A 92-year-old man is moving into a retirement home after his wife passed away. As a staff member describes his new room, including a sheet serving as a curtain, the man says he likes it very much. When told he hasn't seen it yet, he replies that his happiness depends on his perspective, not the furnishings. He views each day as a gift and focuses on happy memories. He advises depositing happiness in the "bank account" of one's memories.
A wealthy man takes his son on a trip to a poor family's farm to show him how poor people live. When they return, the father asks the son what he learned. The son notes that while they have many luxuries like imported lanterns, a pool, and servants, the poor family has simple pleasures like stars at night, fields that go on forever, and friends to protect them. The son concludes that compared to the poor family, they are actually poor themselves. The father is speechless, and the son realizes the importance of appreciating what you have rather than focusing on what you lack.
Jerry is always in a good mood and motivates his employees to remain positive as well. When asked his secret, Jerry explains that every day we have a choice to be in a good or bad mood, and he always chooses good. Even after being shot during an armed robbery at his restaurant, Jerry remained positive, telling doctors he chose to live so they should treat him as if he were alive. Jerry believes our attitude is the one thing we can control, so choosing to be positive makes dealing with life's challenges much easier.
The document provides tips for living a better life in 2010, including taking daily walks while smiling, sitting in silence for 10 minutes, sleeping 7 hours, living with energy, enthusiasm and empathy, playing games, reading more books, drinking water, eating a nutritious diet, practicing meditation, yoga and prayer, dreaming while awake, smiling and laughing more, making others smile, avoiding gossip, having a positive outlook, spending time with both the elderly and young children, forgiving others and not taking yourself too seriously.
The document is a slideshow that features nighttime photographs of various cities and landscapes from around the world. By clicking, the viewer can add color to the black and white photos or advance to the next slide. The slideshow takes the viewer to places like Frankfurt, Bremerhaven, Hamburg, Sydney, Berlin, Budapest, Cologne, London, Prague, Dresden, Salzburg, Las Vegas, Venice, Mount Saint-Michel, Paris, Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, the Alps, Moscow, and features photographs of the Tower Bridge.
10 Insightful Quotes On Designing A Better Customer ExperienceYuan Wang
In an ever-changing landscape of one digital disruption after another, companies and organisations are looking for new ways to understand their target markets and engage them better. Increasingly they invest in user experience (UX) and customer experience design (CX) capabilities by working with a specialist UX agency or developing their own UX lab. Some UX practitioners are touting leaner and faster ways of developing customer-centric products and services, via methodologies such as guerilla research, rapid prototyping and Agile UX. Others seek innovation and fulfilment by spending more time in research, being more inclusive, and designing for social goods.
Experience is more than just an interface. It is a relationship, as well as a series of touch points between your brand and your customer. Here are our top 10 highlights and takeaways from the recent UX Australia conference to help you transform your customer experience design.
For full article, continue reading at https://yump.com.au/10-ways-supercharge-customer-experience-design/
http://inarocket.com
Learn BEM fundamentals as fast as possible. What is BEM (Block, element, modifier), BEM syntax, how it works with a real example, etc.
How to Build a Dynamic Social Media PlanPost Planner
Stop guessing and wasting your time on networks and strategies that don’t work!
Join Rebekah Radice and Katie Lance to learn how to optimize your social networks, the best kept secrets for hot content, top time management tools, and much more!
Watch the replay here: bit.ly/socialmedia-plan
A 92-year-old man is moving into a retirement home after his wife passed away. As a staff member describes his new room, including a sheet serving as a curtain, the man says he likes it very much. When told he hasn't seen it yet, he replies that his happiness depends on his perspective, not the furnishings. He views each day as a gift and focuses on happy memories. He advises depositing happiness in the "bank account" of one's memories.
A wealthy man takes his son on a trip to a poor family's farm to show him how poor people live. When they return, the father asks the son what he learned. The son notes that while they have many luxuries like imported lanterns, a pool, and servants, the poor family has simple pleasures like stars at night, fields that go on forever, and friends to protect them. The son concludes that compared to the poor family, they are actually poor themselves. The father is speechless, and the son realizes the importance of appreciating what you have rather than focusing on what you lack.
Jerry is always in a good mood and motivates his employees to remain positive as well. When asked his secret, Jerry explains that every day we have a choice to be in a good or bad mood, and he always chooses good. Even after being shot during an armed robbery at his restaurant, Jerry remained positive, telling doctors he chose to live so they should treat him as if he were alive. Jerry believes our attitude is the one thing we can control, so choosing to be positive makes dealing with life's challenges much easier.
The document provides tips for living a better life in 2010, including taking daily walks while smiling, sitting in silence for 10 minutes, sleeping 7 hours, living with energy, enthusiasm and empathy, playing games, reading more books, drinking water, eating a nutritious diet, practicing meditation, yoga and prayer, dreaming while awake, smiling and laughing more, making others smile, avoiding gossip, having a positive outlook, spending time with both the elderly and young children, forgiving others and not taking yourself too seriously.
