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iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Last Thursday evening, enroute home, I was in a rickshaw, and the driver (presumably in his early 30s), dropped me near my place; I paid him the auto fare, but this gentleman without looking and counting the money simply put it in his pocket.
I insisted upon him to count and said, “दादा, गिन तो लीजिये” (Brother, please count the money); and the driver replied, “जो मेरा है ही नहीं उसको गिनना क्यों!” (This is not mine so there is no need to count); and I was pleasantly surprised with his profound thought; in terms of formal education he may not be highly qualified but for me he was not less than a PhD holder of rarest faculty called wisdom.  
This incident took me back to my childhood days, wherein my mother used to tell us, you have come to this place with empty hands and you will go somewhere from here also with empty hands, so in this interim phase- of coming and leaving this place- why am I running after possessing materialistic things? And, as I reflect on myself and my running- whether for my life, my family, my career- everything starts with me and ends there only. And here is this auto-rickshaw driver –with his profound understanding about his duty, and an indifferent or detached orientation to rewards – to me, he comes so close to my lay understanding of a true KarmaYogi. It seems this angst ridden and rift-driven world is nothing but the outcome of possessing more than we need.
In an organisation context, people are running, constantly competing, sometimes fiercely, using fair and unfair means, to climb the ladder of organisational success. But my professor Dr Bino Paul at Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai taught us human race has come this far through cooperation not competition (“The Evolution of Cooperation”, Robert Axelrod)!
And here I could relate to the views of organisation psychologist Adam Grant as expressed by him in his most introspective TedTalk titled “Are you a Giver or Taker?” In an organisation also there are people like this auto-rickshaw driver who are engaged in their work without thinking of achieving a position or power, they keep on helping others- within and outside the team to achieve the targets and complete the assignments, and most of the time their efforts go unnoticed. Custodians of organisations need to identify such individuals; empower and encourage them to keep doing the same and passing the ripple effect. Such ripple effect of helping each other will eventually help organisation to establish camaraderie, team spirit, oneness, shared vision and improved synergy organisation wide. Such altruistic individuals could also help the organisation to bring about the culture of asking for help from supervisors and peers without any hesitations of being judged. This will help in creating the organisation culture wherein people shift from being self-centred to others-centred, and consider the larger good than the individual good. It is easy to label such individuals as ‘not smart’ or ‘not result driven’ – but organisations need to recognise that they too contribute value – their approach is different. And maybe some others – result oriented and smart individuals - can show results only because of these individuals – the silent facilitators. Does it call for reviewing the performance metrics or at least make more inclusive? Does it call for more inclusive workplaces?
Above are my thoughts of the kind of world I would like to live in and trying my mite to create one around me. If you relate to my thoughts, I hope you would also contribute in creating a culture of inclusion around you.  
About the Author:
Author is a lifelong student of human behaviour, leadership and spirituality; aims to bring out the best potential of himself and people around him; author holds a Master of Arts degree in Human Resource Management and Labour Relations from Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai. 

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
By Lesley Baird Chapin, Psy.D.

Millions of people experience sleep problems every year. Many things can interfere with the duration and quality of one’s sleep and it is not uncommon to experience some periods of sleep difficulty in life. Sleep is an important aspect of mental health and sleep disruption can often be associated with other mental health issues including depression and anxiety. Mental health professionals and sleep experts have known for years that there are a number of fairly simple behavioral modifications that people can make to improve their ability to fall asleep. If you have been struggling with sleep, use these tips to get yourself back on track.


