Ethos India HR Consulting In India Staffing Agencies In India Recruitment Agencies In Ahmedabad

Teamwork is the ability to work together toward a common vision. And the best teamwork comes from men who are working independently toward one goal in unison. #QOTD #Teamwork #TipOfTheDay #ExpertCareerGuide #CareerOptions #CareerGrowth #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

Teamwork is the ability to work together toward a common vision. And the best teamwork comes from men who are working independently toward one goal in unison. #QOTD #Teamwork #TipOfTheDay #ExpertCareerGuide #CareerOptions #CareerGrowth #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

Teamwork is the ability to work together toward a common vision. And the best teamwork comes from men who are working independently toward one goal in unison. #QOTD #Teamwork #TipOfTheDay #ExpertCareerGuide #CareerOptions #CareerGrowth #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

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The employees are governed by various laws such as Payments of Bonus Act, Equal Remuneration Act, Payment of Gratuity Act, Employees Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, Employees’ State Insurance Act, Maternity Benefit Act, etc. The rights to safe working place with basic amenities, right to appropriate working hours, right to any assured incentive etc. are protected under the law. #ConsumerRightsDay #WorldConsumerRightsDay #ConsumerRightsDay2019 #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

The employees are governed by various laws such as Payments of Bonus Act, Equal Remuneration Act, Payment of Gratuity Act, Employees Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, Employees’ State Insurance Act, Maternity Benefit Act, etc. The rights to safe working place with basic amenities, right to appropriate working hours, right to any assured incentive etc. are protected under the law. #ConsumerRightsDay #WorldConsumerRightsDay #ConsumerRightsDay2019 #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

The employees are governed by various laws such as Payments of Bonus Act, Equal Remuneration Act, Payment of Gratuity Act, Employees Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, Employees’ State Insurance Act, Maternity Benefit Act, etc. The rights to safe working place with basic amenities, right to appropriate working hours, right to any assured incentive etc. are protected under the law. #ConsumerRightsDay #WorldConsumerRightsDay #ConsumerRightsDay2019 #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #CareerGuide #India

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The Company was started with a very limited resource and a strong vision to establish the firm in HR Consulting areas and started its operation with assisting the HR departments of various companies for their Executive Search, People Development and Manpower Outsourcing. #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #Jobs #Change

The Company was started with a very limited resource and a strong vision to establish the firm in HR Consulting areas and started its operation with assisting the HR departments of various companies for their Executive Search, People Development and Manpower Outsourcing. #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #Jobs #Change

The Company was started with a very limited resource and a strong vision to establish the firm in HR Consulting areas and started its operation with assisting the HR departments of various companies for their Executive Search, People Development and Manpower Outsourcing. #EthosIndia #Ahmedabad #EthosHR #Recruitment #Jobs #Change

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The Future of HR Jac Fitz-enz | Talent Management Imagine you are the incoming CEO of a struggling company. The board of directors has hired you to turn the company around as soon as possible. What are you going to do? Obviously, you have to start with big questions regarding strategy, structure, product development, sales, cash management and culture. You will probably shuffle the top management team and provide a clear vision of what and how the enterprise has to change. You need to improve cash flow pronto. You might get control of IT's massive investment by moving toward cloud computing. Eventually, you reach the human resources function. You are smart enough to know the issue is not the 1.5 percent of operating expense that goes into running HR. For the company to be successful, turnover must slow and productivity must grow. You're not an HR professional, so you aren't burdened by traditional thinking or a warm spot in your heart for those nice people who labor there. You start with an objective view of human capital management just as you did with management of cash, products, sales and information. It's probably a good idea to find out what kind of data you have on workforce productivity. Has there been any analysis at either the strategic or tactical level in the past? You could form a small analytics function to help study questions of capability, performance and past human capital investments. Nothing beats having accurate and relevant objective data on which to base the tough decisions ahead. So, what is the best way to ensure a sustainable, highly productive and engaged workforce? A large part of the question is where should the various HR functions reside? Form should follow function. Should they all be in a central unit or spread throughout the company where they can be agile and responsive, not to mention accountable for value generation? You decide that, as CEO, you are ultimately responsible for the workforce, so you make strategic workforce planning, including succession planning, your responsibility. You give a senior HR executive that job and have him or her report directly to you. A recruiting strategy is next, and where should that reside? How about putting it under the COO - the person responsible for company operations? Next comes compensation and benefits. Should that go to the CFO, who is accountable for cash management, or do you put that in operations as well? Maybe you carve out health and welfare benefits to finance and leave pay and incentive compensation with the COO. Now, how are the people best developed? Should development be part of your central workforce function? Pieces such as leadership and engagement likely should go together, but where to put them? You have short-term problems such as engagement and long-term questions of succession. It's complicated. You can't just toss them all together like in the past. That didn't work. Who is going to keep employee records and deal with governance requirements? This is sensitive stuff and getting more so every day. What about general employee relations problems? Should they be pushed back to line management where they started 150 years ago? Isn't that what fostered the birth and growth of labor unions? Maybe you should leave the old structure in place and just give it new marching orders. But if you take a car that isn't running well and repaint it, does that make it run better? If HR was not a value-adding function when you arrived, can you afford to leave it as is while you redesign the enterprise? Just how important is workforce management in your new scheme? I'm sure you will figure it out, but one thing is certain. You have to change the fundamental concept that has driven human resources and human capital management in the past. It did not serve the company well during periods of rapid change and may have been a major reason the enterprise was foundering. After all, nothing happens unless a human being acts - all other assets of the enterprise just lay there waiting to be leveraged. It seems as though you have to give HR new consideration, because it is so important.