The document is a slideshow that features nighttime photographs of various cities and landscapes from around the world. By clicking, the viewer can add color to the black and white photos or advance to the next slide. The slideshow takes the viewer to places like Frankfurt, Bremerhaven, Hamburg, Sydney, Berlin, Budapest, Cologne, London, Prague, Dresden, Salzburg, Las Vegas, Venice, Mount Saint-Michel, Paris, Tokyo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Kuala Lumpur, the Alps, Moscow, and features photographs of the Tower Bridge.
10 Insightful Quotes On Designing A Better Customer ExperienceYuan Wang
In an ever-changing landscape of one digital disruption after another, companies and organisations are looking for new ways to understand their target markets and engage them better. Increasingly they invest in user experience (UX) and customer experience design (CX) capabilities by working with a specialist UX agency or developing their own UX lab. Some UX practitioners are touting leaner and faster ways of developing customer-centric products and services, via methodologies such as guerilla research, rapid prototyping and Agile UX. Others seek innovation and fulfilment by spending more time in research, being more inclusive, and designing for social goods.
Experience is more than just an interface. It is a relationship, as well as a series of touch points between your brand and your customer. Here are our top 10 highlights and takeaways from the recent UX Australia conference to help you transform your customer experience design.
For full article, continue reading at https://yump.com.au/10-ways-supercharge-customer-experience-design/
http://inarocket.com
Learn BEM fundamentals as fast as possible. What is BEM (Block, element, modifier), BEM syntax, how it works with a real example, etc.
How to Build a Dynamic Social Media PlanPost Planner
Stop guessing and wasting your time on networks and strategies that don’t work!
Join Rebekah Radice and Katie Lance to learn how to optimize your social networks, the best kept secrets for hot content, top time management tools, and much more!
Watch the replay here: bit.ly/socialmedia-plan
This document discusses how various fruits and vegetables resemble different parts of the human body and how recent research has found they benefit those corresponding organs or systems. It provides examples like carrots resembling the eye and being good for eye health, tomatoes resembling the heart and being heart-healthy, and walnuts resembling the brain and supporting brain function. The document encourages sharing it to "keep the candle of love, hope and friendship alive."
Department Culture 153 A To Z Of Stress ManagementJason Goh
This document provides 26 tips for stress management from A to Z. Some key tips include taking daily breaks of at least 30 minutes, regular exercise, eating a healthy diet, getting enough sleep, limiting stimulants like alcohol, managing money well, and making time for hobbies and relationships. The overall message is that practicing stress management techniques across many areas of life can help reduce stress and lead to a more enjoyable existence.
The document presents life as a gift given to us each day when we wake up. It likens each new day to a present from God, wrapped and waiting to be opened. The contents of each day's present may contain problems, sadness, or surprises, but appreciating the gift of time each day and remaining thankful is important. While the present may not always contain what we desire, it provides what we need to grow and learn life's lessons.
The document discusses the 90/10 principle, which states that 10% of life is made up of external events outside our control, while 90% is determined by our reactions to those events. It provides an example of how a spilled cup of coffee could lead to a bad day if reacted to negatively through anger and scolding, but may be avoided by responding to the situation calmly. The key message is that while we cannot control what happens to us, we can control how we react, which largely determines our experiences. Applying the 90/10 principle by not letting negative external events affect us can significantly improve our lives and prevent unnecessary stress.
This document discusses how various fruits and vegetables resemble different parts of the human body and how recent research has found they benefit those corresponding organs or systems. It provides examples like carrots resembling the eye and being good for eye health, tomatoes resembling the heart and being heart-healthy, and walnuts resembling the brain and supporting brain function. The document encourages sharing it to "keep the candle of love, hope and friendship alive."
Department Culture 153 A To Z Of Stress ManagementJason Goh
This document provides 26 tips for stress management from A to Z. Some key tips include taking daily breaks of at least 30 minutes, regular exercise, eating a healthy diet, getting enough sleep, limiting stimulants like alcohol, managing money well, and making time for hobbies and relationships. The overall message is that practicing stress management techniques across many areas of life can help reduce stress and lead to a more enjoyable existence.
The document presents life as a gift given to us each day when we wake up. It likens each new day to a present from God, wrapped and waiting to be opened. The contents of each day's present may contain problems, sadness, or surprises, but appreciating the gift of time each day and remaining thankful is important. While the present may not always contain what we desire, it provides what we need to grow and learn life's lessons.
The document discusses the 90/10 principle, which states that 10% of life is made up of external events outside our control, while 90% is determined by our reactions to those events. It provides an example of how a spilled cup of coffee could lead to a bad day if reacted to negatively through anger and scolding, but may be avoided by responding to the situation calmly. The key message is that while we cannot control what happens to us, we can control how we react, which largely determines our experiences. Applying the 90/10 principle by not letting negative external events affect us can significantly improve our lives and prevent unnecessary stress.