  1. Keep a schedule. This is easier said than done. Although it may be tempting to allow yourself to sleep in on weekends after a long week of early mornings, this can actually disrupt your sleep in the long run. Going to bed at approximately the same time most nights and waking up at approximately the same time each morning is essential, particularly if you are already having difficulty sleeping.
  2. Cut the caffeine. That cup of coffee might be the perfect jump-start to your morning routine, but you may want to reconsider sipping those lattes throughout the day or having that extra soda for an afternoon energy boost. Caffeine can impact people differently and sometimes indulging after even three in the afternoon can impact your bedtime routine. Many experts recommend you stop consuming caffeine at least four to six hours before you head to bed.
  3. Have a routine. If you have kids, you probably know the importance of the bedtime routine. For example, parents may do a bedtime snack, bath, pajamas, toothbrushing, and a bedtime story in the same order with their children each night before bed. Sometimes as adults, we lose this routine, but having the same evening “wind down” ritual each night can be very beneficial for helping you get into the mindset for sleep. Choosing a routine that includes the same few steps each night can help condition you to become sleepy at the time you want to be heading to bed.
  4. Limit the use of your bed. Your bed should function solely as a place for sleep and sex. Using your bed as a multipurpose space for television, work, etc. can break the association your brain makes between your bed and sleep. As with the nighttime routine, you want to train your brain so that it learns that when you’re heading to bed, you’re going right to sleep.
  5. If you aren’t sleeping, get up! In order to help train your brain to associate your bed with sleep, you have to also train it not to associate your bed with not sleeping. This means that if you are laying in bed fruitlessly trying to sleep, you should get up and get out of bed. 20 minutes is about the longest you want to allow yourself to lay sleepless in bed. When you get up, try to do something quiet, not particularly effortful, and not especially stimulating. Something like listening quietly to public/talk radio or a book on tape may be the perfect solution. Remember, when you do get tired, head straight to bed! Repeat as necessary if you continue laying awake once back in bed. It may also be useful to ditch the clock when you’re struggling to fall asleep. Staring at a clock tends to make people more anxious and frustrated, which is typically not conducive to bringing on sleep.
  6.  Beware of screens. More and more, experts are suggesting that electronics before bed are negatively impacting sleep. This occurs for a number of reasons including correlational issues like what you are doing on that screen. For example, playing an action-packed video game can increase excitement and wakefulness, and trying to get work done can increase stress. Additionally, some research suggests that the amount of time spent with screens in the evening is generally related to later bedtimes. However, one of the biggest problems with screen time before bed is how the brightness and type of light impacts overall wakefulness. Most experts recommend unplugging from our screens at least 30 minutes before bed, whereas others suggest up to two hours is best.
  7. Stop Napping. This may seem self-explanatory, but we all know the temptation of an afternoon nap when we didn’t sleep well the night before. Giving into that urge for a quick daytime snooze can become very detrimental to some people’s sleep schedule. Those daytime naps often cause you to be less tired at night when you’d like to sleep, which can become a cycle of even less sleep at night due to increased sleep during the day. If you find it difficult to get through the day without a nap, be diligent about keeping it to less than 30 minutes.
  8.  Exercise. Aerobic exercise has a number of benefits including helping to regulate sleep. For many people, vigorous exercise should be scheduled for earlier in the day due to the endorphins released causing an uptick in energy afterwards. The timing of exercise appears more important for some people than others.
  9.   Cut out the night-cap. Although consuming alcohol can elicit a quick onset of fatigue for many people, more than one drink close to bedtime is also associated with poorer quality of sleep and earlier waking times. Not to mention that it could also contribute to extra night wakening to use the bathroom.
  10. No noise or white noise. “Quiet” tends to be part of the ideal image for a bedtime space. Many find that the use of earplugs can help them achieve a “quiet enough” atmosphere, even while sleeping next to a snoring partner. Others, prefer white noise such as the constant whirring of a fan or use of a sound machine. The trick to using noise effectively is to pick something low, neutral, and constant. The variable noise of something like television or radio can actually hamper quality of sleep throughout the night.


Depending on your current sleep habits, making these changes during a rough patch of sleep can be very difficult. However, this can be worth the extra effort and can actually start to improve the onset and quality of your sleep in a relatively short timeframe. If after committing to these modifications for several weeks, you have not noticed an improvement in your sleep, you should speak with your physician.
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.


So you are having #hellwithExcel .... At Fingertips Intelligence we recommend that our clients replace their spreadsheets with database bespoke solution built in Filemaker Pro. Here are 7 reasons why we advocate Filemaker Pro:-

1. It allows several users to use the same data in parallel. There are still some packages that allow only one person to access the data at a time.

2. You can run Filemaker on a Windows , Mac , ipad or iphone.

3. Filemaker allows users to view data via a web browser.

4. You can integrate Filemaker with your website

5. It can work locally or in the cloud. Indeed you can work offline and synchronise it later.

6. It is an established product that has been around for 20 years - with new versions appearing regularly.

7. There an abundance of agencies and freelance contractors with detailed knowledge.

8. I believe it is much faster to deploy solutions with Filemaker when compared with other technologies.

A strapline is defined (according to the Cambridge Online dictionary) as 

"a short, easily remembered phrase used by an organization so that people will recognize it or its products"

My strapline is saving my clients from #hellwithexcel ... as we replace spreadsheet hell with bespoke database solutions. 

What is your company's strapline and how does it say what do you ?

With the cold weather in the UK, it seemed an appropriate moment to show the power of our database solutions. In this video testimonial Hew Stevenson of Shoots and Leaves explains how his Filemaker database has helped him deliver over 3,000 Christmas Trees each year for the last 4 years.

It has eliminated the need to switch between word, excel and outlook to create and dispatch invoices. And it saves 3 hours a day by generating delivery schedules.

Who do you know is having #hellwithexcel ?


7 top tips for effective spreadsheet design. Excel is a valuable business tool, and when spreadsheets are well built, they are a great asset. However, sometimes we can get into a mess. Here are some tips to stop you getting #hellwithexcel:-

1) Is a spreasheet really the correct tool that you should be using. Often people start out think that they need a spreadsheet - but in fact that need  a proper database solution.

