Thursday, September 19, 2013

HBR Guide to Office Politics


HBR Guide to Office Politics


I came up with this excerpt from HBR Guide to Office politics to help my Sister Yeside to have a peripheral knowledge on Organizational politics and am sure other readers will like it as well...

EVERY ORGANIZATION HAS ITS SHARE OF POLITICAL DRAMA: Personalities clash. Agendas compete. Turf wars erupt. It can make you crazy if you're trying to keep your head down and get your job done. The problem is, you can't just keep your head down. You need to work productively with your colleagues--even the challenging ones--for the good of your organization and your career. How can you do that without crossing over to the dark side? By acknowledging that power dynamics and unwritten rules exist--and by constructively navigating them. "Politics" needn't be a dirty word. You can succeed at work without being a power grabber or a corporate climber. Whether you're a new professional or an experienced one, this guide will help you: (1) Build relationships with difficult people, (2) gain allies and influence others, (3) wrangle resources, (4) move up without ruffling feathers, (5) avoid power games and petty rivalries, and (6) claim credit when it's due.

It's all yours, enjoy !!!

Sunday, September 8, 2013

From My Friend " HELEN FLETCHER "


Creamy Pound Cake with Strawberry Lemon Sauce

BY HELEN S. FLETCHER, ON 
COPYRIGHT, HELEN S. FLETCHER, 2013. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
ALL PHOTOS BY T. MIKE FLETCHER, UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED.
Finished photoMany years ago a friend of mine gave me the recipe for this Creamy Pound Cake.  I remember thinking this couldn’t possibly work – as bakers we have been trained to preheat the oven.  This started in a cold oven. But because she was such a good cook I decided to give it a try exactly as it was given to me.  Wow! was I wrong!  This is a fantastic, easy pound cake.  The only caveat is to make sure the butter is really soft or it won’t blend together with the large amount of sugar.  I find it fascinating that is rises as it does without the benefit of any kind of leavening which is why it is important beat a lot of air into the butter/sugar.  It is a dense cake, as pound cakes are, but it has a moistness and flavor that is incomparable.  It literally lasts for days under a cake cover and freezes well.
Everyone I know who has made this has sworn by it and like me, finds the recipe fascinating.  In fact, the reputation of this pound cake is so great,  I was asked by a local magazine for the recipe to use in their yearly cookbook.
Every time I make this I think of my friend, now gone, and what a wonderful gift she gave me.
Pound CakePound cake ingredients2 sticks butter (1/2 pound or 225 grams)
3 cups sugar (600 grams or 21 ounces)
6 eggs
1 tablespoons vanilla
1 cup cake flour (100 grams or 3 1/2 ounces)
1 3/4 cup all purpose flour (245 grams or 9 ounces)
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup 40% cream
Spray tube pan very well.  Set aside.Angel Food Cake Pan
Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.Butter and sugar
Butter and Sugar mixedAdd eggs, 3 at a time beating well after each addition
3 eggs in3 eggs beaten in
Add the vanilla; beating well.vanilla inSift the flours and salt together.  Add alternately with cream, starting and ending with flour.1st flour in
first cream in
Completely mixedPour into tube pan
Batter in panSmooth the top.SmoothedPlace in a COLD oven.  Set the oven for 275 degrees.  Bake 1 hour and 15 minutes to 1 hour and 30 minutes until golden brown on top and a tester comes out clean.
Cool 15 to 20 minutes.  Release from pan.
Strawberry Lemon Sauce
4 cups sliced strawberries
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Grated lemon zest from 1/2 lemon
1/3 to 1/2 cup sugar, or to taste
1/4 teaspoon pepper, optional
Combine all together in a mixing bowl about 1 hour before serving.  Let rest at room temperature.
Finished photo with SauceSpecial thanks to Hillary for commenting she didn’t have a tube pan, what could she do.  The recipe will cut in half really easily so I suggested a 9×5 loaf pan.  She wrote back today saying she had made 2 loaf pans out of a full recipe and they were fantastic.  Hilary said she baked them for the same amount of time.  She did mention the top of the cake was very crusty and fell off, but all was good otherwise.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Marine - D3


