Thursday

Reaching out to celebrate with our community!

Great results made this such a fantastic summer, everyone!  :)



Thanks again to Erika, Joel, Kristina, Kyle, Michelle, Navneet, Pamela, Ralene, Sara, Shiloh, Shyra, and William!



Friday

Fundraiser - The Mustard Seed


Service to people in need...



 There are Angels among us!



Much appreciation to our Community Outreach team, including
Saswati, William, Lucy, Claudia, Dominique, and Orlando!




Thursday

Managing to help The Seed...

Kala, Rebecca, Jess, Amanda, Erika, and Frank are ready to help!





PROGRAMS & SERVICES
·        371 emergency shelter spaces
·        More than 1,000 nutritious meals each day
·        Clothing and work boot program
·        Health and wellness services
·        Chaplaincy and Spiritual services
·        A compassionate community that offers personalized support


EMPLOYMENT
Help individuals achieve their employment goals by providing:
·        Intake facilitators who identify employment strengths , challenges and relevant experience
·        Employment coaches who work alongside clients toward  sustainable employment
·        Communication and support for employers who have questions or concerns
·        Referrals to partner agencies for employment skills training and other services


HOUSING
The Mustard Seed multi-faceted housing program includes:
·      Housing team to help client find affordable , permanent housing that suits their needs
·      A variety of housing options including transitional housing ,Mustard Seed owned and operated low income housing, as well as affordable rental accommodations in the community.
·      Assistance to provide household essentials, including furniture, linens and other necessities. 
·       Aftercare program to provide ongoing support and assistance to individual as they connect and reintegrate with the community.

Tuesday

Community Outreach Program...

Our groups of volunteers are gearing-up to provide more help to the Mustard Seed!



Wish us luck as we move ahead with helping the many worthy causes of The Mustard Seed,
a dynamic organization offering help in Calgary and other cities!














ABOUT THE MUSTARD SEED
The Mustard Seed seeks to address the root causes of poverty through the delivery of basic services, housing, employment and the provision of a safe, supportive community for those in need.  At The Mustard Seed it is believed that community has the power to bring about positive change in the individual and that every individual has the potential to bring about positive change in the community.


VISION OF THE MUSTARD SEED
BUILDING COMMUNITY, GROWING HOPE, SUPPORTING CHANGE.

The Mustard Seed is building a loving, supportive community among their clients and across our cities. They are growing hope by delivering basic services, housing and employment training to those in need.

The Mustard Seed is committed to excellence and to intentionally following Jesus Christ through their services to men and women experiencing poverty.

“We focus on the whole person, we attain measurable results and we maximize diverse funding sources and partnerships to create positive, lasting change in the lives of those we serve”.

Thursday

Change The World

By making better choices in the face of scarcity, our Economists have some goals to improve lives!








Tuesday

BUSINESS AND ACCOUNTING COURSES - from traditional to blended delivery...

Working with five locations in Calgary and 30 locations across Canada, we formed small groups of Project Champions to add online and e-learning components to various one-year business programs.  With an array of diploma-level courses, including Accounting, Business Administration, and Management, transitioned course delivery from traditional classroom to a blend of both traditional classroom and online learning.
Course delivery included flexible scheduling for mornings or afternoons, five-days per week, with approximately 30-weeks required for full completion of diploma courses.  Traditional classroom lectures were provided optional online activities, MyLabs exercises, and online quizzes, in addition to in-person proctored exams and group projects.
I also served as LMS Champion and Scheduler to move course delivery away from paper textbooks to the use of online e-Textbooks, LMS Course Outlines, and integration with Apple iPad devices.  In the span of 300-days, over 90% of training programs were successfully transitioned into a fully online resource environment, and maintained compliance with provincial legislation.
Overall, our e-learning developments connected with over 3,000 students per year in the Alberta region, and thousands more across the nation. In Calgary, we also developed on-site group networking activities and work simulations: we partnered students with real-world business partners and developed training projects to showcase their work to local organizations.  Yearly, four out of five students gain employment in their field of interest immediately upon completing their training and program requirements.












Sunday

Apps for Working on the Go Tablet App Roundup


 

Apps for Working on the Go Tablet App Roundup

Published on Tech | Apartment Therapy | shared via feedly mobile

Whether you're a road warrior or someone who prefers to take their work outside via their tablet, we've brought together several apps that are all about using your tablet to work. While tablets are fun for games and consuming media, they're also nifty tools for taking your work with you, and here are several apps for both the iPad and Android that will help you do just that. More
Read More...