2) Plan your work - the most common mistake - people jump in without thinking about spreadsheet design. I once had a boss who rebuked me because I wasn't producing anything. I told him that I was thinking in my head - which didnt go down well. However when weeks later when we started flying through the project milestones (and normally they were hellish) he offered his humblest apologies.

3) Colour code your cells -
   * a green cell is for input
   * a blue cell for a drop down
   * a white cell is for calculation
   * a yellow cell for an output or a total

4) Work from left to right - don't start your spreadsheet in the middle, and jump back / forth.

5) Use charts - the phrase a picture paints a thousand words is highly appropriate for data analysis.

6) Have different sheets for inputting data, calculations and output

7) Avoid long formulae - hard to debug !


Who are you looking to speak to this week and why ?

We would love to speak to Finance Directors who are having #hellwithexcel. We'd love to see if we can :-

* save them days by automating their management reporting (we saved one firm 30 man days a month)

* integrate their SAGE accounts with their other systems - as we did for one of our clients saving them 2 days a month

* eliminate any other manually repetitive processes

If you comment in the post who you are looking for and why, may be someone can help.

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Since LinkedIn has become the favorite platform for storytellers, here are a couple of tactics you can use to boost your personal brand

🚦 1 - Foundation - make sure your profile is complete and your headline speaks directly to your target audience

🚀 2 - Create or join some engagement pods - these are small groups, ideally in the same niche and engage with each other's posts

😎 3 - Identify 5 - 10 influencers in your niche. Leave meaningful comments on their content daily

➡️ 4 - Create and/or curate content daily AND make at least one other person look good in your content

💪 5 - Visit 50 - 100 people from your target audience daily. You can search on LI and then visit manually or use a tool like dux-soup

🤘 6 - When people leave comments on your content, reply to all and also add everyone who is 2nd degree connection. They will help you get more reach on future content (TY Josh for sharing this)

✅ 7 - Experiment with different content formats (video, Text and Images) to see what works best

And now here is the *Secret Hack*

🔥🔥 The best HACK is to show up daily & produce valuable content. That’s it!

#LetsGraph

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
*STRICTLY FOR MEN ONLY*


When a man steals your wife, there is no better revenge than to let him keep her.
 ~By Lee Majors


After marriage, husband and wife become two sides of a coin; they just can't face each other, but still they stay together.
 ~By Al Gore

By all means marry. If you get a good wife, you'll be happy. If you get a bad one, you'll become a philosopher.
 ~By Socrates

Woman inspires us to great things and prevents us from achieving them.
 ~By Mike Tyson

The great question... which I have not been able to answer... is, "What does a woman want?
 ~By George Clooney

I had some words with my wife, and she had some paragraphs with me.
 ~By Bill Clinton

"Some people ask the secret of our long marriage. We take time to go to a restaurant two times a week. A little candlelight, dinner, soft music and dancing. She goes on Tuesdays, I go on Fridays."
 ~By George W. Bush

"I don't worry about terrorism. I was married for two years."
 ~By Rudy Giuliani

"There's a way of transferring funds that is even faster than electronic banking. It's called marriage."
 ~By Michael Jordan


First Guy (proudly): "My wife's an angel!"
 Second Guy : "You're lucky, mine's still alive."
 ~ By Jimmy Kimmel
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Happy or Not!

Customer Satisfaction at the Push of a Button

HappyOrNot terminals look simple, but the information they gather is revelatory.



