Business Zuckerberg says there's 'no end in sight' for Facebook employees working from home |
- Zuckerberg says there's 'no end in sight' for Facebook employees working from home
- If you've ever wondered how a startup founder mulls a giant acquisition offer, read all of the texts between Instagram cofounder Kevin Systrom and one of his investors after Mark Zuckerberg first approached them
- Walmart now selling Impossible Burger for total of 8,000 stores
- Amazon Reinstates Fired Warehouse Worker After Employees Strike
- 3 Months Of Hell: U.S. Economy Drops 32.9%, In Worst GDP Report Ever
- A day after Jeff Bezos downplayed Amazon's power, it posts record profit
- Companies Are Using Employee Survey Data to Predict — and Squash — Union Organizing
- Andonstar AD207, More Than A Tool To Help Improve Quality of Soldeirng, ...
- Many businesses would seek a platform to make their internal communication secure and instant, go through these checklist to make the process easy.
- 1/3 of small businesses are using savings to stay afloat, survey finds.
- How to finish what you start
- If I have a PhD in operations management and if I want to work in academia will I be useful as I'm not from an engineering background at all and I have no direct industry work experience like airlines operations, manufacturing or anything like that?
- Potential to get company shares/bonus/profit sharing. Need advice
- Just how much does a data breach cost businesses today?
- Huawei overtakes Samsung to be No. 1 smartphone player in the world thanks to China as overseas sales drop
- Nancy Pelosi’s Husband Made Large Transactions in Apple, Netflix Securities
- How are executives and CEOs receiving the mail that is sent to their office for them during the pandemic?
- Hey guys, I've released a book that may interest you
- The British government is investing in a sex party startup
- A client is lying to me...now what?
- Gravity Payments-save on credit card processing
- Apple CEO Says Pandemic Hurt IPhones, Helped Macs
- In need of help trying to grow a free page to help people with online marketing
Zuckerberg says there's 'no end in sight' for Facebook employees working from home Posted: 30 Jul 2020 07:07 PM PDT |
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 10:47 AM PDT |
Walmart now selling Impossible Burger for total of 8,000 stores Posted: 30 Jul 2020 09:39 AM PDT |
Amazon Reinstates Fired Warehouse Worker After Employees Strike Posted: 30 Jul 2020 08:21 PM PDT |
3 Months Of Hell: U.S. Economy Drops 32.9%, In Worst GDP Report Ever Posted: 30 Jul 2020 06:23 AM PDT |
A day after Jeff Bezos downplayed Amazon's power, it posts record profit Posted: 30 Jul 2020 07:46 PM PDT |
Companies Are Using Employee Survey Data to Predict — and Squash — Union Organizing Posted: 30 Jul 2020 07:25 PM PDT |
Andonstar AD207, More Than A Tool To Help Improve Quality of Soldeirng, ... Posted: 31 Jul 2020 02:10 AM PDT |
Posted: 31 Jul 2020 01:01 AM PDT |
1/3 of small businesses are using savings to stay afloat, survey finds. Posted: 31 Jul 2020 12:54 AM PDT |
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 11:54 PM PDT |
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 11:32 PM PDT Hello, I'm a supply chain management at a masters level and after a few weeks some courses on operations management I guess that I really like it. I can't work in the industry though as I have an eyesight condition called nystagmus, due to which I have mild visual impairment even with my glasses on. So the only way to pursue my passion would be to do a PhD in it and go academia. However, I'm a bit concerned about that also. I'm worried that I'll just learn general management in the PhD program and since I don't come from an engineering background I wouldn't be able to research and teach manufacturing management at least strategic although I'm not sure about it, hopefully someone over here can give me relevant insights on whether I'm thinking in the right or not? Secondly, if I don't have any industry experience in operation management so will I be able to carry out effective research on various industries and their operations, for example, construction without any construction or engineering experience or qualification? Lastly, a lot of people say that to work in academia for operations management you need to have the experience of diverse industries like healthcare, airlines or automobiles as operations management for each industry is very much different, are they right? I'm really sorry if this not the right sub to post my concerns about operations management. I hope someone could help me clear my mind. Thank you. [link] [comments] |