Rare Undersea Discovery that Could Extend Your Life by 10, 20 or 30 Years

Rare Undersea Discovery Could Extend Your Life by 10, 20 or 30 Years
Humans have made incredible health strides and are living longer lives than ever.  Many of the maladies that struck down our ancestors have for the most part been completely eliminated – everything from tuberculosis, to polio to malaria.
Today, the biggest killers stem as much from our lifestyles as from microscopic bacteria and viruses.  One of the worst of these is heart disease, and specifically high blood pressure. It’s a slow, but efficient killer that robs many people of what should be the last 10, 20 or 30 years of their lives.
Part of the reason that heart disease is so prevalent and intractable is that it often requires massive changes to one’s lifestyle— changes that are not easy to make.  Everything from radically altering ones diet to implementing serious exercise routines.  And while it’s never too late to start, people often realize the true danger only when it’s too late to make the changes and the damage is done.
Now, however, there may be a scientific breakthrough that could have an impact on high blood pressure comparable to penicillin’s ability treat infections or quinine’s effect on malaria.
Scientists are claiming that they have now isolated unusual ingredients in a rare seaweed discovered by fishermen off the coast of Korea that offer incredible health benefits—including the ability to restore blood pressure to normal levels.
Dr. Haengwoo Lee, a renowned biochemist living near Seattle, Washington conducted a massive 15 year, multimillion dollar clinical study on these two ingredients. The first is Seanol, an extremely rare seaweed extract from Ecklonia Cava that's proven to be 100 times more powerful than any land-based antioxidant. That's because it stays working in your body for 12 hours, compared to land-based antioxidants that work for 30 minutes.
"Its secret is its make-up of special polyphenol antioxidants that are a whopping 40% lipid (fat) soluble," Dr. Lee explains. "Unlike nearly all land-based antioxidants that are water soluble, Seanol's protective compounds can get into things like the fatty tissues of your brain and penetrate all three layers of your cells, including the outside, the oil-based cell membranes, and your DNA."
Indeed, Seanol is so powerful, it's the only FDA-approved Ecklonia Cava marine-algae extract in existence.
The second ingredient is Calamarine, a deep-sea omega-3 discovery that delivers 85% more DHA omega-3s to your heart, brain, joints, and eyes. It's known to combat everything from fatigue and poor memory, to vision problems, joint pain, mood swings and depression.
With that research in mind, Dr. Lee combined Seanol and Calamarine with a high dose of vitamin D to form Marine-D3, the newest supplement in the fight against age-related illnesses and high blood pressure.
According to the CDC, about 1 in 3 U.S. adults has high blood pressure, which increases the risk for heart disease and stroke, the two leading causes of death in the United States. Increasing your omega-3 intake can reduce high blood pressure, and because it's difficult to get enough omega-3s in foods like fish and nuts, many people turn to supplements.
Dr. Lee found that Calamarine delivers some of the greatest concentration of omega-3s known to science, and has been able to formulate it without any fishy burps or aftertaste. Combined with Seanol's ability to reduce body inflammation, as well as help cells get the nutrients they need to thrive, stay healthy and protected, Marine-D3 is able to boost a body's entire well being.
The makers of Marine-D3 are so confident that you'll see fast dramatic results from this product, that if you aren't happy after two full months, simply return the unused portion and they'll buy it back. They'll even give you ten dollars extrajust for giving it an honest try! That kind of faith, combined with Dr. Lee's exhaustive research, shows that Marine-D3 really is a one-of-a-kind product.

Monday, September 2, 2013

From BRIC to BRINC

It's my joy as a student of International Business to bring to your notice a transitional change in the atmosphere of investment localization... The BRIC investors fleeing to a more robust land of opportunities.