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Going all in: How to run a company on 21 apps in the cloud


 

Going all in: How to run a company on 21 apps in the cloud

Published on VentureBeat | shared via feedly mobile

A lot of companies are debating whether — and what — to move to the cloud. The company I work for, Australia-based Proactive Accountants Network (PAN), made a pretty unusual decision to go all-in on cloud technology and made the leap in a span of 10 weeks, dramatically changing our IT infrastructure. So, for those of you still debating, here's a look at life on the other side.

We were once dependent entirely on legacy software. We now run our business on 21 cloud applications, including Google, Salesforce.com, BetterCloud, Cloud Sherpas, Okta, Silverpop, Xero, Citrix, iHance, and Cvent. With a detailed plan and a clear conscience, we went from being a company that was challenged to support workers in multiple countries to an organization that is nimble, flexible, and capable of making incremental versus bet-the-farm bets on new technologies.

For us the decision to go all-in with cloud wasn't a means to an end. Sure, we wanted to get away from our on-premise email and CRM systems, VPN connection, and 3G data speeds. But the real impetus was much more philosophical: Why force a square peg into a round hole? Our firm employs 40-plus consultants who are based — and spend the bulk of their time — outside our primary country of operation. Legacy software simply wasn't built to support geographically versatile, highly mobile workforces. Fortunately for us, the cloud was.

I came to PAN with a strong cloud background, having worked extensively with applications like Salesforce.com. I knew the cloud would allow us to operate more efficiently and easily scale our business.

We knew from day one what the application environment was going to look like, but for management and performance purposes we opted for a phased rollout. Okta, Google Apps and Cvent came first. Then, 45 days later, we added Salesforce.com, and 30 days after that we deployed the other applications.

For the larger application cut-overs like Salesforce.com and Google Apps, we had dedicated launch days.  We brought in beanbags, frisbees, and digital cameras as well as a dedicated support crew consisting of our internal product team and our application partners. We went from a 100% legacy environment to the cloud in a fraction of the time it takes legacy software vendors to update a single system, an extraordinary accomplishment shared by our vendors, partners, and internal staff.

Here's what our life is like now that we've made the transition:

Recruiting and retention: I recently hired an extremely sought after person to join my product team. In the interview she turns to me with a concerned look and says, "Do you use Outlook?" Naturally my response was "Gosh, no, we use Google Apps." Suddenly she looked relieved. The new generation of workers expect "proper" business tools. If you want the best people on your team, you need to provide the best tools — or risk losing them to a competitor who is meeting the expectations of a new wave of workers.

Location, location, location: Our office in Brisbane is nearly half empty on a daily basis. Most execs would be scratching their heads wondering what on earth is going on. The answer is simple: any team member can grab their laptop, log on, and see everything as if he/she were at their desk. Why should you have to be tethered to a desk to do your job? If a worker wants to do his or her job while sitting on the beach or on a mountain overlooking a vast canopy of trees, why shouldn't they? We can still track performance to ensure tasks are completed on-time and with quality.

Security and control: Another comment I hear often from peers is, "That sounds great, but we wouldn't want sensitive content all over the web." I get that, which is why we teamed up with BetterCloud.  BetterCloud provides amazing enterprise-grade security tools — all for the price of a couple of cabs around Sydney, by the way. BetterCloud's DomainWatch tool helped us build a "digital barbed wire fence" for everything created in our Google Apps environment. No matter who's using or sharing data, we can see it and control it. This puts our senior management team at ease. BetterCloud has anticipated what businesses require to deploy a cloud suite in a secure way.

Cost savings: When we went to deploy Google Apps, it was really just to address email and calendar. We thought we'd leave Docs on as a test strategy, just let the team play with it and find a home for it in their day-to-day lives. Three months in and we have hundreds of documents created and used on a daily basis.  While we haven't formally documented the savings, a heck of a lot more work is getting done, and we haven't added any new team members. On the same conversation, we also recently deployed Salesforce.com to the entire business. When we were doing our ROI analysis, the return was well over $100K per year. I can only imagine that the cost savings from implementing Google Apps is significant.