HappyOrNot’s terminals have logged more than six hundred million responses.Animation by Javier Jaén
In 2016, a European gas-station chain hired HappyOrNot, a small Finnish startup, to measure customer satisfaction at its hundred and fifty-plus outlets. One gas station rapidly emerged as the leader, and another as the distant laggard. But customer satisfaction can be influenced by factors unrelated to customer service, so, to check, the chain’s executives swapped the managers at the best and worst performers. Within a short time, the store at the top of the original list was at the bottom, the store at the bottom was at the top, and one of the managers was looking for work.
By the standards of traditional market research, HappyOrNot’s analysis was simplistic in the extreme. There were no comment cards, customer surveys, focus groups, or reports from incognito “mystery shoppers.” There was just crude data collected by customer-operated devices that looked almost like Fisher-Price toys: freestanding battery-powered terminals with four big push buttons—dark green and smiley, light green and less smiley, light red and sort of frowny, dark red and very frowny. As customers left a store, a small sign asked them to rate their experience by pressing one of the buttons (very happy, pretty happy, pretty unhappy, or very unhappy), and that was all.
What HappyOrNot’s gas-station data lacked in substance, though, they made up for in volume. A perennial challenge in polling is gathering responses from enough people to support meaningful conclusions. The challenge grows as the questions become more probing, since people who have the time and the inclination to fill out long, boring surveys aren’t necessarily representative customers. Even ratings on Amazon and on Walmart.com, which are visited by millions of people every day, are often based on so few responses that a single positive or negative review can affect customer purchases for months. In 2014, a study of more than a million online restaurant reviews, on sites including Foursquare, GrubHub, and TripAdvisor, found that the ratings were influenced by a number of “exogenous” factors, unrelated to food quality—among them menu prices (higher is better) and the weather on the day the reviews were written (worse is worse).
A single HappyOrNot terminal can register thousands of impressions in a day, from people who buy and people who don’t. The terminals are self-explanatory, and customers can use them without breaking stride. In the jargon of tech, giving feedback through HappyOrNot is “frictionless.” And, although the responses are anonymous, they are time-stamped. One client discovered that customer satisfaction in a particular store plummeted at ten o’clock every morning. Video from a closed-circuit security camera revealed that the drop was caused by an employee who began work at that hour and took a long time to get going. She was retrained, and the frowns went away.
Last year, a Swedish sofa retailer hired HappyOrNot to help it understand a sales problem in its stores. Revenues were high during the late afternoon and evening but low during the morning and early afternoon, and the retailer’s executives hadn’t been able to figure out what their daytime employees were doing wrong. The data from HappyOrNot’s terminals surprised them: customers felt the most satisfied during the hours when sales were low, and the least satisfied during the hours when sales were high. The executives realized that, for years, they’d looked at the problem the wrong way. Because late-day revenues had always been relatively high, the executives hadn’t considered the possibility that they should have been even higher. The company added more salespeople in the afternoon and evening, and earnings improved.
HappyOrNot was founded just eight years ago, but its terminals have already been installed in more than a hundred countries and have registered more than six hundred million responses—more than the number of online customer ratings ever posted on Amazon, Yelp, or TripAdvisor. HappyOrNot is profitable, and its revenues have doubled each year for the past several years; its clients have a habit of inquiring whether, by chance, the company is for sale—significant accomplishments for a still tiny enterprise whose leaders say that their ultimate goal is to change not just the way people think about customer satisfaction but also the way they think about happiness itself.
The C.E.O. of HappyOrNot, Heikki Väänänen, has the build of a long-distance runner, which he is, and the beard of a high-school sophomore. He was born in 1980, and grew up on a small dairy farm in the remote, brutally beautiful lake-and-forest region of central Finland. He and his wife live with their three children in Tampere, Finland’s second-largest city. (It’s roughly the size of Lubbock, Texas.) The company is based there, too. “Tampere has an amazing airport,” he told me recently, at HappyOrNot’s U.S. headquarters, in a one-story building in a corporate development in West Palm Beach, Florida. “From the airplane, you can see your car.”
Väänänen got the germ of the idea for HappyOrNot when he was fourteen or fifteen. He was shopping for computer diskettes at a large electronics store and couldn’t find anyone to help him. “I thought, O.K., in this location there are no people who are interested in customers, but it’s a big company, so maybe there’s someone, somewhere else, who cares,” he told me. “But filling out surveys isn’t something you can always do, so it came to my mind that maybe there could be an easier way to give feedback, and to send the data directly to people who are interested in the results.” He didn’t pursue that thought, but he didn’t forget it.
During Väänänen’s second year in college, where he studied business, he and a few friends started a small company that mainly produced computer code for other small companies. Their biggest customer was a creator of games for mobile phones, a brand-new market that was easy to enter and growing fast. In 2004, the two companies merged, with Väänänen as the C.E.O. “That timing was perfect, because mobile games took off,” he said. “Soon, we were selling to Disney, Warner, LucasArts, Sega—all the big game-brand owners.” In 2007, they were bought by a client.
Väänänen stayed on but soon became restless. One day, he described his old feedback idea to Ville Levaniemi, who’d been a colleague in both of his previous ventures. Levaniemi thought the idea was so simple that someone must have done it already, and said he’d investigate. “The next day, he came back to me and said, ‘Let’s resign immediately and start this business,’ ” Väänänen recalled. They installed the first HappyOrNot terminal in December, 2009, in a small grocery store in Tampere. “It was very exciting,” Väänänen said. “But when we left the store I told Ville, ‘Shit, what if, like, no one gives feedback?’ So we were guessing—maybe ten? maybe twenty?” By the end of the day, more than a hundred and twenty customers had used the terminal. “We saw that, if you make it easy, people will give feedback every day, even if you don’t give them a prize for doing it.”
Finland is a good place to start a technology company. The semi-collapse of Nokia—the Finnish telecommunications giant, which once dominated the global mobile-phone market—left a pool of unemployed but highly capable hardware and software engineers. “When we came to the United States to do trade shows,” Väänänen said, “we saw that maybe thirty per cent of the people were Finnish, and it was, like, ‘Why are we meeting here instead of in Finland?’ ” A Finnish national program, called Tekes, gives grants to entrepreneurs. The grants start very small but grow as the recipients meet targets. HappyOrNot eventually received about a million euros in Tekes grants, and grew very fast.
In early 2012, Väänänen and Levaniemi hired Todd Theisen to help with international sales, an area in which they’d been having trouble. Theisen had grown up in the United States, and majored in international politics and German studies. He then ran an English-language school in Germany for half a dozen years, married a Finn, and worked in sales and marketing for a Finnish educational-technology company. He saw immediately what HappyOrNot was doing wrong. He told me, “Selling in Finland is a different proposition from selling abroad, and it’s very different from selling in America. Finnish culture is extremely modest and humble.” There’s an old joke that a Finnish introvert looks at his shoes when he talks to you, and a Finnish extrovert looks at your shoes.
HappyOrNot’s international breakthrough came at Heathrow Airport. Passengers had been complaining that security workers there were rude and incompetent, and, as the 2012 Summer Olympics approached, the airport’s executives worried about the imminent influx of international visitors. They positioned HappyOrNot terminals so that passengers could use them as they cleared security. The executives were now able to identify problem locations in real time, and security workers in low-rated areas could see when they were viewed as more annoying than colleagues in other parts of the airport. Very quickly, Theisen told me, Heathrow security’s over-all passenger-satisfaction scores rose by more than half.
The Heathrow contract has been extremely important for HappyOrNot, since even today new clients often say that they first noticed the terminals either there or at an airport that installed them after one of its officials noticed them at Heathrow. The terminals haven’t reached the security area at Palm Beach International Airport, however—as I saw when I flew back to New York after my visit to the company. I did see a single sign, with a message from the Transportation Security Administration which asked for feedback about T.S.A. Precheck: “Scan the code to tell us about your experience.” But the sign was pushed back against a wall, and no one who didn’t understand how to scan a QR code would have known what to do. What’s more, anyone who scanned the code, as I did, would end up with just a link to the T.S.A.’s general customer-service Web page, on which, if they scrolled down far enough and clicked through enough options, they’d be able to find and fill out an (endless) online form, on which they would be required to include their full name and e-mail address. As if!
An episode in the third season of the TV show “Black Mirror” portrays a world in which people spend nearly all their time using their phones to rate virtually everyone else on a five-star scale. Lacie—a young woman whose obsession with her own rating is so extreme that she practices giggling in a bathroom mirror, while using gadgets installed in her eyes to click selfies—is trying to boost her rating in order to win a discounted rent on a fancy apartment. Soon, though, her rating plummets, following an argument with her brother, a temper explosion at an airport, and other stress-related misfortunes. In the end—after mug shots, eye-gadget removal, and confinement in what appears to be a prison for people with zero stars—she rediscovers the meaning of life by engaging in an unfettered fuck-you fight with another inmate.


