Odds and Ends

Yes, most CEO’s and their advisors are “out of touch” with the actual reality of what’s going on within their own companies, well, the rather large ones. They usually make the best decision in favor of the “shareholders” rather than the people actually working there.

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The '90s are back with a vengeance…

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I agree with this statement. Attention should be paid to the opinions and experiences of employees. All of said employees should not have a say in business direction. The chain of caimans has to end with someone

If you’re happy with the way it’s working, then I’m not going to try to argue it with you :slight_smile:

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That’s rather contradictory, do you not think so? You can’t pay attention to the opinions and experiences of employees if you and dismiss said employees by saying their opinion won’t figure into the final decision.

I wasn’t implying that every single decision made within the company has to have a democratic (most votes wins) vote held.
I was saying that the decision makers need to consider the advice of everyone who works for them when making each decision. All employees should be considered ‘advisors’.
In a democracy, a vote is not held by the general public for every policy decision. A representative is voted upon, who then makes decisions, ideally, based upon the will of the majority who elected them in. But, I respect your opinion. Enjoy your weekend, my fellow comic enthusiast. :beers:

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That wasn’t what I was trying to say, but I can see why you would think it was. I’m trying to explain myself while working and I’m not making my point clear. I’m in a 13 hour shift and my focus is elsewhere. Doing too many things at once, so I’m just going to let this one go.

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Oh my goodness I can’t wait…

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Looks damn good, right ?

:grinning: :blush:

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So utterly random!

Hi guys I got a sale on ebay and when I went to print the shipping label I noticed that the user registered today and had 0 feedback. I then checked the address listed and it’s just a P.O box in San Antonio with a zip code. Does this look correct? There’s no street address. I contacted the buyer to verify the address. What do you guys think? I’m getting a little nervous about selling an item ($50) to a user with zero feedback that just happens to register today and doesn’t have a street address when creating his account, just a P.O. box. Should I contact ebay to cancel this order?

(Name)
P.O. box XXX
San Antonio, New Mexico (Zip Code)
United States

Spend two dollars for signature confirmation so they have to sign that they received the package.

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What will the signature confirmation do? It’ll just confirm they got the package. If it’s a scam they can always just request a return.

It confirms they received the package and provides proof that it was recieved. Now, with eBay they can start a return for any other reason but at least they can’t claim they didn’t get the product so in this case, if they do want a refund, you can request they ship the item back before any refund is issued.

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Also, I like PO Boxes. They’re secured by lock and key at the post office. Someone is paying for that box so they don’t actually have packages stolen at their regular normal mailbox or doorstep.

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Thanks for the help. Does that look like a valid address? It looks like it’s missing a street address, just a P.O. box. Maybe that’s how it looks in New Mexico I don’t know.

PO Boxes don’t need street addresses. The post office knows exactly what PO BOX to deliver to.

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