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June 25, 2009

“Let Freedom Ring” Need Not Become A Distant Memory

In this day of negative publicity about corporate leaders and falling GNP (Gross National Product), we need a little positive Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) in the headlines. An enduring, community involvement CSR strategy exists, i.e., Employee Volunteer Program that allows employees to volunteer mentor during high school advisory periods.  Not only does the strategy show the encouraging human, American resilience connection to private enterprise but also gains greater workplace engagement; it is uplifting for employees to know they work for the company with a reputation for contributing to the greater good.

Curriculum-based mentoring creates a focused, engaged-in-working-for-a-living pool of new hires rather than a pool of graduates looking for a government handout. If the latter seems a stretch, you have not heard the current thinking in the halls of your local high school.  During a high school advisory http://strengthbank.com/blog/Iw last fall when asked each one’s vision, what each has always seen as his or her future, answers came back:
“I am going to get on welfare and enjoy myself.”
“I (immigrant from France) am going to stay in America so I can take advantage of the welfare system and never have to work.”
“I am going to work for the government where I can’t be fired.…”
The responses were thought provoking.  Today’s students are absorbing knowledge in an environment moving other than by tradition for these United States of America, perhaps not all bad if the sole intent is to be sure every child gets a chance to go to school, but once you let the fox into the henhouse for a snack, …  One landmark statute to note: Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 http://strengthbank.com/blog/ap.  We are remiss to assume that magically upon public high school graduation, young adults will reach for the stars, struggle to achieve and live out each ones’ calling while ultimately contributing to the GNP as each embraces free enterprise http://strengthbank.com/blog/F7l and the satisfaction of participating in capitalism http://strengthbank.com/blog/Oe! What are we thinking?

We can step up an Employee Volunteer Program for a CSR stellar, that is, that will mentor the future workforce to the truth about the engines that “Let Freedom Ring,” includes individual excellence, the latter (StrengthBank® http://strengthbank.com/blog/Iw )is the key that moves us to the others.

3 key things a business can do now to begin strengthening the future workforce:
Schedule a company professional growth seminar to experience the mentoring program and benefit from the program’s tenets that enhance productivity and service capacity building for the company itself.
Connect to local chamber of commerce, high school, or business network and host events to educate to the CSR possibilities inherent in curriculum-based mentoring during high school advisories.
Contact StrengthBank Inc. for the how-to’s and support: 817 230 4523 – sandra@strengthbankinc.orgwww.talkgroups-mentors.org
You, as a member or retired member of private enterprise can “Be A StrengthBank® Mentor” beginning next fall. During StrengthBank® Talk Groups you can watch tomorrow’s workforce reach out to each one’s potential to contribute.

“Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it.” Thomas Paine

“You know it took us 80 years to get to where we are today and it’s going to take us 80 years to contain it and start to unravel it. It’s not going to all happen tomorrow and if people think it’s going to happen tomorrow, then they tend to give up and don’t take the little steps that they need to take today. We need to start with the little steps. We need to start chipping away and that is how we get back in the game.” — Mark Levin (Beginning in 1981, Mark R. Levin served as advisor to several members of President Ronald Reagan‘s Cabinet, eventually becoming Associate Director of Presidential Personnel and ultimately Chief of Staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese; Levin also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education at the U.S. Department of Education, and Deputy Solicitor of the U.S. Department of the Interior. He has practiced law in the private sector, and is president of the Landmark Legal Foundation in Leesburg, Virginia. He holds a B.A. from Temple University, where he graduated Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude, as well as a J.D. from the Temple University Beasley School of Law.)

May 17, 2008

Where do the best new hires come from?

You do know that the best new hires are all around you. Right! (more…)

April 25, 2008

By your measure, it shall be meaured unto you.

Don’t be a StrengthBank® mentor to high school kids; let the chips fall where they may. After all, (more…)

October 11, 2007

Where is peace of mind in this crazy world of work?

Peace of mind is not found with money, acclaim, or pornography (sometimes so easy you think no one knows you are into it). In fact, those very things may create the greatest dissonance for creating anxiety of mind. One deterrent for obsessive “secret” unrest is choosing or hiring (depending upon which side of the table you reside) to StrengthBank® – the plan for each life that brings peace of mind. Two key questions must be answered for starters:

  1. What criteria do you use for choosing a job?
  2. How do you choose who you hire?

If your answer to the above is listed below, you have bypassed peace of mind.
• best listed items on a resume
• good enough to fill the slot
• at least it will allow me to pay the bills
• I can do that if you will pay me
• past performance
• one hour interview
• best-dressed
• most company benefits
• looks good in a uniform
For the “rest of the story,” consult Sandra as an executive coach, for a stellar presentation to your workforce, or read The StrengthBank® Principle by sandra Shelton with a willing heart to apply it.

October 10, 2007

Leadership Has A Sense of Humor

People with a sense of humor are put at the top of the recruiter’s short list. Both outlandish clowns along with emotionless people go to the bottom of the recruiter’s short list. How to keep you sense of humor has nothing to do with telling jokes or “being funny.” Humor comes from your sense of your own purpose and motives of your heart in accepting pay for the job you are doing. . Sandra A. Shelton gives priceless tips on how to use humor to be your own advocate in sustaining yourself at the highest levels in the workplace and finding future work. It is all about a relationship with what you are willing to contribute. www.strengthbank.com

July 27, 2007

Companies need the dinosaurs and the young whippersnappers

There is a master plan to workplace productivity just as there is to demographics. Disregard for the essential need forall the generations working together at work misses the opportunity to maximize human capital. We need the millennial’s as much as we need the veterans, the boomers, the x’ers and whatever other names we call incoming and outgoing generations. (more…)

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