The social satire in the episode is pretty broad, but Lacie’s world is enough like ours to be thought-provoking. Nowadays, it’s probably impossible for a reasonably with-it American to get through an entire twenty-four hours without being asked to rate someone or something, or feeling compelled to give five stars and a tip to a Lyft driver who was actually pretty terrible but clearly needed the work, or deciding to give a perfect score to a lousy online seller out of fear that otherwise the seller might give a less than perfect score in return.
HappyOrNot is satisfying because you can use it effortlessly and anonymously, without condemning yourself to a lifetime of targeted ads, and without adding still more monetizable information about yourself and your family to the world’s exponentially growing online hoard of permanently lost privacy. But Väänänen, Levaniemi, and Theisen have bigger ambitions. “Think of an airport,” Theisen told me. “If you’re a passenger and you’ve a bad experience in security, it can cloud your day. You’re pissed off, so you speak nastily to the salesperson at Starbucks, and they speak nastily to the next customer—it’s like a chain of events.”
Studies have shown that patients have better health outcomes when the medical professionals who care for them listen thoughtfully and explain what they’re doing, and even that flu shots are more effective if people are in a good mood when they receive them. Many medical facilities have signed on with HappyOrNot, because the data generated by the terminals make it easy for them to identify problem areas. “Patients who are treated well stick to their treatment plans more,” Theisen said. “And doctors who admit their mistakes and apologize for them are less likely to be sued for malpractice.” It’s also reasonably certain that, no matter what you do for a living, becoming less aggravating to others while you’re on the job is likely to make you and your co-workers more contented as well. “At the end of the day, we all care about how we’re treated,” Theisen said.
Väänänen told me, “Basically, every time a customer uses our service, we can say that, based on the data, we are making the world a happier place.” This assumes, of course, that happiness is quantifiable, and that the human supply of it rises and falls, like oil in a tank. There’s some evidence to the contrary, since even people with no objective reason to complain about anything somehow manage to find new ways to make themselves and others miserable. There are also situations in which measurement itself can lead to bad results. The Timesrecently published a story about a Veterans Administration medical center in Oregon that had boosted its “quality of care” ratings, as measured on a five-star scale, by turning away the sickest patients. Gathering those ratings had nothing to do with HappyOrNot, but the underlying issue applies to assessments of many kinds. Life wouldn’t necessarily be better if we all did the equivalent of teaching to the test.
In 2013, the people in charge of the business side of the San Francisco 49ers football team hired Moon Javaid to work on analytics. He had an M.B.A. from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, and, among other things, he’d worked for a health-care private-equity firm. When he arrived, the 49ers had just had three of their best seasons ever, including one in which they’d made it to the Super Bowl for the first time in eighteen years. Nevertheless, Javaid decided that the organization ought to make a serious effort to measure and improve fan satisfaction. He and his staff created their own version of a standard National Football League postgame survey, rewriting existing questions and adding additional detail. “I wanted to be able to say to our I.T. guy, ‘Hey, our Wi-Fi didn’t score that well this week—can you fix it?’ ” Javaid said.
Many of Javaid’s colleagues were uncertain at first about the value of postgame surveys, or any surveys, but when the results began to come in they changed their minds. Al Guido, the 49ers’ president, pushed Javaid to gather data faster, and said that what he would truly like to have was feedback in real time. Javaid said that he didn’t think that was technologically possible, but soon afterward, during a business trip to New York, he saw a HappyOrNot device at J.F.K., and called the company. “We had HappyOrNot terminals here in the building within two weeks,” he told me. His staff placed them at stadium entrances, at the exits from rest rooms, and at every concession stand. During the first game the terminals were in operation, they recorded twenty thousand fan responses—about the same as the total number of surveys that fans had returned during the whole of the previous year.
Theisen and I went to see Javaid this past November, a couple of hours before the 49ers’ game against the Giants. His office is on an upper floor of Levi’s Stadium, in Santa Clara, the team’s home since 2014. There was a miniature Cavaliers basketball hoop on the back of his office door (Javaid is from Cleveland), an artificial putting green on the floor, and a big file drawer full of game balls, which he hands out almost like business cards.
“Before HappyOrNot, I could tell you on Tuesday how our concessions had performed on Sunday,” Javaid said. “But now I was able to tell you the same thing on Sunday, and in fifteen-minute increments, and I could give you the results by concession stand.” That was during the 2016 season. The team now has an app, developed by HappyOrNot and Layer, a business-communications company in San Francisco, that allows it to monitor results second by second. “You can’t do that with surveys,” Javaid said. “There are seventy thousand people in the building, and, even if you could somehow get them to answer in real time, it would be extremely difficult to process the information.” By next year, Javaid’s staff will have deployed a hundred and twenty terminals throughout the stadium.
