ways to actually get a job.
Edit  Steps
  1. 1
    Network. The best companies to work for tend to rely heavily (up to 40%) on employee referrals.[1] Make a list of all of your friends, relatives, and acquaintances. Call each one and ask them if they know of any openings that they could recommend you for. Don't be too humble or apologetic. Tell them what you've been looking for, but let them know that you're flexible and that if they have any suggestions, you're open to them. This is not the time to be picky about jobs; a connection can often get your foot in the door, and you can negotiate pay or switch positions later once you've gained experience and established your good reputation.
     Earn ₱10,000 PhP per day We're hiring Filipino translators
    • Touch base with all of your references. The purpose of this is twofold. You can ask them for leads and you'll also be refreshing their memory of you in their mind. (Hopefully their memory of you is a good one, or else you shouldn't be putting them down as a reference.) If a potential employer calls them, they won't hesitate as much when remembering who you are.
  2. 2
    Volunteer. If you aren't already, start volunteering for an organization that focuses on something that you're passionate about. You may end up doing boring or easy work in the beginning but as you stick around and demonstrate your commitment, you'll be given more responsibilities. Not only will you be helping others, but you'll also be gaining references. You should emphasize your volunteer experience on your resume, as companies that treat their employees well tend to favor candidates who help the community somehow.[1]
  3. 3
    Work for the UN. The United Nations has a lot of organizations where you can work as an employee, volunteer or you may get an internship with them.
    There are many sites to start your job search there:
  4. 4
    Develop your personal elevator pitch. Many structured interviews, particularly those at large companies, start with a question like "tell me about yourself." The interviewer doesn't really want you to go back to grade school and talk about your childhood. This is a specific question with a specific answer...in two minutes or so, the interviewer wants to get you to relax and loosen out your vocal cords, understand your background, your accomplishments, why you want to work at XYZ company and what your future goals are.
  5. 5
    Prepare for a behavioral interview. You might be asked to describe problems you've encountered in the past and how you handled them, or you'll be given a hypothetical situation and asked what you would do. They'll basically want to know how you'll perform when faced with obstacles in the position you're interviewing for. Be able to give honest, detailed examples from your past, even if the question is hypothetical (e.g. "I would contact the customer directly, based on my past experience in a different situation in which the customer was very pleased to receive a phone call from the supervisor"). You might find yourself listing facts--if so, remember that in this kind of interview, you need to tell a story. Some questions you might be asked are:
    • "Describe a time you had to work with someone you didn't like."
    • "Tell me about a time when you had to stick by a decision you had made, even though it made you very unpopular."
    • "Give us an example of something particularly innovative that you have done that made a difference in the workplace."
    • "How would you handle an employee who's consistently late?"
  6. 6
    Research the company. Don't just do an Internet search, memorize their mission, and be done with it. If it's a retail company, visit a few of their stores, observe the customers, and even strike up a few conversations. Talk to existing employees--ask them what it's like working there, how long the position has been open, and what you can do to increase your chances of getting it. Become familiar with the history of the company. Who started it? Where? Who runs it now? Be creative, and out do the other candidates.
  7. 7
    Settle down. If you've moved around a lot, be prepared to offer a good reason for it. Otherwise, you'll need to make a good case for why you want to stick around in the area where the job is located. A company doesn't want to hire someone with wanderlust who still wants to relocate. Be prepared to outline why you are where you are today, how long you intend to stay there, and why. Give specific reasons like "This county has the best school systems in the entire state, and I have a daughter who might find the cure for cancer" or "I was drawn to this area because it's at the cutting edge of innovation for this business and I want to be a part of that." The more details, names, and specifics, the better.
  8. 8
    Make a list of work-related skills you'd like to learn. Your employer will be interested in hearing about how you intend to become a better employee. Think about which skills will make you more competent in the position you're applying for. Public speaking, project management, team leading, and computer programs are usually beneficial. Find some books and upcoming conferences that would significantly improve your abilities. In an interview, tell the employer what you're reading and learning, and that you'd like to continue doing so. This is a list of the 7 most important job skills, wanted by employers, that a job seeker must have to be sure of landing a good job and just as importantly, keeping it.
    • The ability to find relevant information: Research Skill Job seekers should possess the ability to systematically find relevant information through research not because they want a research job, but in order to do effective searches for the data needed by a particular activity.
    • Logical thinking: Information Handling. Most businesses regard the ability to handle and organize information to produce effective solutions as one of the top skills employers want. The ability to make sensible solutions regarding a spending proposal or an internal activity is valued.
    • IT Skill: Technological Ability Most job openings will require people who are IT or computer literate or know how to operate different machines and office equipment, whether a PC or multi-function copier and scanner. This doesn't mean that employers need people who are technology graduates. The simple fact that job seekers know the basic principles of using the technology is sufficient.