The Future of HR Jac Fitz-enz | Talent Management Imagine you are the incoming CEO of a struggling company. The board of directors has hired you to turn the company around as soon as possible. What are you going to do? Obviously, you have to start with big questions regarding strategy, structure, product development, sales, cash management and culture. You will probably shuffle the top management team and provide a clear vision of what and how the enterprise has to change. You need to improve cash flow pronto. You might get control of IT's massive investment by moving toward cloud computing. Eventually, you reach the human resources function. You are smart enough to know the issue is not the 1.5 percent of operating expense that goes into running HR. For the company to be successful, turnover must slow and productivity must grow. You're not an HR professional, so you aren't burdened by traditional thinking or a warm spot in your heart for those nice people who labor there. You start with an objective view of human capital management just as you did with management of cash, products, sales and information. It's probably a good idea to find out what kind of data you have on workforce productivity. Has there been any analysis at either the strategic or tactical level in the past? You could form a small analytics function to help study questions of capability, performance and past human capital investments. Nothing beats having accurate and relevant objective data on which to base the tough decisions ahead. So, what is the best way to ensure a sustainable, highly productive and engaged workforce? A large part of the question is where should the various HR functions reside? Form should follow function. Should they all be in a central unit or spread throughout the company where they can be agile and responsive, not to mention accountable for value generation? You decide that, as CEO, you are ultimately responsible for the workforce, so you make strategic workforce planning, including succession planning, your responsibility. You give a senior HR executive that job and have him or her report directly to you. A recruiting strategy is next, and where should that reside? How about putting it under the COO - the person responsible for company operations? Next comes compensation and benefits. Should that go to the CFO, who is accountable for cash management, or do you put that in operations as well? Maybe you carve out health and welfare benefits to finance and leave pay and incentive compensation with the COO. Now, how are the people best developed? Should development be part of your central workforce function? Pieces such as leadership and engagement likely should go together, but where to put them? You have short-term problems such as engagement and long-term questions of succession. It's complicated. You can't just toss them all together like in the past. That didn't work. Who is going to keep employee records and deal with governance requirements? This is sensitive stuff and getting more so every day. What about general employee relations problems? Should they be pushed back to line management where they started 150 years ago? Isn't that what fostered the birth and growth of labor unions? Maybe you should leave the old structure in place and just give it new marching orders. But if you take a car that isn't running well and repaint it, does that make it run better? If HR was not a value-adding function when you arrived, can you afford to leave it as is while you redesign the enterprise? Just how important is workforce management in your new scheme? I'm sure you will figure it out, but one thing is certain. You have to change the fundamental concept that has driven human resources and human capital management in the past. It did not serve the company well during periods of rapid change and may have been a major reason the enterprise was foundering. After all, nothing happens unless a human being acts - all other assets of the enterprise just lay there waiting to be leveraged. It seems as though you have to give HR new consideration, because it is so important.