In Javaid’s office, I also met Julianne Jochym, a business-strategy analyst. “What we got from Layer is kind of a messaging app,” she said, demonstrating on her iPhone. If the proportion of negative responses suddenly rises at a particular terminal location, an employee can be dispatched to investigate. “You can type a message, here, and also send photos,” she continued. “So they can let you know, Hey, this men’s room is out of paper towels, or this floor needs to be swept and here’s a picture, or this concession stand doesn’t have hot-dog buns.”
On a large monitor on a wall of Javaid’s office, Jochym showed us several ways she’d devised to represent HappyOrNot data graphically, for presentation to other members of the organization. One was a stadium seating map on which the HappyOrNot terminals were identified by numbered, colored circles. “You can see all the terminals here, and you can move through the data hour by hour. The colors change as the ratings do.” The most consistently high-rated performer—even during the two most problematic periods for customer service, halftime and the fourth quarter—was a new vender, which, unlike most other venders, used the same, experienced work crew at every game.
“Last year, a lot of the red”—the frowny, unhappy color—“was kind of in this area, down by this end of the stadium, and now that has kind of moved over here,” she continued. “So we know where our problem areas are, and we can focus on those.”
On game days, fans begin to arrive at Levi’s Stadium long before kickoff, and then either hang out in the parking lot, which has its own venders, or wander through the stadium, drinking, eating, and buying stuff. After our meeting in Javaid’s office, Jochym took Theisen and me on a pre-game tour. We watched a man in a 49ers T-shirt having his photograph taken with eight cheerleaders, and a woman in a Giants T-shirt having her photograph taken while sitting on a gold-colored plastic throne, which was connected in some way with Yahoo’s fantasy-football league. We walked through two of the stadium’s “clubs,” including one in which fans, for several hundred dollars more than the price of a regular ticket, can watch the game on large television monitors while eating ribs that are nearly the size of the ones that made the Flintstones’ car tip over.
On the main concourse, Jochym reoriented a couple of HappyOrNot terminals that had been moved out of position. When I first met Theisen, I asked him what would prevent a store manager from standing next to a terminal and repeatedly pressing the smiley button, and he said that the devices have a brief reset delay, which blocks them from registering closely spaced multiple presses, and also that the most important information from any location comes from the number of frowny presses, which not even a dishonest employee would be able to undo. There’s also safety in numbers. At the stadium, I watched a youngish guy idly reach over and press the red button on a terminal as he walked past a concession stand that he hadn’t bought anything at: a false negative! But Theisen and Jochym were unconcerned. When you receive twenty thousand impressions in the course of a few hours, as the 49ers do, the signal-to-noise ratio is necessarily high.
During the first half, Theisen and I sat in nice seats on the fifty-yard line. One of the stadium’s many fan-friendly amenities is fifteen hundred Wi-Fi access points, mounted under seats; they can accommodate forty thousand people simultaneously streaming at LTE speeds. If anything goes wrong, Javaid and his staff hear about it. (Frustration with bad Wi-Fi is a form of unhappiness that didn’t exist until relatively recently—raising the possibility that human satisfaction, over all, may be a zero-sum game.) Theisen used his phone to scroll through up-to-the-moment results from all sixty of the stadium’s terminals. He noticed nothing unusual, so we returned our attention to the field.
Later—as it began to seem likely that the 49ers were going to win their first game of the season and the Giants were going to lose their eighth—we had to deal with an issue that San Francisco fans have complained about since Levi’s Stadium opened: late-afternoon sun, which frequently blasts people sitting on the east side of the field. A young mother in the row directly in front of ours used a 49ers jacket to create a sun shield for her baby, who was asleep, and just about all the people wearing hats had pulled the brims down to shade their eyes. There wasn’t a button anywhere that I could push to register my feelings about any of that. But Theisen and I had passes that allowed us to sit pretty much anywhere we wanted, so we dealt with our unhappiness the old-fashioned way, by moving to seats on the other side. ♦
This article appears in the print edition of the February 5, 2018, issue, with the headline “The Happiness Button.”
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
My boss made a mistake on a project we were working on and instead of owning his mistake, he said
A bad job with a Good Boss is better than a Good Job with a bad boss.
it was my fault. I sat through that meeting feeling shocked and disappointed. When we left the meeting he told me, "You are a good sport.” I knew I needed to start planning my exit strategy. I loved my job but I couldn’t trust my boss. He would throw you under the bus in a heartbeat to make himself look good. It's demotivating being under a manager who does not stand up for their team. If you made a mistake, he would transform into judge, jury and executioner. In spite of how good a job is, once you don’t have a manager that has your back, you will be miserable in that job. A bad job with a Good Boss is better than a Good Job with a bad boss. Agree?
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.