    • Getting your words understood: Communication Skills Employers tend to value and hire people who are able to express their thoughts efficiently through verbal and written communication. People who land a good job easily are usually those who are adept in speaking and writing.
    • Efficiency: Organizational Skills Organization is extremely important to maintain a harmonious working relationship in the company and the opposite, disorganization costs money. Hence, most employers want people who know how to arrange their work through methods that maintain orderliness in the workplace.
    • Getting on with others: Interpersonal Skill Because the working environment consists of various kinds of personalities and people with different backgrounds, it is essential to possess the skill of communicating and working with people from different walks of life.
    • Career Advancement: Professional Growth Employers prefer to hire people who are able to create a plan that will generate maximum personal and career growth. This means that you are willing to improve yourself professionally by learning new skills to keep up with developments in the workplace. These are just some of the top skills employers want. Take note of these skills which demonstrate how to get the job and be successful in your every job seeking endeavor. From Your-Career-Change.com.
  9. 9
    Cold call. Locate a specific person who can help you (usually the human resources or hiring manager at a company or organization you're interested in). Call that person and ask if they are hiring, but do not become discouraged if they are not. Ask what kind of qualifications they look for or if they have apprentice or government sponsored work programs. Ask if you can send your resume indicating what field you want to go into. Indicate whether you would accept a lesser job and work up.
    • Reflect after each phone call on what went well and what did not. You may need to write out some standard answers on your list of skills so you can speak fluently. You may need to get some additional training to break into your chosen field. None of this means you cannot get a good job, only that you need to become further prepared to do so.
  10. 10
    Change your attitude. There's a difference between making phone calls and going to interviews thinking "I'm looking for a job" versus "I'm here to do the work you need to have done".[2] When you're looking to get a job, you're expecting someone to give something to you, so you focus on impressing them. Yes, it's important to make a good impression, but it's even more important to demonstrate your desire and ability to help. Everything that you write and say should be preceded silently by the statement "This is how I can help your business succeed."
  11. 11
    Fit the job to the skills rather than the other way around. Many people search for jobs, then try to see how they can "tweak" the way they present their own skills and experiences to fit the job description. Instead, try something different. Make a list of all of your skills, determine which kinds of businesses and industries need them most (ask around for advice if you need to) and find businesses that will benefit from having you and your skills around. It's important the nature of the job fits your personality and salary requirements, otherwise you'll have spent a significant amount of time to find a day job you dread getting up for every morning.[2]
Janet Furr and the Virtual e-Staff

VirtualeStaff is a contract staffing company that helps U.S. businesses reduce expense and retain talent for administrative jobs by recruiting highly skilled employees from, and maintaining infrastructure in the Philippines. VirtualeStaff works with customers to identify tasks that are suited for out-tasking with our workforce skillsets. We recruithire and manage a solution team from our headquarters in the Philippines.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Hiring and Retaining Good Employees

by Myron Curry
Contributing Author
Hiring good employees is not only important to business, it is essential. Employees are the heart and soul of a business; they are the mechanism that makes a business run; they are the breath of life that enables a business to be something more than an idea. A business cannot run unless someone (employees, in this case) is doing the work. Any intelligent business owner should want good employees.
Employers Not the Only Ones to Feel the Effect
Bad employees not only affect an employer by driving down sales, costing the company unwanted expenses due to negligence or simple lack of motivation, etc, but they affect the customer as well. Of course, once a customer has experienced a bad employee, it automatically affects the employer in obvious ways. Although this seems like common sense to most people, it is uncanny how most employers will overlook this fact, whether it s because of time constraints to effectively deal with the problem or lack of better judgment. Whatever the case, it is a fact that sales get driven down and production slowed for a reason. That reason could very well be because of the customer s lack of satisfaction with whatever service he or she had received and that lack of satisfaction stems from bad employees.
Find the Right People to Start With
This is one of the most important things you, as an employer, can do. Getting the right people into your company to start with gets things moving in the right direction at the very beginning.
According to Chairman and CEO, Hal F. Rosenbluth, and Consultant, Diane McFerrin Peters, of Rosenbluth International, the third-largest travel management company in the world, most of us choose our spouse with care and rear our children with nurturing and compassionate attention. Yet, we tend to select the people who will join our company on the basis of an interview or two, and once they have joined, they often find that they must fend for themselves.
This contrast illustrates the disparity between the environments of family and work. But, given the amount of time we must spend at work, wouldn't we all be happier if we took as much care at the office as at home to create a supportive environment? Wouldn't we also be far more successful?
The answer is yes.
The Customer Does Not Come First
It s important to remember that if you want quality employees, your company must be of the same caliber. If you expect to attract an employee who thrives to be as dedicated to the business as possible, doing more than what is expected, and putting forth 110% without any consideration being given to the employee s personal needs, thoughts, and desires, you are truly fooling yourself. And, eventually, your business will suffer for it.
