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The Chief Happiness Officer

The Chief Happiness Officer

Goalkeeper: Project Management With an Emphasis on Usability Goalkeeper Goalkeeper is a hosted free online project management application, team collaboration and issue tracking software. Online project management is a big business, and for good reason – Web technology has made it far easier for companies and organizations to collaborate and manage projects and staff. And while there are already some great tools out there (i.e. Goalkeeper is an all-encompassing project management system. For those who are familiar with project management software, most of these features are standard. Another strong suit of Goalkeeper is timeline and all of its calendar-based features – they’re superb. Goalkeeper also has an easy-to-use web chat system and even budget tracking for complex projects. Still, this doesn’t detract from Goalkeeper’s functionality or usefulness. Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark Entrepreneurs can take advantage of the Azure Services platform for their website hosting and storage needs.

Scobleizer — Searching for world-changing technology How to be a program manager by Joel Spolsky Monday, March 09, 2009 Having a good program manager is one of the secret formulas to making really great software. And you probably don’t have one on your team, because most teams don’t. Charles Simonyi, the brilliant programmer who co-invented WYSIWYG word processing, dated Martha Stewart, made a billion dollars off of Microsoft stock and went into space, first tried to solve the Mythical Man Month problem of organizing really big software teams by creating one super duper überprogrammer writing the top-level functions, while handing off the implementation of the lower-level functions to a team of grunt junior-programmers as needed. For more on the history, read William Poundstone’s How Would You Move Mount Fuji? Jabe Blumenthal, a programmer on the Mac Excel team in the late 80s, recycled the title for a different job. What does a program manager do? Henceforth, a program manager would: Truth be told, I didn’t know anything about anything. x = [A1] had to work. Conflict

Biz Stone Becoming a Stellar Games Industry Manager, Part 2: Growing the T Coming together is a beginning.Keeping together is progress.Working together is success. -- Henry Ford As a leader, you’re going to encounter potential team members with a variety of backgrounds. An ambitious applicant who has tested a couple of games may have impressed you in the interview by dressing upscale and dropping all the right names but you had to ask the tough questions to see how much genuine desire was under the bravado. An applicant with a ton of experience who couldn’t look you in the eye during the interview probably wasn’t the right person for the producer slot but might be a brilliant artist who is happy doing his thing 24/7 without complaining. The veteran female producer who said she’d like a chance to mentor others might turn out to be a great asset when newcomers are shell-shocked by crunch time. It’s all about learning to read a resume and conduct an interview where you, not the applicant, were in control. Even the best leader can’t do it alone.

Contrarian Thinking Bird's Eye View Stephen R. Covey Choosing Not to be Angry May 4th, 2010 I was teaching the 7 Habits at a professional gathering last week when I experienced something remarkable. While I spoke about Habit 1, Be Proactive, and some of the principles for being responsible for your own life or carrying your own weather and choosing your own response, a gentleman from the audience stood up. Right […] Launched My Blog on Huffington Post—“Our Children and the Crisis in Education” April 22nd, 2010 I am pleased to announce that I am now a contributor to the Huffington Post. A New Tool to Help You Create a Great Career April 9th, 2010 When you are looking for work or trying to advance your career, you need all the help you can get. 25 Years of Dot-Com. March 18th, 2010 March 15, 2010 marked the 25th anniversary of the first “dot-com” registration on the Internet. Start Small with Your Resolutions for 2010 December 29th, 2009 The start of a New Year is always special. Success on the Far Side of Failure—Learning from Failures

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