Tuesday, August 16, 2011

What is Forex?

Forex is the foreign exchange market or currency market or FOREX is the market where one currency is
 traded for another.It is the one of the largest market in the world.

In the foreign exchange market there is little or no "inside information".Exchange rate fluctuations  are usually caused by actual monetary flows as well as anticipations on global macroeconomic conditions.
 
Forex trading: its all about earning easy money. maybe you did go to exchange office for any reason, for example: you need to change money if you want to go to holiday to foreign countries. onet exchange rate changes day to day. Sometime your money can get higher to other countries money. sometimes your money can get lower.
                                                                      
                                                                       
                                                           Anchor Text: "giocare in borsa"

      URL: http://www.giocareinborsaonline.com/Come-giocare-in-borsa-on-line



Saturday, August 6, 2011

Why I need Project Management ?


What Is Project Management?

  Project management is a methodical approach to planning and guiding project processes from start to finish. According to the Project Management Institute, the processes are guided through five stages: initiation, planning, executing, controlling, and closing. Project management can be applied to almost any type of project and is widely used to control the complex processes of software development projects.


 Why We Need Project Management?

26% of projects are successful.
46% of projects are challenged.
28% of projects fail.
Average cost overrun is 89%.
Average schedule overrun is 122%.
45% of functions provided in newly developed systems are never used.

## The Top Ten Reasons Why You Need Project Management..

A disciplined project management process is important to any project.  Project managers are expected to deliver results, on time (if not sooner) and on budget.  Solid project planning reduces the risks associated with any project you take on.  Here are ten reasons why you need project management:

1. Control Scope Creep and Manage Change,
Small changes in demands occur on every project.  They come from management, the customer, your project team, suppliers, or other stakeholders.  Individually, they may appear acceptable, but collectively these project demands can add up to a significant project expansion (referred to as “scope creep”) that can overrun your budget.  As a project manager, if you effectively manage the scope of your project, you have a better than even chance of effectively managing project resources — time, money, etc. — and managing change.

2. Deliver Project Results On Time and On Budget,
Project planning starts with a well thought out business case justification that usually includes some type of cost calculation associated with Return On Investment (ROI).  Once these measures are established, it is up to the project manager to ensure that on-time, on-budget performance is maintained; otherwise, the project will never produce the expected results.  That’s what good project management is all about.

 3. Focus the Project Team on the Solution,
The project team can easily drift off topic and spend too much time on the wrong tasks.  A good project manager keeps the project team focused by using a clear and concise project charter, resolving barriers, or shielding the team from unnecessary interference.

4. Obtain Project Buy-In from Disparate Groups
As President Lincoln once said, “Public sentiment is everything. With it, nothing can fail; without it, nothing can succeed.” A good project manager uses the tools in the initiation phase of project management to collect user requirements, project constraints, and a feasibility study to build a strong business case justification.  Using input from various sources, the project manager overcomes dissent and obtains buy-in by communicating the project benefits as the different stakeholder groups see them.

5. Define the Critical Path to Optimally Complete your Project,
Every project is made up of a series of connected activities, each of which has its own constraints.  The project manager identifies the critical path of activities — the optimal sequence of actions that best ensure the project’s successful completion.

6. Provide a Process for Estimating Project Resources, Time, and Costs,
Using project management software, previous project experiences, and a solid project initiation phase can provide the discipline needed to reduce project estimating errors, increasing the likelihood that the project will finish on time and on budget.

7. Communicate Project Progress, Risks, and Changes,
As a project progresses, stakeholders must be kept informed of the outcomes, changes, stumbling blocks, or successes that the project experiences.  Project management creates a project communication plan to address these communication issues, provide a format, and lay out a process for execution.

8. Surface and Explore Project Assumptions,
All projects are based on assumptions to some extent.  A good project manager delves into user requirements, project constraints, and management expectations to understand what is said and what is not said.  Relying on too many unconfirmed assumptions can invalidate a project schedule or, worse, sink the project.

9. Prepare for Unexpected Project Issues,
Every project runs into unforeseen issues, such as changes in market conditions, and is hit with random cause variability.  Experienced project managers plan for the unexpected by lining up alternative courses of action.

10. Document, Transfer, and Apply Lessons Learned from Your Projects
The last phase of project management focuses on “closing out” the project.  The project manager reviews how well each prior phase — project initiation, project planning, project execution, and project monitoring and control — was performed.  As part of good knowledge management, all project review notes should be dissected and analyzed for patterns, trends, and opportunities for improvement.  These “lessons learned” should be documented and communicated to other project managers before starting the next project.


Project Manager Value
The value a project manager adds is to a project is:
• Manages people in a stressful environment
• Keep everyone focused on the ultimate goal
• Manage the scope of the goal
• Constantly adjust workloads and timeframes to keep the project on track
• Manage problems. Not necessarily resolve the problems but ensure they are
  being addressed or escalated
• Ensure all the stakeholders are aware of any changes
• Fight for the necessary resources
• Plan ahead and take actions to ensure the plans can be followed
• Know where everything is up to, and manage dependencies between different


 Would project management have helped?
By better project management, perhaps the warning signs that the project was at risk could have been communicated. Expectations could have been managed. Perhaps better project management could have refocused the project to smaller deliverables in shorter timeframes, or a complete re-scoping of the project. All these are the normal activities of a project manager. Any experienced, people oriented project manager will understand these sorts of potential issues. By project managing the close down of the project, many of the employees could have been salvaged.


    Publisher :H.H.G.L De Silva
University Of  Peradeniya
Faculty Of Science

Contact : +94718657907
                       : geeth.pdn@gmail.com

< UR ALL Donations For My Higher Education >



Monday, August 1, 2011

What is entrepreneurship?


                                 Introduction
This is the era of the entrepreneur! Through the world, growing numbers of people are realizing their dreams of owning and operating their own business.Entrepreneurship is thriving. The past two decades have seen record numbers of entrepreneurs launching new businesses and each year. American entrepreneurs alone start 3 to 4.3 million businesses each year and 84 percent are doing that for the first time.

I. The World of the Entrepreneur

A study by the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) found 11.3 percent of the adult population in the United States is working to start a business. North America, South America and Latin America lead the world in entrepreneurial activity.


II. What is an Entrepreneur?

An entrepreneur is one who creates a new business in the face of risk and uncertainty for achieving profit and growth opportunities and assembles the necessary resources to capitalize on those opportunities. While we may not be able to teach entrepreneurship, we can teach the skills of small business management. This is an important distinction to make to students. Noted psychologist David McClelland characterized high achievers/entrepreneurs as possessing these traits:

Desire for responsibility
Preference for moderate risk (risk eliminators)
Confidence in their ability to succeed
Desire for immediate feedback
High level of energy
Future orientation (serial entrepreneurs)
Skill in organization
Value of achievement over money Other characteristics of entrepreneurs include:
High degree of commitment
Willingness to accept risk, work hard and take action
Flexibility

The Benefits of Entrepreneurship

The primary benefits entrepreneurs enjoy include the opportunity to:
Create their own destiny
Make a difference
Reach their full potential
Generate impressive profits
Contribute to society and be recognized for their efforts
Do what they enjoy and have fun at it!

                                                                                       Publisher :H.H.Geeth Lakmal De Silva
                                                                                       University Of Peradeniya
                                                                                       Sri Lanka.


YOU CAN DONATE   FOR HIGHER EDUCATION.............................