Thursday, 30 October 2014

SEHRISH IRUM SEHRISH Irum 'Sesame Street' is 45, so Ernie got a colonoscopy

Sesame Street turned 45 this week, and with age comes responsibility.
In that spirit, Ernie is taking control of his health and stopped by Conan to get his first colonoscopy. Although heavily sedated, the Muppet chatted with Conan O'Brien throughout the procedure and explained that, with his family history, it's important for him to visit his gastroenterologist regularly.

Maybe next year he'll grow a beard for Movember.

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sehrish irum sehrish irum Lighting the way to gender equality in Germany


Politicians in the German city of Dortmund want to institute a 50/50 quota to ensure equality with female Ampelfrauen in the streets.
Representatives from the Social Democratic and Green parties there reasoned that since society gives equal treatment to men and women, it would "be consistent to partially modify traffic-light men to traffic-light women," The Guardian reported.
Germany isn't a feminist paradise. It has a gender pay gap of 20%, one of Europe's highest. Women occupy just 6% of executive board seats on the 30 largest companies on the country's blue-chip DAX index, according to Reuters, although Chancellor Angela Merkel is determined to enforce a quota for that too.
The concept of female versions of the traffic lights, known as Ampelfrauen, were first introducedin 2004. They would improve pedestrian safety because the triangular skirts would allow more light to show. You can find Ampelfrauen in several cities throughout Germany (including Bremen, Cologne, Dresden, Kassel, Magdeburg and Zwickau), but they are still largely outnumbered by their male counterparts.


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SEHRISH IRUM SEHRISH IRUM Out of the spotlight, Hong Kong protesters still in the streets



HONG KONG— A few weeks ago in Hong Kong, I spotted a sign spelling out 'Umbrella Calendar' above dozens of little origami umbrellas tied to a rickety wooden frame: One umbrella for every day of protests.
I’ve not seen the calendar since — perhaps it got swept up in the ever-moving flood of tents and artworks at the main protest site — but as of Friday, it would have noted 47 days or almost seven weeks.


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Wednesday, 23 April 2014

Sehrish Irum Pk - How to Simplify Your Life in 5 Minutes a Day

The situation for many of us is that life is fast and full of opportunity. The complication is we think we have to do everything. The implication of this is that we make a millimeter progress in a million directions. My position is we can make a different choice. We can learn to recognize what is essential and eliminate nonessentials. If we do this then we can operate at a higher point of contribution. Below are five simple ways to simplify your life so you can focus on what is most essential.
The Priority Game
When the word priority came into the English language in the 1400s, it was singular. Think for a moment: What did it mean? The answer is the prior or very first thing. What's interesting is it stayed singular for the next 500 years. It wasn't until the 1900s that we came up with the pluralized term and started using the word priorities. But what exactly does the word mean? Can there be multiple very first things?
In the spirit of this, take five minutes to write down the most important six activities for tomorrow. Then cross off the bottom five. Write down your priority on a Post-it note and put it on your computer. Schedule a ninety-minute window to work on that priority - preferably the first thing of the day.
60 Seconds to Clarity
Pause once every hour for one minute to ask, "Is this the most important or valuable thing I could be doing right now?"If the answer is no, simply stop.
Two for the Price of One
Establish a new rule for one day: If you want to add a new activity you need to edit out two existing activities.This simple rule ensures two things. First, you don't add an activity that is less valuable than something you are already doing. Second, it helps to ensure you move toward reducing your overall burden each day.
Hold tightly to this idea if you are considering setting up any regular or repeated commitment and think long and hard about all the things you would have to give up in order to take this new thing on.
The Automated No
Saying no is one of the most socially awkward things for people to do. Perhaps the most socially acceptable way most of us do this is when we are on vacation or know we will be out of the office: "I will be out of the office from X date to Y date. If this is urgent call me on Z."
We can use a similar bounceback when we need to concentrate. In this case the bounceback can read: "I am off the grid from 1-4PM today working on a priority project. If this is urgent call me on X."
There are a growing number of apps and services that do this. AwayFind, for example, sends an auto-reply that includes a way to contact you (in an emergency) through a text. There are three advantages: First the person has to decide if it is worth the extra effort, second you only have to respond with a text-message length reply, and third it ensures you can be found just in case something actually is essential.
Frictionless Tomorrow
Think through tomorrow's schedule from the moment you will wake up until you go to bed. Look at each activity. Identify any way you can make it a little easier through preparation. If you are planning to exercise, get your running clothes out so when you wake up in the morning, you won't have to spend time digging through your closet. The idea here is to make doing the essential activity almost easier than not doing it.
I encourage you to experiment with Essentialism. Prototype ways of working. Try out these ideas - and many others. Live by design rather than by default. Use what works. Eliminate the rest.