Potential to get company shares/bonus/profit sharing. Need advice Posted: 30 Jul 2020 10:35 PM PDT So I work for a successful company in the UK that's also naturally benefited hugely from COVID-19 due to the products we sell. I work in marketing and primarily do design. For the past few months I have been designing OEM packaging for some of these supplies under a new brand, related to the company I work for. The director is pushing more and more on me which I'm fine with, but I'm not actually working on my contracted job, I'm doing all the design work for this newly registered company's product packaging (and logo). My immediate manager pointed out to me that now it's registered, I could and perhaps should ask for shares in this new company considering I am doing all this branding and packaging work, for a company I don't technically work for. As this is a busy period for us, my manager suggested using that as the main point saying I should suggest getting shares in this new company, and working on it in my spare time, instead of my normal work hours. There's no doubt this newly formed company would be a success, huge in fact so I'm happy to play long term instead of a slight salary increase for example. Does anyone have any advice in this? How to ask? Whether I have a right to ask? Thanks [link] [comments] |
Just how much does a data breach cost businesses today? Posted: 30 Jul 2020 10:23 PM PDT |
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 09:46 AM PDT |
Nancy Pelosi’s Husband Made Large Transactions in Apple, Netflix Securities Posted: 30 Jul 2020 05:32 PM PDT |
Posted: 30 Jul 2020 05:17 PM PDT Pre-pandemic I always had a huge success rate getting through to CEOs and executives at startups and other large companies by sending my pitch as a letter through FedEx (in a FedEx envelope) or through priority mail. The response time was amazing if I sent it through FedEx. I'm a joint venture broker. I literally was able to land deals with Landry's, Outback Steakhouse, and several other billion dollar restaurant chains for a deal I was putting together this past winter (Late January up until the pandemic started) doing this. I'm thinking of trying it now for a new client I'm brokering deals for, but I'm not sure how or if CEOs and executives are still getting their mail. [link] [comments] |
Hey guys, I've released a book that may interest you Posted: 30 Jul 2020 07:05 PM PDT |
The British government is investing in a sex party startup Posted: 30 Jul 2020 10:14 AM PDT |
A client is lying to me...now what? Posted: 30 Jul 2020 03:07 PM PDT tl;dr: I'm 99% sure my client is lying to me and I'm not sure how to handle it anymore. Asking for advice. Background: I'm a bookkeeper for multiple small businesses. I do bookkeeping, payroll, state tax filings, and I get files ready for the CPAs to do federal taxes. Earlier this year, a CPA called me about one of our shared clients - there was a big problem. The money I reported as income to the state was nowhere near what it should have been. It turns out, the client in question had the money going to a different account I never knew about. The CPA knew this because he had the 1099 form for the federal taxes. After repeated attempts to get the corrected information from the client, he finally sent me new numbers for his 2019 income with permission to correct his state returns soon. The problem is, when I add up the "corrected" numbers with what I already reported, I'm still only at half of the income number the CPA gave me. I'm really not sure how to handle this with the client at this point. Should I play dumb and send an email saying something along the lines of "I'm not sure why these new numbers don't add up to the CPA number?" Should I fire him as a client because I've previously explained that I can't knowingly commit fraud? Do I just ignore it because the world is on fire and there are bigger things to worry about? Something else? Advice appreciated or direction to other subs if not appropriate here. Edit: There seems to be a consensus. Thanks everybody! [link] [comments] |
Gravity Payments-save on credit card processing Posted: 30 Jul 2020 06:22 PM PDT |
Apple CEO Says Pandemic Hurt IPhones, Helped Macs Posted: 30 Jul 2020 05:36 PM PDT |
In need of help trying to grow a free page to help people with online marketing Posted: 30 Jul 2020 04:42 PM PDT Hello there everyone, I hope you guys are having a great day. I started a on here i want to grow with helping people make money online without having to spend a ton of money on other peoples programs that u see on YouTube 24/7 and on all social media platforms. I want to take as much info as I can and put it into a community to implement real techniques that actually work for yours for free!! Is this a great idea? Let me know 😉. Also I want actually promote programs as well that actually work from others as well to get that information as well you can use for your own! slide over [link] [comments] |
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