The Future of HR Jac Fitz-enz | Talent Management Imagine you are the incoming CEO of a struggling company. The board of directors has hired you to turn the company around as soon as possible. What are you going to do? Obviously, you have to start with big questions regarding strategy, structure, product development, sales, cash management and culture. You will probably shuffle the top management team and provide a clear vision of what and how the enterprise has to change. You need to improve cash flow pronto. You might get control of IT's massive investment by moving toward cloud computing. Eventually, you reach the human resources function. You are smart enough to know the issue is not the 1.5 percent of operating expense that goes into running HR. For the company to be successful, turnover must slow and productivity must grow. You're not an HR professional, so you aren't burdened by traditional thinking or a warm spot in your heart for those nice people who labor there. You start with an objective view of human capital management just as you did with management of cash, products, sales and information. It's probably a good idea to find out what kind of data you have on workforce productivity. Has there been any analysis at either the strategic or tactical level in the past? You could form a small analytics function to help study questions of capability, performance and past human capital investments. Nothing beats having accurate and relevant objective data on which to base the tough decisions ahead. So, what is the best way to ensure a sustainable, highly productive and engaged workforce? A large part of the question is where should the various HR functions reside? Form should follow function. Should they all be in a central unit or spread throughout the company where they can be agile and responsive, not to mention accountable for value generation? You decide that, as CEO, you are ultimately responsible for the workforce, so you make strategic workforce planning, including succession planning, your responsibility. You give a senior HR executive that job and have him or her report directly to you. A recruiting strategy is next, and where should that reside? How about putting it under the COO - the person responsible for company operations? Next comes compensation and benefits. Should that go to the CFO, who is accountable for cash management, or do you put that in operations as well? Maybe you carve out health and welfare benefits to finance and leave pay and incentive compensation with the COO. Now, how are the people best developed? Should development be part of your central workforce function? Pieces such as leadership and engagement likely should go together, but where to put them? You have short-term problems such as engagement and long-term questions of succession. It's complicated. You can't just toss them all together like in the past. That didn't work. Who is going to keep employee records and deal with governance requirements? This is sensitive stuff and getting more so every day. What about general employee relations problems? Should they be pushed back to line management where they started 150 years ago? Isn't that what fostered the birth and growth of labor unions? Maybe you should leave the old structure in place and just give it new marching orders. But if you take a car that isn't running well and repaint it, does that make it run better? If HR was not a value-adding function when you arrived, can you afford to leave it as is while you redesign the enterprise? Just how important is workforce management in your new scheme? I'm sure you will figure it out, but one thing is certain. You have to change the fundamental concept that has driven human resources and human capital management in the past. It did not serve the company well during periods of rapid change and may have been a major reason the enterprise was foundering. After all, nothing happens unless a human being acts - all other assets of the enterprise just lay there waiting to be leveraged. It seems as though you have to give HR new consideration, because it is so important.

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Secretly watching #IPL @ Work? ;) IPL ergonomics : 1. Hand supported at the edge of table. 2. Under-thigh level with chair. 3. Hamstring relaxed. 4. Lower back upright. 5. Vision at a slight 10% down tilt. 6. Elbow weight through centre of gravitiy of chair handle.

Secretly watching #IPL @ Work? ;) IPL ergonomics : 1. Hand supported at the edge of table. 2. Under-thigh level with chair. 3. Hamstring relaxed. 4. Lower back upright. 5. Vision at a slight 10% down tilt. 6. Elbow weight through centre of gravitiy of chair handle.

Secretly watching #IPL @ Work? ;) IPL ergonomics : 1. Hand supported at the edge of table. 2. Under-thigh level with chair. 3. Hamstring relaxed. 4. Lower back upright. 5. Vision at a slight 10% down tilt. 6. Elbow weight through centre of gravitiy of chair handle.

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Hiring: Solution Architect –Mobile: Leading IT Company for Pune Location. Experience: 8+yrs. Job Location: Pune Technology – iOS, Android, J2ME, Black Berry Additional Skills – Good analytical and communication skills Should have worked on Development/Support/Maintenance projects. Desirable: o Technical documentation skills o Proactive approach to take initiatives to problem solving. o Client facing Experience o Ability to work with minimum supervision. Interested candidates please send resumes on dhruval.modi@ethoshr.net / call on 9227499351.