Tips and tricks: We use SherpaTools to dynamically insert marketing promotions into team members' signatures. We use Google Hangout more and more for team-level conversations about the applications we are making — with a global product team this is a real lifesaver. We partnered with Okta to deliver a complete single sign-on experience to all of our end users. That means one password and one URL for all our applications; no need to memorize URLs, usernames, passwords, etc. for over 21 applications.

Global expansion: The Google Apps suite has positioned us for rapid expansion around the world. In the last week, a senior manager relocated from Brisbane to Darwin and another colleague moved to Auckland to head up operations in New Zealand. Each move was made seamlessly due to our cloud-based infrastructure and applications. We no longer worry about version compatibility, licenses for different software editions, deploying VPNs, ensuring sufficient bandwidth, sketchy performance, etc. That responsibility falls to our cloud partners, who have done an amazing job. The fact that our users can be on a train, plane, boat, or spaceship and still work/collaborate effectively is testament to the technical sophistication of the cloud and our cloud partners.

Better tracking of sales and marketing activities: iHance was the answer to how we could capture emails from members, prospects, suppliers, etc., automatically within Salesforce.com. In the past, our team would have to add an email to our CRM manually. If they forgot or didn't do it, the communication never made it to our system. Now, with iHance, every email gets logged without our team having to lift a finger.

Easier events: We run a ridiculous number of events with complex pricing structures and billing needs. Cvent is truly a best-of-breed solution that has about 1,400 features. The events team internally can't stop raving about it. About 18 months ago we had no digital system for managing events (where we had thousands of attendees) — it was all paper driven!  Then we tried to build our own application. That worked for a little while, but as the business grew and evolved it became superfluous. We came across Cvent, and to date it still has more features than we use (great for growth), and they continue to maintain a strong history of new feature releases.

Simplified, tracked digital marketing:  A major pain point for us was integration, without which we would lack a vast amount of business intelligence. So, we really pushed for tools that integrate with Salesforce.com. Silverpop provided an enterprise-grade solution for mass digital marketing, including email marketing, landing pages, dedicated whitelisted IP addresses, and more.

Accounting solution that grows with us: Xero provided a fantastic SaaS accounting platform that integrated with all of the necessary systems. Further to that, we tend to look for application partners who not only have a strong solution but are backed financially, plus also have a strong history of feature releases that make sense to the marketplace. Not every solution will be perfect from day one, but as long as they are committed to improving their solution frequently, we will consider working with that vendor. At the moment, Xero delivers new releases every six weeks!

In addition to the apps mentioned, the others in our 21-app ecosystem are: HootSuite (Facebook/Twitter/LinkedIn/Youtube), Google Analytics, Pivotal Tracker, SendGrid, Teamwork Project Manager, Asana, Community (a professional collaboration environment we built for our clients), AWS Cloud, and Azure Cloud.

Scott Gassmann is an Innovation Engineer at Proactive Accountants Network, one of the fastest-growing industry associations in Australasia. He has presented at the 2010, 2011, and 2012 national Australian CloudForce Tour as well as the 2010 global computing conference for Salesforce.com.

[Top image credit: 18percentgrey/Shutterstock]
Filed under: , enterprise

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Going all in: How to run a company on 21 apps in the cloud

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Thursday

Our business people on tour...

Cheers to Lauren for leading us through the Alberta Children's Hospital this exciting afternoon!























































































...and that's how to kick-off Spring 2012!!!

Thank you for sponsoring our fund-raiser!

It was essential that we established some outstanding partnerships with businesses and networked with business people!

Our heart-felt thanks to over 50 business partners, including the following sponsors:

Pink Lime Salon & Spa

Trademark Clothing

Stormtech Clothing

Mr. Nassim Abboud

Elegant Beauty

Pro-Star Auto


Starbucks


Tropical Corner Restaurant

Angel

Broken Plate Restaurant in Kensington

Mimos Portuguese Restaurant

Kelly & Flo’s Restaurant



Wednesday

Come see us!

Check this out http://www.inc.com/rene-siegel/five-reasons-you-need-to-meet-in-person.html

ALBERTA CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL

The children thank you!!! Your generosity during this event is highly appreciated, you know? :)




















Cheers from Samantha, Binny, Daniela, Kristie, Lee, and Letha!!!

