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Tool to Help Christmas Decorators Manage the Lights on Their Trees

christmas Tool to Help Christmas Decorators Manage the Lights on Their Trees
It is an age old question. It has kept many a man up at night, pencil in hand, scribbling figures and measurements endlessly on ream after ream of paper. Still it perplexes even the most astute scholar of mathematics: How many lights should I put on my tree? When decorating indoor and outdoor trees for the holiday season, just how many lights should be used? The Christmas Light Source has found a solution to the problem. No more sleepless nights,no more endless formulas to compute. No, all you have to do is visit their website to see the Christmas Lights Calculator and answer a couple of questions to find out pretty much instantly how many lights you should put on your tree.

While not everyone decorates their tree the same way, this tool is a good place to start. Individual taste usually dictates how many lights a tree should have. What is simple to one person may be extravagant to another. There are not hard fast rules,but there are some standards that can work as guidelines for designing the perfect tree. The tool calculates the size of the tree and the type of lights that the person intends to use. It then recommends how many lights should be used, but they can do more or less, depending on personal taste. The calculator is intended for trees that have kept their leaves. In the case of a tree that has lost its leaves, Christmas Light Source recommends using up to half of that number of lights. For indoor trees, they suggest adding 30% to the highest recommended amount of lights if you like your Christmas tree lighting to be over the top. It should also be noted that the tool is trees.

“We had so many people calling in asking for advice,” says Shellie Gardner, co-owner of Christmas Light Source. “So we thought we’d create this tool to give them an easy way to see what changing the sets of lights would do for the quantity that would be required. “And it is certainly doing its job. Along with pithy but fun comments returned to users, the little tool keeps with the lightheartedness and humor that is prevalent throughout the Christmas Light Source website. They have managed to solve yet another holiday dilemma with a creative, effective, user friendly tool. Now, if they could only solve the fruitcake issue.

The Client Coworker

The idea of being customer service and customer satisfaction oriented is not a new paradigm in the business world. Even in businesses that are not directly working with the public, the idea of structuring the company to satisfy the needs of the people that make it possible for the company to stay in business – it’s customers – is a core value for a large percentage of businesses, especially those that are successful.

But there are segments of every business that have no contact with customers so it is difficult for them to develop a customer service mentality. And if the business itself is not structured to deal with the public or have conventional “customers”, that approach to the business world can be lacking in the workplace. That is why a big business trend in all type of business settings is to change the work ethic internally so that workers view those who use their work as customers.

When properly implemented, each employee actually begins to view each other, their bosses and especially people who rely on their work in other departments as customers or clients. In theory, this approach has as its objective to build that customer service mentality even in workers for whom the outcome of their work is only for internal
departments or other workers in the company.

Its an innovate approach to changing the corporate culture of any business. By altering the mindset especially of an office worker to that of someone who comes to work with that entrepreneurial or retail oriented outlook, the employee is freed to become more creative, more aggressive about completing quality work for their “customers” and get a greater feeling of satisfaction from satisfying their internal customers.

It’s a noble effort to try to alter the traditional culture of an office based business setting. The traditional culture of a “cubicle farm” type of office setting often resembles the comic strip Dilbert. That strip can be painful to read if you are a manager trying to keep a creative and proactive team moving forward in a business setting. But Dilbert does point out some of the communication problems that are common in an office setting. The distrust of management, the tendency by employees to drift toward unproductive attitudes and behavior and the low morale of many office settings is lampooned by the strip.

The client coworker business concept attempts to empower the employee to strive to perform to his or her best even when only performing duties for the department or another department internal to the company. The client customer model calls for viewing that other department as a customer and providing customer service to that internal relationship with the same “eager to please” attitude that is necessary when serving external customers whose revenue drives the company.

There are some real values to be had by introducing a customer service attitude even to internal support functions within the company. When combined with other empowering techniques such as process improvement and open communications with all levels of management, it can unify an office and put some real life into your staff.

However, the negatives of the client customer model have to be avoided. This approach can create animosity between coworkers and hard feelings when one employee feels that he or she is not being treated like a customer by another. The client customer model can create distance between peer employees and reduce comradery which has a great deal of value in a team oriented corporate culture. But a wise manager can implement the client customer model to a business setting and harvest from it the productivity gains while skillfully avoiding the pitfalls.