Hiring: Solution Architect –Mobile: Leading IT Company for Pune Location. Experience: 8+yrs. Job Location: Pune Technology – iOS, Android, J2ME, Black Berry Additional Skills – Good analytical and communication skills Should have worked on Development/Support/Maintenance projects. Desirable: o Technical documentation skills o Proactive approach to take initiatives to problem solving. o Client facing Experience o Ability to work with minimum supervision. Interested candidates please send resumes on dhruval.modi@ethoshr.net / call on 9227499351.

Hiring: Solution Architect –Mobile: Leading IT Company for Pune Location. Experience: 8+yrs. Job Location: Pune Technology – iOS, Android, J2ME, Black Berry Additional Skills – Good analytical and communication skills Should have worked on Development/Support/Maintenance projects. Desirable: o Technical documentation skills o Proactive approach to take initiatives to problem solving. o Client facing Experience o Ability to work with minimum supervision. Interested candidates please send resumes on dhruval.modi@ethoshr.net / call on 9227499351.

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Let’s change our vision..!! Think simple, Live simple... There was a millionaire who was bothered by severe eye pain. He consulted so many physicians and was getting his treatment done. He did not stop consulting galaxy of medical experts; he consumed heavy loads of drugs and underwent hundreds of injections but the ache persisted with great vigour than before. At last a monk who has supposed to be an expert in treating such patients was called for by the millionaire. The monk understood his problem and said that for some time he should concentrate only on green colours and not to fall his eyes on any other colours. The millionaire got together a group of painters and purchased barrels of green colour and directed that every object his eye was likely to fall to be painted in green colour just as the monk had directed. When the monk came to visit him after few days, the millionaire's servants ran with buckets of green paints and poured on him since he was in red dress, lest their master not see any other colour and his eye ache would come back. Hearing this monk laughed said "If only you had purchased a pair of green spectacles, worth just a few rupees, you could have saved these walls and trees and pots and all other articles and also could have saved a large share of his fortune. You cannot paint the world green." Let us change our vision and the world will appear accordingly. It is foolish to shape the world, let us shape ourselves first.

Let’s change our vision..!! Think simple, Live simple... There was a millionaire who was bothered by severe eye pain. He consulted so many physicians and was getting his treatment done. He did not stop consulting galaxy of medical experts; he consumed heavy loads of drugs and underwent hundreds of injections but the ache persisted with great vigour than before. At last a monk who has supposed to be an expert in treating such patients was called for by the millionaire. The monk understood his problem and said that for some time he should concentrate only on green colours and not to fall his eyes on any other colours. The millionaire got together a group of painters and purchased barrels of green colour and directed that every object his eye was likely to fall to be painted in green colour just as the monk had directed. When the monk came to visit him after few days, the millionaire's servants ran with buckets of green paints and poured on him since he was in red dress, lest their master not see any other colour and his eye ache would come back. Hearing this monk laughed said "If only you had purchased a pair of green spectacles, worth just a few rupees, you could have saved these walls and trees and pots and all other articles and also could have saved a large share of his fortune. You cannot paint the world green." Let us change our vision and the world will appear accordingly. It is foolish to shape the world, let us shape ourselves first.

Let’s change our vision..!! Think simple, Live simple... There was a millionaire who was bothered by severe eye pain. He consulted so many physicians and was getting his treatment done. He did not stop consulting galaxy of medical experts; he consumed heavy loads of drugs and underwent hundreds of injections but the ache persisted with great vigour than before. At last a monk who has supposed to be an expert in treating such patients was called for by the millionaire. The monk understood his problem and said that for some time he should concentrate only on green colours and not to fall his eyes on any other colours. The millionaire got together a group of painters and purchased barrels of green colour and directed that every object his eye was likely to fall to be painted in green colour just as the monk had directed. When the monk came to visit him after few days, the millionaire's servants ran with buckets of green paints and poured on him since he was in red dress, lest their master not see any other colour and his eye ache would come back. Hearing this monk laughed said "If only you had purchased a pair of green spectacles, worth just a few rupees, you could have saved these walls and trees and pots and all other articles and also could have saved a large share of his fortune. You cannot paint the world green." Let us change our vision and the world will appear accordingly. It is foolish to shape the world, let us shape ourselves first.

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