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Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Special Announcement 2012 Key Employment Law Alerts

Your business must satisfy many workplace obligations especially when it comes to Federal and State law regulations and requirements. It is anticipated that 2012 will continue the increasing trend of new laws that can impact your business.

Today, we offer you a friendly reminder about a great resource - your HR Support Center - designed to help you stay on top of the latest employment law updates. For the most current information regarding the state(s) where you do business, visit your HR Support Center, check out the “Laws” section, and click on the Alerts area. Make sure to visit often as the HR Pros regularly post new alerts.

An additional option to help you get timely employment law updates is to sign up for eAlerts! Within the HR Support Center, simply visit the “My Account” section in order to update your eAlert preferences. Once this is complete, look forward to important announcements emailed directly to your inbox.

If you have any questions, please let us know.

Thank you. info@amsinsure.com

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

How to Boost Employee Engagement in a Slow Economy

With companies running lean and mean, none can afford even one disengaged employee, say researchers
You’ve thrown an employee appreciation party. The job satisfaction numbers on the annual survey look decent. Is it time to check “improve employee engagement” off your list?

Not so fast! According to experts, job satisfaction isn’t the most important goal. An “attitude of commitment” to the mission is the key, particularly during tough times, says Kevin Groves, associate professor of organization theory and management at Pepperdine University. Companies should make things like action-learning projects (a group of people from different divisions are invited to work together and tackle a challenge) and job cross-training a part of the daily culture. “Whatever you can do to build networks and allow people to see beyond their silo to how their roles really matter to the company is valuable,” he says.

Marcie Pitt-Catsouphes, Ph.D., director of the Sloan Center on Aging & Work at Boston College and author of Engaging the 21st Century Multigenerational Workforce, agrees.[1] “With companies running lean and mean these days, they can’t afford to have even one employee show up who is not engaged. It can have a major impact on the business,” she says.

Workers who are emotionally engaged in a company’s mission are more likely to tackle tough problems and look for creative ways to expand the business. They contribute more to the bottom line, too: Significantly increasing engagement levels among employees can up their discretionary effort by more than 50 percent, according to research done by the Corporate Leadership Council.[2] In a Gallup study of nearly 8,000 business units across 21 industries, companies whose engagement scores rose into the top 25 percent achieved 7 percent higher productivity.[3]

But the benefits of engagement extend deeper. High engagement allows a company to weather difficult times without excess turnover. “We’ve found [higher engagement] adds to people’s resilience in getting through high-pressure times,” says Pitt-Catsouphes. In addition, engaged employees are healthier, and, over the long haul, less costly workers. “It’s the difference between people who cross the threshold totally wiped out at the end of the day and those who feel invigorated by what they do. Those are the people who are more willing and able to go the extra mile,” she says.

Here are some strategies experts recommend for boosting engagement:

Tailor engagement programs for different audiences. People want to be heard, but what they are asking for varies, Pitt-Catsouphes says. Gen Xers particularly value training and development through stretch assignments, while workplace flexibility makes women and Gen Y workers tick.

Abolish blanket reward systems. Nothing can drain engagement faster than a committed employee who receives the same acknowledgment for meeting a goal as the team’s weak link, says Groves.

Minimize “status” hierarchy. Southwest Airlines, software developer SAS and others foster engaging corporate cultures by having everyone eat in the same cafeteria, follow a similar dress code and park in the same lot. “Symbolic differences can carry a lot of weight. Feeling like ‘I can only communicate with people at my own level’ stymies communication and undermines the feeling that everyone’s commitment matters,” Groves says.

Invest in Wellness. Healthier people are more engaged, according to Pitt-Catsouphes’ findings. While it’s hard to untangle the cause from the effect (does engagement protect against stress, or is it easier to be engaged if you’re feeling well?), the finding underscores the notion that funding for a company gym or nurse hotline is money well spent.




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[1] http://www.metlife.com/assets/cao/mmi/publications/studies/mmi-engaging-21st-century-workforce-study.pdf

[2] Driving Performance Through Retention and Employee Engagement, http://www.usc.edu/programs/cwfl/pdf/Employee%20engagement.pdf

[3] http://www.gallup.com/poll/150383/Majority-American-Workers-Not-Engaged-Jobs.aspx



This article was featured in the December 2011 issue of Working Mother Research Institute’s email newsletter, Working Mother Research Institute Essentials. To read additional stories from that issue, see the related content section above. To subscribe to Working Mother Research Institute Essentials, register on the newsletter page of this website.

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Flue Season and time for a shot, its simple and easy.

We are in the FLU SEASON and shots are available at most HMO Medical Groups, and at Walgreens as wellas other retailers. If you have a PPO check to see for coverage's and or use one of the low cost retailers. If you have Kaiser Health Plans you can click on the link below for there locations.


KAISER FLU SHOT LOCATIONS

Thursday, December 01, 2011

What is a Tax Deferred Annuity?

A “tax-deferred” annuity is an annuity in which taxation of interest or other growth is deferred until it is actually paid. The contract owner contributes funds to the annuity in a lump sum or through annual payments to the annuity. The money is then allowed to grow for a period of time on a tax-deferred basis. At a future date the money is “annuitized”, and accumulated funds are paid out, generally through periodic payments made over either a specified period of time, or the life of an individual or the joint lives of a couple.

