This comprehensive manual helps you develop an effective strategy for job-description implementation, shows you how to conduct appropriate job analyses and helps you understand the attendant legal issues. Includes a disk of generic jo + descriptions to use as-is or modify for your practice.
Determine what's working in your practice and eliminate what isn't. This edition shows you how to gather crucial information about your practice by listing the pertinent questions in all areas. The results will help you decide which management areas to strenghten. Tables and questions address external and internal environments, financial management, human resource management, information systems, operations management, planning and marketing, and quality improvement.
This easy-to-use guide will help entrepreneurs steer clear of often costly "trial and error" methods, and move them steadily toward success. "Tips and Traps for Entrepreneurs" is full of valuable management insights--real-life, step-by-step examples that have been used successfully by entrepreneurs in many industries.
A survival guide for small business owners by the "Dear Abby" of entrepreneurs. Complete with easy-to-follow start-up, operational guidance, and a resource guide, this entrepreneurial "success kit" is must reading for serious entrepreneurs of every age, educational background, and type of business. Illus.
Otto Höfler (1901–1987) was an Austrian Germanist and Scandinavist. His research on ‘Germanic culture’, in particular on Germanic Männerbünde (men’s bands), was controversial and remains a topic of academic debate. In modern discourse, Höfler’s theories are often fundamentally rejected on account of his involvement in the National Socialist movement and his contribution to the research initiatives of the SS Ahnenerbe, or they are adopted by scholars who ignore his problematic methodologies and the ideological and political elements of his work. The present study takes a comprehensive approach to Höfler’s research on ‘Germanic culture’ and analyses his characterisation of the ‘Germanic peoples’, contextualising his research in the backdrop of German philological studies of the early twentieth century and highlighting elements of his theories that are still the topic of modern academic discourse. A thorough analysis of his main research theses, focusing on his Männerbund-research, reveals that his concept of ‘Germanic culture’ is underscored by a belief in the deep-seated religiosity of the ‘Germanic peoples’ formed through sacred-daemonic forces.
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