Posts tagged Consulting

2010: Out With Old Thoughts And Patterns, In With New Goals, Ideas, and Gratitude!

In 2009 pictures spoke 1,000 words. Thank you for your friendship and support. Turn up your speakers, get in the dancin’ spirit and enjoy this little video I made to recap the year in pictures.

Happy New Year!
It’s time to recap, refresh, renew and say thank you. 2009 filled my life with many opportunities to meet [...]

Why I Ride On Shopping Carts And Other Important Life Questions

I went to bed last night feeling disappointed and slightly off. Not meltdown off, or toss and turn all night off, or write a poem about my emotions off. Just off. Do you ever have those moments? You know, things are generally okay, nothing major or minor really, the day was good. And heck, I [...]

Cost Psychology: Is Price Equivalent To Our Expectations?

Yes, absolutely! Not only is payment a form of exchange for goods or services, it is a determining factor for human beings to gauge how much we expect from the experience we’ve bought into.
Think about it, when you sit down to a meal at a two star restaurant, you expect two star food and two [...]

Make College Work For YOU!

Well here it is! My first video post… It’s about time I get it all out of my head and into the world, I’d say.
I have the wonder people who indulged my curiosity and ponderings over the past week about the incredible need and desire for Academic Coaching in the University… Life is moving so [...]

Gen Y: Hard at Work

Psychology and expectations of Generation Y: “Technology is largely responsible for the shift in expectations and employers’ willingness to adapt to them. Some of the world’s most visited Web sites, such as Facebook and YouTube, made their creators millionaires before their 30th birthdays. For some Gen Y-ers, this is ammunition when entering the work force.
“Companies desperately want to be a part of the Web 2.0/user-generated content, MySpace, YouTube phenomenon. Who better to guide that shift than Gen Y?” asks Matt Dornic, 26, president of the public relations firm 3 Dog Communications.” (Excerpt from cnn.com)