Friday

Management Lessons from Star Wars





By
updated 2/22/2012 12:47:23 PM ET
My colleague Dorothy Pomerantz notes that this weekend, the re-issued 3-D version of "Star Wars: The Phantom Menace," pulled down about $23 million at the box office. This got my mind to pondering the mistakes that people make, ranging from making the "Star Wars" prequels to reissuing them in 3-D to actually going to relive the misery that was "The Phantom Menace" all over again.
But mistakes are learning opportunities. And in thinking about "Star Wars," let’s leave the prequels behind and focus on the original trilogy. It occurs to me that the "Star Wars" films have a lot to teach us about leadership styles.
In particular, the Galactic Empire strikes me as a quintessential example of how not to effectively run an organization. Let’s take a look at five of the Empire’s biggest mistakes and see how you can avoid them in your own organization.
Mistake I: Building an organization around particular people, rather than institutions
Perhaps the biggest mistake the Galactic Empire made is its singular focus on the preservation of power for the Emperor and a few of his chosen lackeys. There is a constant we see starting with "A New Hope" and running through to the end of "Return of the Jedi" of the Emperor consolidating more and more power into his own hands and that of his right-hand man, Darth Vader. In "A New Hope," the Galactic Senate is disbanded in favor of regional governors hand-selected by the Emperor. By the time "Return of the Jedi" rolls around, the Emperor’s only advisor is Darth Vader, and his distrust in his organization is so complete that his only plan for succession is a desperate attempt to poach Luke Skywalker from the Rebel Alliance and get him to join his organization. Anytime your future plans depend on getting a rising star from a rival organization to join your team, you know that you have some serious institutional issues.
As the events of the movie make clear, the deaths of the Emperor and Darth Vader pretty much eliminated any opportunity for succession. A galaxy-wide organization was defeated simply by taking out two key individuals. Despite his decades of scheming, Palpatine’s organization barely lasted a day after he was gone.
Key Takeaway: Your organization needs to be structured so that talent is being developed on all levels of the organization, in order to ensure smooth functioning and ensure that it’s easy for people to rise in the organization in the event that key individuals leave. Responsibility should be distributed on several fronts, so that chaos doesn’t ensue if one person can’t be reached. Realistic succession plans are vital to developing an enduring organization.