I HIRED a candidate with 30 years experience. The HR manager was not
impressed. She said he is ‘too old’ and won’t "fit into our culture." He had been laid off by his previous employer due to restructuring at the age of 53 yrs. He kept applying but was rejected for being "overqualified" which led to his 'employment gap" reaching almost 1 yr. Everyone is looking for that 18 year old with 20 years experience. This guy brought an abundance of experience and taught me a lot that I never learned from all my years in the industry. You can’t Google Experience. Employers if you want good talent you need to be considering the "OVERQUALIFIED" candidates. The truth is 'Overqualified' is really the code word for age discrimination. AGEISM in the workplace is very real and quite acceptable. It seems the EEOC has no interest in enforcing the law.  ATS systems require dates. If they don't ask your age, they require employment dates  and the date of college graduation. Our society needs to change. All that should matter is if the candidate has the right skills and attitude to do the job. It’s time to stop discrimination on the grounds of a person’s age. Agree?
iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
7 Tips to Feeling Better About Yourself best ever tips
When you’re feeling lousy, what can you do to feel better about yourself?
It turns out that we feel better about ourselves when we behave in ways that we find worthy of our own and others' respect — such as helping other people, surmounting a fear, and the like.
1. Do a good deed. Be selfless, if only for selfish reason; you’ll benefit as much as the person you’re helping. When I’m feeling low, forcing myself to do something for someone else’s benefit seems particularly hard, but then it gives me a big boost. As Montaigne observed, “These testimonies of a good conscience are pleasant; and such a natural pleasure is very beneficial to us; it is the only payment that can never fail.” In the same vein…
2. Make small gestures of good citizenship. Bring your old magazines to the gym so other people can read them. Pick up trash that other people have left on the subway. Sign up to be an organ donor.
3. Keep a resolution. Not only will you benefit from exercising or cleaning out your garage, you’ll also get a boost from the mere fact that you made a commitment and stuck to it. Feeling so overtaxed that you can’t face the thought of trying to keep a resolution? Try this one: Make your bed. Just do that one thing. I know it sounds a bit preposterous, but many people have told me what a lift they’ve received from that small act.
4. Become an expert. There’s great satisfaction in mastery. Pick a subject that interests you, and dig in deep: the American Revolution, the works of Chekhov, wine, Homeland (my husband and I love this TV show).
5. Boost your energy. Studies show that when you’re feeling energetic, you’re much more likely to feel good about yourself. For a quick shot of energy, take a brisk ten-minute walk (outside, if possible, where sunlight will also stimulate your brain), listen to some great music, or talk to a friend.
6. Challenge yourself physically or mentally. Many people feel great after para-sailing, white-water rafting, surfing, or rollercoaster-riding. (Not me, but other people.) Or push yourself to speak in public, ask someone on a date, make a gesture of friendship toward an acquaintance, or begin an intimidating creative project. In these trying situations, I often comfort myself by repeating Enjoy the fun of failure.” And it’s true, even when my effort fails, I feel good about the fact that I gave it a shot.
7. Make something by hand. There’s something particularly satisfying about making something with your own hands, whether it’s a loaf of bread, a photo album, a piece of furniture, or a fly-fishing fly. It’s tangible, it’s creative, it’s right in front of you. Similarly, making visible improvements like cleaning out a closet can give a big boost. I get an (inexplicably) large boost just from changing a light bulb. I delay, I delay, I delay — and then finally I change it! A triumph!
How about you? Have you found any good strategies to feel better about yourself? As Joseph Addison observed, “The important question is not, what will yield to man a few scattered pleasures, but what will render his life happy on the whole amount.”
--Do you love great quotes? I do. Sign up here to get the Moment of Happiness--a free daily email with a happiness quote. Almost 76,000 people get it each day.