Annuities are used for many purposes in addition to providing lifetime income. They may be used to accumulate funds for some future event, e.g. education, a court settlement, or a lottery.

What are the tax advantages of an annuity calculator?


What is the future value of an annuity calculator?

Eight Tips for Talking to Your Kids About Their Weight

Submitted by Timothy Boyer on 2011-12-01


Child Health and Safety Weight Loss Program News Analysis Talking to our children about drugs and sex (but never rock and roll because our tastes are just too out of the times with the current generation’s tastes) has added a new dimension lately—talking to your kids about their weight. Dr. David Katz, an expert on weight management, nutrition and disease warns us that today’s younger generation will not live as long or as healthfully as their parents. He believes that one of the ways to counter this trend is for parents to start talking to their children about weight management and healthy lifestyle choices.

Weight loss and children

The following are eight tips for talking to your kids about their weight printed in its entirety courtesy of Dr. Katz and MindStream Academy - a full-service boarding school for teens and tweens who want to get healthy, fit, lose weight, take control of their lives, build self-esteem, and pursue a personal passion.

1. Put the focus squarely on health and off weight. Whether by default or by design, each family has a health and wellness “culture.” This includes the types of food that are kept in the house, how heavily physical activity is emphasized, what sleep patterns are encouraged, how much health information is available, and more. As a parent, you should emphasize each aspect of this health culture, not just your child’s weight. Remember, healthy weight follows good lifestyle behaviors, but good lifestyle behaviors typically don’t follow weight-loss diets.

2. Recognize that you spend too much time focusing on weight. Most people don’t realize how much they use weight as a yardstick to measure their overall quality of life as well as their worth. For example, how many times have you asked about a piece of clothing, “Does this make me look fat?”—with the understanding that if the answer is “yes,” you’ve somehow failed? That’s why, when broaching the subject of weight with your child (and in your own life), it’s important to stop talking about weight—and even, to some extent, appearance—and emphasize other characteristics. For example, talk about how an unhealthy lifestyle influences your child’s self-esteem and thus demeanor, as well as how he expresses himself and the impression he makes on other people.

3. Ask your child what would help. Yes, you’re the authority figure in this relationship, but it can be a mistake to assume that you know the best way to help your child become healthier. One of the problems with giving support from a position of experience is that you tend to think that your child’s situation is the same as yours, and therefore, the things that worked for you will work for her. That’s not necessarily the case. Instead, it’s always a great idea to ask what your child thinks the best course of action would be. This, Dr. Katz says, is a main talking point when working with the families of MindStream students.

4. Focus on change, even if you run into resistance. The purpose of any discussion about losing weight and living a healthier lifestyle is to bring about change. In other words, talking to your teen about his weight angst for an hour might have some value because it allows him to vent, but try not to leave the discussion there. Try to take one step forward, too, even if your child is resistant to change.

According to Dr. Katz, an effective way to overcome resistance (or even cut the conversation short if things are getting heated) is to get a commitment to make just one change in the next week. That might be anything from drinking fewer sodas and more water to walking three days a week. Dr. Katz adds that focusing on one simple change a week seems manageable (as opposed to dropping 30 pounds, which is overwhelming), and is a very constructive way to move the conversation forward without getting too bogged down.

5. Observe how your child (and the whole family) uses food. Your discussion will be better received and more effective if you are well informed, so before instigating “the talk,” observe how your child uses food. For example, if you see that she eats in order to manage her emotions, you’ve gained an important piece of information about a very damaging habit. The truth is, we aren’t always the best observers of ourselves. So if you can determine whether or not your child is using food as a drug to avoid discomfort or as a stress manager, you’re one step closer to attacking the root of the problem. You can explain to your child that this underlying eating “trigger,” not food itself, is what she’ll need to focus on managing.

6. Don’t be judgmental. One thing is for sure: Nobody is perfect. And another thing is also for sure: If you attack someone, he’ll stop listening to you. Taking those two truths into account, Dr. Katz insists that you should avoid blaming your child at all costs. The fact is, we live in a fat culture, and the majority of Americans are overweight—so in many ways, your child’s struggle isn’t his fault. However, it is his and your responsibility to do something about it. The focus should always be on how you can help your child move forward from here, expressed as lovingly as possible.

7. Walk the walk. In the end, your example is the best way to change your child’s health behaviors. Dr. Katz points out that teens in particular are sensitive to hypocrisy. So if you aren’t ready to make any and all of the changes that you’re asking of your child, don’t instigate the weight discussion in the first place. If you can’t walk the walk, then your actions will simply be encouraging your children to continue with deadly habits that will have a major negative impact on their lives.

Controversial Children's Book Uses Four-letter Word: DIET

8. And if you really can’t get through… Sometimes, despite their best efforts, parents just can’t get a positive response from their children. If this happens in your family, Dr. Katz is adamant that someone needs to have the weight discussion with your child. Getting professional help is always a good idea, but there may be siblings, other relatives, friends, or even teachers who might get a more receptive response. And if all else fails? Well, Dr. Katz insists, all else can’t be allowed to fail. Your child’s life is too important.

Reference: MindStream Academy