Archive for Business

Aug
12

An Olympian’s View of Gymnastics

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Samantha Peszek’s Top Ten Reasons to Get Involved in Gymnastics


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Jun
30

USAG NJ Club Directory Update Complete

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The Club Directory (Click Here) for New Jersey have finished a 6 month upgrade.
If you need to change or need to be added, complete the Club Directory Update Form (Click Here) to submit your info.

Categories : Business, NJ Updates
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Jun
03

Region 7 Congress – Weeks Away!

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Region 7

Jump start your Summer with a ton of info at the Region 7 Congress
June 25-27 in Baltimore, MD
.

REGIONAL CONGRESS EDUCATION:
Over 75 Sessions covering the following areas and varied by region

  • Coaches Education – Sessions covering popular topics for the developmental through elite gymnastics coach.
  • Recreational Education – A recreational track covering programs for tots through teens; be the best instructor in your gym!
  • Business Education – Sessions covering marketing, managing your business, staff retention and more.
  • Judges Education – Sessions covering compulsory, optional and elite judging criteria, technique and more.
  • Other Education – Sessions covering acrobatic gymnastics, T & T, Men’s Artistic, rhythmic, sports science, psychology and more.

    Click Here for more INFO
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May
27

USAG National Committee Minutes – May 2010

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Meeting Minutes are available from 4 USAG Women’s Committee Meetings held in May 2010.
The minutes contain important information for the 2010-2011 Season.

Administrative Committee Minutes
Jr Olympic Committee Minutes
Joint JO/Technical Committee Minutes
Technical Committee Minutes

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May
11

Don’t Become a Bus Company!

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An article from Seth Godin’s blog that applies to our business, teams, coaching and individual actions.

We all have a vision of the typical bus company, slowly moving people from place to place, going through the motions and showing a lot of fatigue.

Some of the elements that make an organization feel like a bus company:

  • Aging equipment in need of a functional and design refresh
  • Tired staff, punching the time clock
  • By the book mentality, with no room for humanity or initiative
  • Treating all customers the same (poorly) and knowing (and caring) little or nothing about them
  • Acting like a monopoly, with no easy substitutes in sight
  • Lack of eye contact (between employees or customers)
  • Attitude that tomorrow will be just like today
  • No one to complain to, and if you persist, you’ll get a form letter

American Airlines has officially become a bus company, without a doubt. On a recent non-flight (it got canceled) all of these elements occurred. Only one (1) act of human initiative would have made a huge difference.

More and more, I’m seeing bus company behavior from previously great organizations. It’s a symptom of companies (and cultures) under long-term stress. These are all traits that occur when you allow standards to erode, when you embrace the status quo and when management gives up. You don’t need lots of money or squadrons of people to change this, you just need to care.

Ironically, there are new bus companies that are proving that there’s always a way to avoid this fate.

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