It s obvious to most, by now, that benefits and perks play a large part in attracting employees. I need not explain the many benefits that a company should make available to attract a good employee because it should be common sense to most, by now. I will say, however, that attaining a good employee must go much farther than just having a great set of benefits. After all, does a wonderful benefits package actually attract only good employees? Of course not. There must be more to it than that.
For the customer to be served with the best results humanly possible, a more modern approach to the theory of customer satisfaction must be realized which is that the customer should not come first; the employee should. Therein in itself is one of the most successful ways to attract a good employee.
When a business puts its employees first, many things can happen. To begin with, the employee is happy. If the employee is happy, the service that the employee provides to the customer will be far more outstanding than if he or she were not happy. If the service is outstanding, the customer will be happy and that only spells successful results for the business.
This does not mean that an employer must wait hand and foot on the employee. No, it simply means that careful consideration to what an employee thinks, wants, and suggests should be considered. Do not treat an employee as if he or she is a factory robot working on a clock. Treat them as people. Treat them with respect by talking to them as people and not talking down to them as employees . In fact, a good idea would be to remove the term employee all together. One successful company I know of refers to its employees as associates , thereby empowering their associates with a feeling of more respect and purpose.
Employee Leadership and Flexibility a Must
An open, friendly atmosphere is a must in a workplace. Micro managing, as most already are aware of, is frowned upon. This is for a reason. When a work environment is open enough for all employees to contribute and offer ideas and suggestions, without ridicule or negative response, this sparks creativity in an employee and, again, empowers them to contribute more to the business. If everyone feels as though they are a part of the leadership process and not just a worker bee, they will have a satisfying feeling that can go a long way. Micro managing completely kills this system.
An employer must be flexible. Does there really need to be a rigid schedule? Does lunchtime really need to take place at a specific time? Who actually needs a clock to tell them when they are hungry? This line of thinking is what is needed in every faucet of business, as simple as it seems. It makes an employee feel more like a human; it makes them feel as though the business respects them as a person and will put them first. Once that consideration is instilled in an employee s mind, there isn t anything that he or she wouldn't do for a business. And, when a person looks forward to waking up in the morning to begin working in a place where they feel management gives them respect and thinks highly of them, they will put forth the effort to show appreciation.
Hire Nice People
Experience and degrees are great ways of measuring employees qualifications and potential but ask yourself, are they nice people? A person can be the most qualified, educated, and experienced possible employee on the planet but if they have the personality of a wet paper bag or of a caged wolverine, it s guaranteed they re not going to do much for your business. Those that have to work with them will be disgruntled on a daily bases and begin putting out a poor performance. The customers that receive service from them will be unhappy and I need not say what happens after that.
Hire nice people. Nice people can do wonders for a business. Sound picky? It is. But, when it comes to your business, can you afford not to be picky?
A nice person can learn anything. Nice people are pleasant to be around and are easy to teach. They are notoriously quick to learn. So, even if your nice person does not have the skill set that you are looking for, one might consider the possibility of training. Think about the potential, especially if nice people seem to be rare in your neck of the woods.
How Do You Find Nice People?
This should be obvious. During the interview process, were they down-to-earth or were they focused solely on success, success, and more success? As crazy as it may seem, the total, success driven fanatic may not be the best option. Again, the person who seems more like a person would be the best candidate for hiring. In the long run, they will make your business more successful because they would make the customer, as well as those that have to work with them, happier.
Conduct tests and unconventional interview methods.
Why should an interview consist of one or two meetings in a stuffy room? How can we really find out about a person that way? The answer is that we can t. Instead, how about combining the stuffy office interview one day with another day of playing a game of softball with other, current employees, as Hal F. Rosenbluth and Diane McFerrin tend to do within their company? This would be great for company moral and, at the same time, provide a chance to see how the potential employee reacts in a team environment. If the person is bent on nothing but winning and becomes angry when other teammates drop the ball or do not hit as far as they should, perhaps this person is not the best employee to have around. Chances are that their performance on the softball field will reflect their performance in the office. (31-32).
Go for a drive.
As again explained by Hal F. Rosenbluth and Diane McFerrin Peters, the way a person drives an automobile says a lot about a person s personality. Are they overly aggressive and speed through traffic, weaving in an out of other cars, determined to get to the point of destination no matter what the cost? Or, are they assertive drivers who consider the safety of their passengers and think of alternate routes when confronted with a traffic jam, focusing more on the drive than the destination? (31). Which person would you rather have working for you? Which person would you rather have serving your customers? If you were a customer, which person would you rather have serving you?