Mistake II: Depriving people of the chance to have a stake in the organization
By consolidating his power, the Emperor didn’t just ensure that his organization wouldn’t survive his death. He also deprived both his employees and the public-at-large a key motivation: a feeling of having a stake in the success of the organization. The Emperor disbanded the Galactic Senate, removing the idea of any democratic stake in the government. He wiped out all references to the Force, so there was no longer any guiding ideology. His sole idea for maintaining control of the Empire was building the Death Star, on the theory that, in the words of Grand Moff Tarkin, “Fear will keep the local systems in line. Fear of this battle station.” Similarly, while in the first "Star Wars" film, there was a scene showing officers in the Imperial Navy discussing strategy, by "Return of the Jedi," it was clear that no feedback was being solicited anymore. The Emperor or Vader gave orders and that was it. No further discussion.
But as was ably demonstrated in this exchange in the movie "Office Space," this is the worst possible way to get the best work out of your employees. Fear, combined with a sense of powerlessness, only inspires the bare minimum amount of work:
Peter Gibbons: You see, Bob, it’s not that I’m lazy, it’s that I just don’t care.
Bob Porter: Don’t ... don’t care?
Peter Gibbons: It’s a problem of motivation, all right? Now if I work my ass off and Initech ships a few extra units, I don’t see another dime, so where’s the motivation? And here’s another thing, I have eight different bosses right now.
Bob Porter: Eight?
Peter Gibbons: Eight, Bob. So that means when I make a mistake, I have eight different people coming by to tell me about it. That’s my only real motivation is not to be hassled, that, and the fear of losing my job. But you know, Bob, that will only make someone work just hard enough not to get fired.
Key Takeaway: In order to get the best work out of people in your organization, you need to solicit their feedback, engage them in the decision-making process, and ensure that they have a stake in the success of the organization
Mistake III: Having no tolerance for failure
In an early part of the "Empire Strikes Back," the Empire attempted to wipe out the Rebel Alliance once and for all in the Battle of Hoth. However, because Admiral Ozzel took the Imperial Fleet out of lightspeed too close to the Hoth system, the Rebel Alliance was able to detect the Imperial approach and quickly begin its defense. Enraged by this error, Darth Vader used the Force to choke Admiral Ozzel to death. Captain Piett, Ozzel’s second-in-command, was then promoted to Admiral and given command of the Imperial Fleet.
This swift, decisive punishment of failure is a huge error of management. First of all, mistakes are inevitable — especially in times where quick decisions are needed to be made on incomplete information. Rather than simply kill Admiral Ozzel, Vader should have attempted to direct him to a course of action that corrected his error. Instead, he threw the Imperial Fleet into organizational disarray as countless numbers of officers were suddenly thrust into new roles and responsibilities without the opportunity to learn them. This organizational chaos was undoubtedly key to the Rebels ability to escape in mass numbers, even as they flew perilously close to the Imperial Fleet.
Even beyond this one mistake, by adopting a management style of “failure leads to Force choking,” Vader developed an organizational culture that was destined to be weak. People would be afraid to offer feedback or suggestions, choosing instead to follow orders to the letter. This ensures that decisions are made at a very high level, and anyone under those levels will lack initiative or the ability to act on their local knowledge. What’s more, by punishing failure so harshly, the Empire provides an incentive for people within the organization to actually lead their superiors to failure. After all, the quickest way to promotion in the Empire is for your boss to make a mistake, so it’s in your own best interests to ensure that he does.
Key Takeaway: It’s essential to remember that failure is the engine of success. Mistakes are inevitable, but the key to making them is learning from them. It’s also vital to ensure that organizations are flexible, capable of quickly adapting to changing conditions and allowing for initiative and quick action at all levels, even if that leads to some mistakes.
Mistake IV: Focusing all of the organization’s efforts into a single goal and failing to consider alternatives
When it came to the success of the Galactic Empire, the Emperor had one single idea that he was absolutely obsessed with: building the Death Star. The completion of the Death Star, with its ability to destroy entire planets, was the singleminded obsession of the Emperor. At no point do we ever see any alternatives broached. No scenes between Darth Vader and the Emperor debating the wisdom of building a second Death Star so soon after the first one was destroyed. Nobody suggests to the Emperor that it might be wiser to develop more flexible ways for the Empire to destroy planets, such as combining the firepower of several Star Destroyers at once.
The only other goal we ever see the Emperor pursue, apart from the destruction of the Rebels, is to get Luke Skywalker to turn to the Dark Side and succeed Darth Vader and possibly the Emperor himself. As discussed above, having only one succession plan, based entirely around getting a key player from a rival organization to change his mind, showed remarkable lack of foresight. This singleminded obsession with one way to succeed is something that undermined not only the Galactic Empire, but also many other organizations throughout history. Kodak focused on film even after developing digital technology. Borders focused on brick and mortar years after it was clear that a strong Internet presence was key to the book business.
Key Takeaway: It’s vital to be flexible and adaptable to changing circumstances. You should always consider alternatives to your course of action and develop multiple plans for achieving particular goals in case one or more plans don’t pan out.
Mistake V: Failing to learn from mistakes
The Galactic Empire devoted years, an enormous amount of money, and an enormous amount of manpower to building the Death Star. After it was built, the Death Star only successfully completed one mission before it was destroyed by the Rebels. And the Empire’s response? Build a bigger, newer Death Star to serve as a target for the Rebel Alliance. In the second case, the Death Star wasn’t even completed before the Rebels managed to destroy it again.
Despite the failure of Force choking Admiral Ozzel to improve performance by the Imperial Fleet, Vader Force choked Captain Needa after his failure to capture the Millennium Falcon shortly thereafter.
Both the Emperor and Vader were obsessed with turning Skywalker to the Dark Side of the Force, even after Skywalker made it clear that he’d rather die than abandon the Rebel Alliance or join the Dark Side.
You may see a pattern emerging here. Perhaps the Emperor and Vader were blinded by their success taking control of a millennia-old Republic and turning it into an Empire, but it’s clear that they became very overconfident in their own abilities. Despite making the same mistakes over, and over again, they still moved stubbornly, blindly forward without ever changing course. And then kept on moving forward without changing their paths until the Empire was destroyed.
Key takeaway: While it’s admirable to not let setbacks hold you back from pursuing your goals, its vital to learn from every failure in order to correct your course of action. Failing to learn from your mistakes and repeating them will inevitably lead to the destruction of your organization.
The bottom line: Ultimately, the Galactic Empire failed as an enduring organization because of incredibly flawed leadership at the very top. By building an organizational culture based on fear, lack of independence, and an unwillingness to adapt to changing circumstances, the Emperor set the stage for his own inevitable failure.

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