iTech Dunya is a technology blog that specializes in tech-related topics.Our GOAL is to produce high-quality content for our millions of readers.
Career tips... Before Quitting Your Job what you have to do

That’s it. You’ve reached your breaking point. You’re going to quit your job. Well...soon. Very soon.
Quitting a job is never easy. There is a lot to consider before finally turning in your resignation letter. Is this an emotional reaction or a real decision? Can the problems you’re currently facing actually be solved? Have you done everything possible to solve them? Will this be a good or bad career move? How long have you been in this role? Will your next potential employer think you’re a quitter based off a short stint on your resume? Will the next job actually be better?
Why Do You Want To Quit?
Have you outgrown the job? Is the job affecting your health or personal life in a negative way? Is the job hindering you from pursuing your bliss or long-term goals? Does your job no longer match the lifestyle you desire?
It’s important to identify concrete reasons before leaving job to not only be able to remind yourself why you made the decision you made, but to provide feedback to your company during an exit interview. Additionally, you’ll need solid material to craft your reason for leaving response for your next job interview.
Take the Necessary Steps to Quit
If you are still confident quitting is the best option, when preparing to leave, here are the steps you should take:
1. Job search and interview like it’s your second job. If you really want to escape, searching for a new job passively once a week won’t cut it. Spend at least one hour every night connecting with other professionals on LinkedIn, joining groups, and polishing your profile. Browse job posts on mobile apps while standing in line for coffee or taking a walk outside on your break -- any downtime you can find while not at your current job. Stay in constant communication with recruiters and hiring managers using email, LinkedIn messaging, or another social media channel. Schedule interviews around your workday as if they are “meetings” for your second job.
2. Let your boss know the second you accept a new offer. Once you receive a new job offer, shift your priorities to create as smooth of a transition as possible. Give an extended notice if you have the time. Three weeks to a month is always more appreciated than the standard two weeks. Always let your boss know right away, because if he finds out you waited to tell him, he might feel betrayed, leading you to part on bad terms.
3. Offer your help in referring a candidate or training your replacement. In your letter of resignation, offer your help in referring a candidate or training your replacement. Filling a position can take a company weeks or even months. But if they can move quickly enough, they can assure your replacement receives quality training through you, the current expert in the role.
4. Leave an organized space for your replacement. Organize your digital space -- the files in your computer, your contacts, and all documents -- for your replacement. Use categories to make finding information more intuitive. You can even begin this while job searching and interviewing so you aren’t rushing to tie up loose ends in your last couple weeks. If it makes sense for your role, create a “guide” that will help the new hire get acclimated in the company, sharing helpful hints to help the day run smoothly.
Quitting your job is a process which requires a lot of thought, planning, and determination. You may still experience doubt or “buyer’s remorse” after you make the big decision. But instead of looking at the choice you make as “right” or “wrong,” ask what you can learn from it and keep moving forward.
What other advice would you add based on your own experience quitting a job?
About Ilya Pozin:
Serial entrepreneur, writer and investor. Founder of Pluto TVOpen Me, andCiplex. Writer for Forbes and Inc. Husband 1x, father 2x, entrepreneur 3x. Follow Ilya below to stay up-to-date.
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