Please go through this article by my coach and mentor - HILARY KRAMER.

With even Goldman Sachs turning cold on the core emerging markets basket of Brazil, India, Russia and China, investors are combing the world looking for a place to put their money to work. For this new generation of adventurers, the goal is to be on the ground in the right new market before it becomes the core — and Nigeria just started flashing all the signals.
For years, the country – the biggest and most dynamic frontier economy in Africa, with a GDP on par with global capital destinations like Hong Kong and Singapore – had a Wild West reputation for both rambunctious growth and a little danger. But while the entrepreneurial energy of Lagos still reminds fund managers of Houston multiplied by four times the population, success in cracking down on security threats in the oil-rich interior is changing the security situation for the better.

Contributor Monday’s reports that government forces may have killed Abubakar Shekau, the leader of the Boko Haram insurgency, mean the rewards here may now substantially outweigh the risks. As Nigerian Senate President David Mark told me, security is a critical factor for the current administration and extremist groups like Boko Haram have already been pushed to the country’s borders.
However, many investors still have an outdated conception of Nigeria as a dangerous market engulfed by unrest and corruption, and so stocks in Lagos still trade at something of a distress discount to reflect the country’s past – and create an opportunity for investors willing to understand what the Nigeria of today is really all about.
Massive growth, dramatic value
The $31 billion currently moving on the Nigerian Stock Exchange represents annual economic activity of $268 billion. To buy the same amount of productivity in Singapore, for example, would cost nearly $737 billion, or 23 times as much. Even in relatively mature emerging markets like Brazil and Russia that are unlikely to enjoy much in the way of future growth, domestic equity trades at a 200% to 300% premium over what it would cost in Lagos.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian economy is growing at an annualized rate well above 6%, faster than any of the top-tier emerging markets short of China itself. Although the oil sector still contributed $8 billion to GDP in the first quarter of 2013 – largely in the form of exports to the United States — the country’s petroleum wealth now takes a back seat to its expanding middle class. Construction, hospitality and service are actually booming at a rate faster than what even China can currently claim, without the top-down state meddling.
While a planned Beijing-style economy runs counter to all the laissez-faire impulses the oil boom has brought to Lagos, investors here can also count on more transparency and better corporate governance than ever. Compared to the sometimes-intimidating government presence of countries like China, India or Russia, Nigeria has traditionally confronted investors with too much freedom, but the regulatory environment is making great strides.

President Goodluck Jonathan has pursued a “Transformation Agenda” with two extremely market-friendly goals since his election in 2011: accelerate the modernization of the economy and finish the job of eliminating money laundering, payroll fraud and other once-persistent red flags for investors who want to make sure their interests are taken as seriously as they would be in any developed economy.
Judges who accept bribes are losing their jobs and facing formal prosecution. And as Senator Mark tells me, the level of corruption that Nigerians and foreign investors once dealt with on a day-to-day basis would seem “extremely exaggerated” in modern Lagos.
In the place of corruption, the young and dynamic population is finding work. New infrastructure is coming online to support private enterprise and while oil remains the center of the economy, education, employment, agriculture and even home ownership are rapidly emerging as linchpins of the new Nigeria.
Opening the floodgates to global capital is another strategic goal. Yvonne Emordi, head of strategy at the Nigerian Stock Exchange, is serious about boosting the country’s overall public market capitalization to $1 trillion by 2016.

Putting Lagos on equal footing with Bombay or Sao Paulo as a global capital hub in three years would be quite a feat, but the foundations for that kind of growth are already in place. Nigeria was one of the world’s four best-performing markets last year with a 35.45% gain, while a compound return above 10% a year since 2003 can easily support doubling the market’s capitalization from decade to decade if the trend continues.
While thin capital flows often turns one year’s top frontier into a big loser immediately thereafter, Nigeria is relatively liquid by African standards and seems to be early in its cycle of attracting liquidity. Overseas investors currently hold about 43% of the shares in Lagos, which is relatively balanced – nowhere near an unsustainable glut of fast foreign money but those who come in now already have something like critical mass to work with.

