Remove Airlines Remove Creativity Remove Human Resources Remove Marketing
article thumbnail

Make Work Fun Again

Lead Change Blog

One of the best examples of this is the world-famous Pike Place Fish Market in Seattle. They started to throw fish around the market, perform improv acts with customers, and be comedic in an effort to enjoy what they do and prevent the job from being drudgery again. Motivation. Fun is not a gimmick or a fad, it’s a state of mind.

Sports 170
article thumbnail

Navigate Your Path to Success

Women on Business

Often this meant trying to read Mapquest directions while driving on a highway or in the dark.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Jim Hunter – Servant Leadership Interview Series

Modern Servant Leader

You can also consider a business that awakens a massive industry then dominates the market shares globally at the same time, busting misconceptions about the way the food service industry must treat employees. $16 America’s largest airline and the most profitable – the airline that love built. They’d say, “Flight attendant?!

article thumbnail

Jim Hunter – Servant Leadership Interview Series

Modern Servant Leader

You can also consider a business that awakens a massive industry then dominates the market shares globally at the same time, busting misconceptions about the way the food service industry must treat employees. $16 America’s largest airline and the most profitable – the airline that love built. They’d say, “Flight attendant?!

article thumbnail

Cast the Net Wide – Make the Most of Your Promotional Time and.

Women on Business

To compensate your side of this seesaw, creative shortcuts cultivate new directions for building business and explore the inspiring nature of change. Evaluate organizations online: their mission, major products/markets, history, and biographies of key participants. Base marketing initiatives on shared values and multiple-agendas.

article thumbnail

Case Study: Challenge the Boss or Stand Down?

Harvard Business Review

Thomas Green winced as he reread an e-mail message from his new boss, Frank Davis, marketing director for the travel and hospitality group at D7 Displays. Tom, this week's client meetings went well, but they would have gone better if you had been on top of the market data. Tom, you're ambitious and creative," she'd begun, solemnly.

article thumbnail

Why Your Company Culture Should Match Your Brand

Harvard Business Review

Ask people how to develop a good corporate culture, and most of them will immediately suggest offering generous employee benefits, like they do at Starbucks, or letting people dress casually, as Southwest Airlines does.

Brand 8