Invite your new, potential employee to a company social event. Are they the type of person that talks only of themselves and continuously brags about all of the wonderful things that he or she has done? Do they even talk to anyone at all? These are the folks that either want to gain far more than they are willing to contribute or aren't willing to gain or contribute. These are the type of people that will bring your company down.

So, some key points to consider thus far:

Consider your employees before your customers. Not only will the employee put out a far better performance due to feeling respected, but your company will also build a reputation as being the company to work for , which will attract other, good employees.
Be flexible. Constraints in the office constrain creativity and work performance. Go for casual clothing, if possible. Let your employee decide when it s time to eat and take a break. Be flexible on your employee s schedule, catering to his or her personal needs. The employee will show appreciation in return, by supplying a good output of production.
Hire nice people. Not one customer in the world, no matter what business you are in, enjoys service from someone with less-than-appreciative attitude. And, your other employees will not enjoy working with them either, bringing down moral and production drastically. This kind of person will not be willing to strive at contributing to your company; they will strive to contribute only to themselves.
Consider the unconventional when interviewing an employee. The more often you can set a scenario that a potential employee will not expect or could find to be an unusual method of interviewing, the better. It will give you a chance to see what that person is really capable of, as a person.
Retaining Good Employees
As important as attracting good employees is, it is just as important to retain them. As always, benefit packages help to retain employees. But, again, this is something that most people are already aware of. Sure, there will be those that will want to stay for the great benefits. But, is that all you, as an employer, can offer? No.
After spending as much time as you should have in attracting good employees, it only makes sense that you would go to certain lengths to keep them. Chances are, if you really attracted a good employee, it wasn t just because of the benefits. And, chances are that your good employee will not stay just because of the benefits. Benefits, although a positive force, are not the end all and can, at times, be a false sense of security to an employer. Not everyone develops his or her retention decision on a benefits package, at least not the smart employee.
Let Them Change it Up Now and Again
Let your people explore your company. Don't lock them into one, specific type of work, especially if they express desire to try other things. In today s job market, job-hoping, as it is known, is a regular occurrence. If you provide your employees with the chance to job-hop within your company, this is one way of keeping them there. Give them the opportunity to gain new experience, knowledge, and skills. This will only enhance your company anyway, by having an employee that can do and handle more. It also increases confidence in the employee and makes their work more satisfying. The United States military and civil services such as police and fire departments have already figured that one out. They call it cross-training and fleeting-up and it s a great idea.
Communication
Communicating is very important, not only in day to day business, but in retention as well. People need to feel as though they have a grasp on what is going on within the company. They want to know where the company is going and how they will be part of that process. They need to feel they are involved in the company. Being part of any planning processes, being able to contribute ideas for the company, and essentially being heard is all part of communication. Again, this is emphasized in most of the U.S. s military forces as well, even though they conduct themselves in more of a dictatorship.
Know why your people wanted to join your company in the first place and hone in on that. Keep that priority of the employee in consideration, always acting on it and developing it, and the employee will want to continue that purpose with a strong sense.
Talk to your people. Not only should you get to know them, you should get to know what they continue to want and think. And, don t think for a minute that a person s desires and thoughts on particular matters will be the same later down the road as they were when they first joined the organization. Things change, including your employee s thoughts and desires. Keep up with those changes.
Get feedback from your employee s. Find out what they think is right and wrong with the company. Provide a feedback forum. And, most importantly, act on the information you receive from this feedback.
In summary:
Let your employee job hop and provide an opportunity to let them do it within your company, instead of having to go outside the company. More than likely, if they can t do it in the company, they will venture outside to a place that they can. Take advantage of the multiple skills your people can learn within the company. This not only helps your company out, it gives the employee a feeling of more purpose and he or she will enjoy not having to go far to expand their skills.
Keep your people in mind when it comes to information on where the company is headed and what it is doing. If the employee does not feel informed on what is happening, they will not feel as though they are part of the company and, therefore, will not want to stay, in the long run.
Get to know what your people want, when they first enter the organization and periodically throughout their tenure. People s motives and desires change. The good employer is the one that can keep up with those changes. Offer feedback methods and make sure you act on the results.
Above all, remember what it was that got you that good employee in the first place. The concepts mentioned in this article that enable an employer to attain a good employee to begin with are basically the same principals of retaining them as well. It s that simple. Anyone who works for a company that considers their needs, is just, and can remain flexible, as well as provides other good employees to work alongside, will want to continue working in that company. Hiring and retaining good employees goes hand in hand.

Janet Furr and the Virtuale-Staff

VirtualeStaff is a contract staffing company that helps U.S. businesses reduce expense and retain talent for administrative jobs by recruiting highly skilled employees from, and maintaining infrastructure in the Philippines. VirtualeStaff works with customers to identify tasks that are suited for out-tasking with our workforce skillsets. We recruithire and manage a solution team from our headquarters in the Philippines.