And while the risk of terrorist disruption recedes, money keeps flowing in the form of direct investment in the domestic economy. In just the last six months, U.S. corporations like Procter & Gamble PG +0.75% have committed at least $700 million to build new factories and agricultural facilities in the country while the Nigerian government itself announced a $1 billion fund to nurture the local software industry, which officials think can ultimately capture $20 billion a year from rivals like India.With even Goldman Sachs turning cold on the core emerging markets basket of Brazil, India, Russia and China, investors are combing the world looking for a place to put their money to work. For this new generation of adventurers, the goal is to be on the ground in the right new market before it becomes the core — and Nigeria just started flashing all the signals.

For years, the country – the biggest and most dynamic frontier economy in Africa, with a GDP on par with global capital destinations like Hong Kong and Singapore – had a Wild West reputation for both rambunctious growth and a little danger. But while the entrepreneurial energy of Lagos still reminds fund managers of Houston multiplied by four times the population, success in cracking down on security threats in the oil-rich interior is changing the security situation for the better.

ContributorMonday’s reports that government forces may have killed Abubakar Shekau, the leader of the Boko Haram insurgency, mean the rewards here may now substantially outweigh the risks. As Nigerian Senate President David Mark told me, security is a critical factor for the current administration and extremist groups like Boko Haram have already been pushed to the country’s borders.
However, many investors still have an outdated conception of Nigeria as a dangerous market engulfed by unrest and corruption, and so stocks in Lagos still trade at something of a distress discount to reflect the country’s past – and create an opportunity for investors willing to understand what the Nigeria of today is really all about. Massive growth, dramatic value.

The $31 billion currently moving on the Nigerian Stock Exchange represents annual economic activity of $268 billion. To buy the same amount of productivity in Singapore, for example, would cost nearly $737 billion, or 23 times as much. Even in relatively mature emerging markets like Brazil and Russia that are unlikely to enjoy much in the way of future growth, domestic equity trades at a 200% to 300% premium over what it would cost in Lagos.

Meanwhile, the Nigerian economy is growing at an annualized rate well above 6%, faster than any of the top-tier emerging markets short of China itself. Although the oil sector still contributed $8 billion to GDP in the first quarter of 2013 – largely in the form of exports to the United States — the country’s petroleum wealth now takes a back seat to its expanding middle class. Construction, hospitality and service are actually booming at a rate faster than what even China can currently claim, without the top-down state meddling.
While a planned Beijing-style economy runs counter to all the laissez-faire impulses the oil boom has brought to Lagos, investors here can also count on more transparency and better corporate governance than ever. Compared to the sometimes-intimidating government presence of countries like China, India or Russia, Nigeria has traditionally confronted investors with too much freedom, but the regulatory environment is making great strides.

President Goodluck Jonathan has pursued a “Transformation Agenda” with two extremely market-friendly goals since his election in 2011: accelerate the modernization of the economy and finish the job of eliminating money laundering, payroll fraud and other once-persistent red flags for investors who want to make sure their interests are taken as seriously as they would be in any developed economy.
Judges who accept bribes are losing their jobs and facing formal prosecution. And as Senator Mark tells me, the level of corruption that Nigerians and foreign investors once dealt with on a day-to-day basis would seem “extremely exaggerated” in modern Lagos.
In the place of corruption, the young and dynamic population is finding work. New infrastructure is coming online to support private enterprise and while oil remains the center of the economy, education, employment, agriculture and even home ownership are rapidly emerging as linchpins of the new Nigeria.
Opening the floodgates to global capital is another strategic goal. Yvonne Emordi, head of strategy at the Nigerian Stock Exchange, is serious about boosting the country’s overall public market capitalization to $1 trillion by 2016.