Sehrish Irum pk - How to Get Millions of Customers … on a Shoestring

For the first three years of my company, HootSuite, we spent literally no money on marketing, PR or advertising. As a bootstrapping startup, we simply couldn’t afford it. A lot of you have asked me how we did this.
So recently, I wrote about one of the ways my company got five million customers with zero ad budget: by building a business on the freemium model.
In this post, I’ll share the second secret behind HootSuite’s early and explosive growth on a very tight budget: a successful global brand ambassador program. What is this? A brand ambassador program involves building up a global ‘army’ of people who are genuinely interested in your company and therefore willing to spread the word for you. It’s an incredibly effective way to increase global brand awareness on a shoestring.
Here are just a few key tactics behind this successful initiative, which helped us gain millions of users in our first three years:
Facilitate cost-effective but irresistibly fun grassroots campaigns.
As our user base quickly grew from thousands to millions, we discovered that a key secret to our rapid growth was organizing fun but small-scale, locally-driven campaigns around the world. Thanks to advancing technology (like social media, of course), this is surprisingly easy and manageable, even for a business with limited resources.
First we’d notice an emerging organic market and immediately start reaching out to locals in the region using networks like Facebook and Twitter. Then we’d engage with them further by doing translation projects together, sending them ‘swag’ (like stickers and owl masks), andorganizing fun, casual community events. Finally, we would always celebrate what they were doing by posting their photos and stories on our own channels, like on a dedicated blog or our company Facebook page. We would also choose a few select industry events like SXSW to attend and come up with cost-efficient, enjoyable ways to stand out from the crowd.
In this way, we saw hundreds of people all over the world become brand ambassadors because they liked our product and they liked us. And they did it all for free, because they were having fun. Many of these ambassadors, it turned out, were bloggers, consultants, early adopters, and "digital influencers," who really helped us spread the word in new markets.
Build authentic relationships with people.
In our early days, we quickly learned that building a successful brand isn’t just about ROI; it’s also about developing relationships with people.
The key to doing this—even with limited resources—is to really listen. Again, tools like social media are essential here. Even if just one enthusiastic fan in Iceland or Siberia reached out to us via a Tweet or Facebook update, we made sure our community and support teams were paying attention and engaging or responding.
Looking back now, what really differentiated our community programs from many others at the time and what certainly contributes to our continued growth today is that we always prioritized users first (even if they were non-paying) and spoke to them over all of our social media channels. For example, by our second year of business, HootSuite had dozens of active regional Twitter accounts to make sure no one reaching out to us went unheard. From the start, our community managers were on the front lines, connecting with people all around the world.

Sehrish Irum Pk - Why even $1M may not be enough for retirement

You've been saving like a miser to get ready for retirement. You've pinched pennies, kept that last car for what seems like an eternity. And now you've banked a cool $1 million for your retirement years.
Think you're set?
Well, you very well might be. Then again, you still might be short.
"The good news is there are more millionaires," says Richard G. Dragotta, at LPL Financial in Paramus, N.J. "Over 9 million people in the U.S. have $1 million or more." But, Dragotta says, $1 million might not mean you're wealthy: The new $1 million may be $2 million.
"Thirty years ago, $1 million was a huge amount of money," says Haitham "Hutch" Ashoo, CEO of Pillar Wealth Management, in Walnut Creek, Calif. "Today, given today's lifestyles and costs, it isn't so much money."
Why not? "It translates into $40,000 to $50,000 (annually) in sustainable revenue," says Joe Heider, regional managing principal for Rehmann Financial Group in Westlake, Ohio. "That is not that much money on an annual basis."

Sehrish Irum Pk - Wealthy Chinese are turning to American surrogates to birth their children

The familiar image of international surrogacy until now has mainly involved Americans and Europeans crossing the world to find women to birth their children. Now, wealthy Chinese couples are seeking surrogates in the US. The practice—a new version of Chinese “birth tourism”—offers a solution to rising infertility in China, a way around Chinese population controls, and even the added bonus of US citizenship for babies born in the States.
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For years, pregnant Chinese women have come to the US, mainly to the West Coast, to give birth to baby US citizens who can, at the age of 21, sponsor their parents for green cards. In a new wrinkle, some are instead paying American women to carry their children—a way of getting citizenship as well as dealing with the fact that more Chinese couples are facing trouble having children. (Othersurrogacy destinations for wealthy Chinese include Thailand, India, and Ukraine, but the US is still the favorite.)
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According to a report on National Public Radio (NPR), surrogacy agencies in California say that the trend has taken off since 2009, as news of these services were passed on through word of mouth. One agency, West Coast Surrogacy, says that almost half of its clients waiting for a surrogate mother are from China. US fertility clinics and surrogacy operations have been creating Chinese language websites and staffing up with Mandarin speakers to cater to their new clients: