A Few Quick Method Changes

April 10th, 2007

My employer calls the changes that it develops for it’s clients ‘Method Changes.’

As I travel every week for my job, I have come to be quite the critic of all the aspects of the travel industry, and lately I have been whipping up some pretty good method changes to address some of the stupidity out there.

  1. Airlines, hotels, and rental car agencies should put more functionality behind their frequent customer cards. For example, when checking in at a hotel, I should be able to swipe my card through a reader and get an instantaneous printout saying what room number I have been given. I then go to the room and use that card again to unlock the room door.
  2. Rental Car Agencies should have a “directions request” portion of every rental set up online. So, while I reserve my car I also put in the address of the hotel where I will be staying, then when I get into my car there will be a Google Maps printout with directions to from the rental car agency to my hotel… Sure beats the idea of some clueless local trying to tell you that Idaho is southwest of Utah.
  3. Hotels - stop cluttering every room with garbage fliers. Most of them have been thrown on the ground so many times that even if I was interested in the crap they are marketing, it looks so poor that I would be turned off anyhow.

That should get them started…

Oh! One thing that the airlines have listened to - dual jetways (one to the front door, one to the back door hanging over the wing)… I’ve been saying this for years, and now everytime through Denver I enjoy quick boarding / deboarding.  Very well done.

Inspired by a recent article in the magazine BestLife I decided I better get back to blogging.  The article specifically mentioned blogging as a means to improving one’s ‘Google image’ or the results returned when a potential employer runs your name on a search engine.  That was precisely the reason I started this blog.

However, that reason has never been the reason for actually maintaining it (as can be seen in my lengthy intermissions).

I have always liked exploring my ‘professional side.’  And on that front, nothing has changed.

I am now 10 months into my job with the Operations Consulting firm previously mentioned, and loving it as much as ever. As of January 1, 2007 I was given a promotion, from ‘Consultant’ to ‘Analysis Manager’.  The new role is quite a bit different in that instead of working on projects (developing, installing, and building sustainable operational improvement changes), I am now on a small (7 people) team that does the pre-project scoping and the final steps of the project sales process.

Anyone who has interviewed or considered interviewing for a management consultant job has read the questions like ‘how many phonebooths are there in NY City?’ or ‘How many white dishwashers were sold in North America last year?’

Well, my job is basically to ask those types of questions in terms of our potential clients, then determine the answers. In one weeks time, the Analysis team evaluates a business’s operational execution, determines the opportunity in terms of increased throughput, increased capacity utilization, decreased overhead, etc. then correlates that opportunity to an improvement to the company’s bottom line. From there we communicate to the President or Owner of the company the opportunity we found, the correlation of capturing a portion of that opportunity to the bottom line, and a rough outline of how the project team would go about achieving that opportunity capture.

It’s all pretty interesting stuff I think.  Even if I do typically work in the range of 80hrs per week.

You can probably imagine that is why this post is so helter skelter and hereby being cut-off.

More to come for sure.

My earlier post, How To: Accept and Decline Job Offers has been very successful, especially with visitors who searched the web for info on the declining portion. Since that original post was mostly about accepting job offers, I thought I would write in a little more detail about declining job offers. This post does just that, and touches on why you should always call and talk to a real person to decline a job offer, what to say when talking to that person, how to follow up using a professional letter, and issues to be mindful and tactful about when you decline a job offer.

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Yes, I long ago accepted a job offer, but none the less… A site like RickMaher.info just begs a resume.

As such, you can now browse over to http://rickmaher.info/resume/ to see if you think you might want to hire me!

Eventually I will get around to putting up more of an “About” page with a little bit simpler bio, but for now if you want to get to know the less professional me, click on over to http://rickmaher.com.

This is the final post of a three part series. Check out all three posts regarding the post interview job hunt process:

  1. How To: Compare Job Offers
  2. How To: Negotiate Salary Out Of College
  3. How To: Accept and Decline Job Offers

When faced with the opportunity to accept and or decline job offers, excitement and haste can easily come over people. If you are reading this, than you likely have avoided at least the haste… good job.

Follow a few simple steps when accepting or declining a job offer and you can score big points with your future employer or possible further down the road future employer. After all, you should look at all current job offers as a potential lead on a job offer in the future if you are declining them now.

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