Putting Lagos on equal footing with Bombay or Sao Paulo as a global capital hub in three years would be quite a feat, but the foundations for that kind of growth are already in place. Nigeria was one of the world’s four best-performing markets last year with a 35.45% gain, while a compound return above 10% a year since 2003 can easily support doubling the market’s capitalization from decade to decade if the trend continues.

While thin capital flows often turns one year’s top frontier into a big loser immediately thereafter, Nigeria is relatively liquid by African standards and seems to be early in its cycle of attracting liquidity. Overseas investors currently hold about 43% of the shares in Lagos, which is relatively balanced – nowhere near an unsustainable glut of fast foreign money but those who come in now already have something like critical mass to work with.

And while the risk of terrorist disruption recedes, money keeps flowing in the form of direct investment in the domestic economy. In just the last six months, U.S. corporations like Procter & Gamble PG +0.75% have committed at least $700 million to build new factories and agricultural facilities in the country while the Nigerian government itself announced a $1 billion fund to nurture the local software industry, which officials think can ultimately capture $20 billion a year from rivals like India.

Getting ahead of the game
India is a good example of the long-term potential Nigeria can unlock for its people and for the world’s investors. In 2001, when Goldman Sachs was first developing its BRIC strategy, India’s GDP was under $500 billion and the blue-chip Sensex index was trading around 3,200. Twelve years later, the economy had doubled in size and a tidal wave of money pushed the market bellwether within sight of 19,000.
Brazil and Russia have also seen their stocks multiply in value as the BRIC evolved into the hot strategy of the decade. Last year alone, over $100 billion poured into BRIC exchange-traded funds, representing a full 1.6% of the combined capitalization of the four countries and giving share prices an external boost.

Should Nigeria enjoy a similar trajectory, there are fortunes to be made here. Despite its reputation as a leading oil producer, it is already much better diversified than Russia.
If anything, the economy more closely resembles that of Brazil: rich in petroleum but blessed with an abundance of other resources and a population that is only now starting to live up to their potential as consumers. GDP per capita – a key gauge of the penetration of middle-class lifestyles – is still only a fourth of that in Brazil and barely a third of what investors can now get in China. In terms of domestic development, the Nigerian economy already has critical mass but we are still very close to the ground floor on future growth.

Until recently, U.S. investors practically needed to have both feet in the ground in go-go Lagos in order to get any direct exposure at all to that growth curve. There are no Nigerian American depositary receipts (ADRs). Even in London, the only shares available are in the country’s leading banks.
Those same banks appear again in the 12% of Van Eck’s African ETF (AFK) currently invested in Nigerian stocks. Only a single holding there – Nigerian Breweries – represents the thriving consumer sector.
And then there is the Global X Nigeria ETF (NGE), which has drifted on either side of its April offering price and is currently looking defensive amid the ongoing “risk off” move. P/E in the portfolio is still low at under 9.5 and many of the holdings are names you will not find anywhere else: Nigerian subsidiaries of global consumer brands like Nestle, Unilever and Guinness, construction-oriented plays and even food processors.
For now, NGE is the best game in town if you want to add some spice to an otherwise sagging BRIC allocation. There will be other ways to take your portfolio to the BRINC as Nigeria continues to eliminate sources of domestic unrest and awareness of the country’s economic progress spreads.
Either way, with performance in the BRIC markets suffering it may be time to look a little farther afield for the benefits those countries used to provide. Senator Mark tells me he sees a little room left for heavy lifting to bring Nigeria’s infrastructure up to modern standards, but once that happens, it may be all hands on deck.

Saturday, August 31, 2013

 I was going through Wil Schroter's write-up on " why investors don't sign NDA's " and i found it so informative, exciting and insightful enough to share on my blog... Please sit back, take a good position and enjoy every bit of it.

Why Investors Don't Sign NDAs

There’s a popular misconception amongst first-time entrepreneurs that sharing an idea without signing a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) will lead to some version of The Social Network, where Mark Zuckerberg, played by Jesse Eisenberg, steals the Facebook idea and becomes a billionaire.
The mythology sounds horrifying, but the reality is much different.
In short — investors don’t sign NDAs. They won’t sign your NDA. Asking them to will make you look like you don’t know what you’re doing, and there are a few reasons for that.
No One Wants Your Idea

Zuckerberg didn't just magically hear about an idea and create Facebook.
You may have the world’s most amazing idea. It may be a complete pile of rubbish. Either way, it’s not about ideas.
Investors want entrepreneurs, not ideas. Anyone can come up with a great idea, but very few can actually pull them off.
It’s not that Mark Zuckerberg just happened to steal an idea for social networking. It’s that he was the most capable person to actually pull it off. It’s not like he was the first (Friendster, anyone?) or the first to be successful (Myspace, anyone?).
A clever idea may pique an investor’s interest, but that isn’t worth getting ahead of yourself and demanding a NDA. You’ve got plenty of other hurdles.
Don’t Make Life Harder
On average investors see 20 deals per week. That amounts to over 1,000 deals per year. Signing a NDA could potentially prevent them from having a meaningful discussion with any potential investment after yours.
Should they choose not to invest (and most won’t) they would be stuck with the liability of a legal contract with you that prevents them from finding more deals. There are literally no benefits for the investor to sign a NDA.
Now imagine you’re an investor looking at hundreds of deals. You find one that looks interesting and you reach out. The startup responds by saying you need to sign a NDA.
Do you go through the hassle of signing a NDA or do you just move on to the hundreds of other startups who aren’t asking for a document that no one ever signs? You can probably guess.
It’s hard enough to get an investor to pick you among hundreds of other deals. Don’t make your life harder by insisting on them signing a document that they don’t need to.

You Can’t Enforce It
The power of any legal agreement is proportionate to your ability to enforce it. Do you plan on suing investors in the near future? Do you think the power of the document you’ve asked them to sign will give you adequate grounds to enforce that suit?
Probably not.
Focus on what you can control, which is what information you show them and what aspects of the business you are willing to share.
Share The Cookie, Not The Recipe

Share the goodness, not how you make it.
If your idea is so easily stolen that just hearing the concept is enough to allow anyone to replicate it and launch it better than you, then you’ve already lost.
There is little protection in just a concept, so unless you’ve got a secret recipe behind it, signing a NDA doesn’t do you much good anyway.
You should be able to openly share the concept idea with anyone, since as soon as you launch everyone will have a taste of it anyhow. If there is a secret recipe behind the concept, then by all means don’t share that until you’ve gotten to know the investor better.
Very few ideas have a secret recipe, however, and you’re more likely to be explaining why you can defend this concept once it’s launched.
What To Really Worry About
All of that said, there are some things you should consider protecting as you shop your idea around to investors.
Investors who have investments in similar companies to yours could present a challenge. You are essentially providing them with competitive information that they are free to share with their other portfolio companies. Most investors will decline meeting based on those grounds in the first place.
The other thing to worry about is the dissemination of your information. Pitch Decks and Business Plans can get shared incredibly easily. It’s helpful to have a method to grant and revoke access online if possible, or to only present the key documents in person on your own laptop.
If you’re going to worry about anything, worry about actually getting a meeting with an investor. You’re going to have plenty of challenges in attracting investors, don’t make forcing them down the NDA path one more reason to not get a pitch to begin with.
If you have some specific questions about using an NDA with investors, tweet at @Fundable and we’ll try to answer them.

LESSON OF THE DAY


1.  No One Wants Your Idea
2.  Don’t Make Life Harder
3. You Can’t Enforce It
4. Share The Cookie, Not The 
5. What To Really Worry About 

Have a wonderful and insightful weekend !!!



 

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Lab meat or in-vitro meat

Industry Opinion
Will consumers ever be open to eating meat that was created in a lab?
Yes(35% )
 
No(65% )
 
Share your thoughts

Tuesday, August 27, 2013