Thursday, March 06, 2008
TECHNIP
Offshore field development
Subsea products
Pipelay and subsea construction
Subsea maintenance
Floating and fixed platforms
Subsea field decommissioning
Mooring services
Drilling and service applications
Onshore Field development
Gas treatment and liquefaction
Oil refining
Hydrogen - Syngas - GTL
Sulfur
Onshore pipelines
Petrochemicals (ethylene, aromatics, olefins, polymers)
Advanced systems engineering
Refining and onshore applications
Chemicals, pyrotechnics
Fertilizers
Life sciences
Agro-industries
Metals
Power generation
Cement
Manufacturing industries
Buildings
go here
Wednesday, February 20, 2008
Management lesson:
Johnny wanted to have s XX with a girl in his office, but she belonged to someone else...
One day, Johnny got so frustrated that he went up to her and said, 'I'll give you a $100 if you let me screw you. But the girl said NO.
Johnny said, 'I'll be fast. I'll throw the money on the floor, you bend down, and I'll be finished by the time you pick it up. '
She thought for a moment and said that she would have to consult her boyfriend... So she called her boyfriend and told him the story.
Her boyfriend says, 'Ask him for $200, pick up the money very fast, he won't even be able to get his pants down.'
So she agrees and accepts the proposal. Half an hour goes by, and the boyfriend is waiting for his girlfriend to call.
Finally, after 45 minutes, the boyfriend calls and asks what happened.
She responded, 'The b @ stard used coins!'
Management lesson: Always consider a business proposal in its entirety before agreeing to it and getting screwed!
One day, Johnny got so frustrated that he went up to her and said, 'I'll give you a $100 if you let me screw you. But the girl said NO.
Johnny said, 'I'll be fast. I'll throw the money on the floor, you bend down, and I'll be finished by the time you pick it up. '
She thought for a moment and said that she would have to consult her boyfriend... So she called her boyfriend and told him the story.
Her boyfriend says, 'Ask him for $200, pick up the money very fast, he won't even be able to get his pants down.'
So she agrees and accepts the proposal. Half an hour goes by, and the boyfriend is waiting for his girlfriend to call.
Finally, after 45 minutes, the boyfriend calls and asks what happened.
She responded, 'The b @ stard used coins!'
Management lesson: Always consider a business proposal in its entirety before agreeing to it and getting screwed!
Wednesday, November 07, 2007

..4 Indians among world's top 50 business gurusDecember 20, 2005 17:07 ISTLast Updated: December 20, 2005 19:22 IST
Four Indians figure amongst the world's top 50 management gurus, according to The Thinkers 50 2005 -- a ranking by the European Foundation for Management Development.
The four Indians on the elite list are University of Michigan professor C K Prahalad (ranked 3rd), CEO coach Ram Charan (ranked 24th), Tuck Business School professor Vijay Govindarajan (ranked 30th), and Harvard professor Rakesh Khurana (ranked 33rd).
Michael Porter, who heads Harvard Business School's Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, has been voted the world's topmost living management guru.
Friday, July 20, 2007
How to Start a Consulting Business - Entrepreneur.com
The contents of this Startup Kit are excerpted from How to Start a Consulting Service, an Entrepreneur Startup Guide. Visit SmallBizBooks.comfor more ...www.entrepreneur.com/startingabusiness/businessideas/startupkits/article41384.html - 61k - 18 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages
How to Start a Consulting Business Everyone has an untapped reservoir of knowledge. Put yours to work for you as an independent consultant by teaching your skills to others.
Article Tools
T TTEXT SIZE:PrintE-MailMy Bookmarks
.floatlink
{
float:none;
}
Add to My Bookmarks
How to Start a Consulting Business
Everyone has an untapped reservoir of knowledge. Put yours to work for you as an independent consultant by teaching your skills to others.
Adds Article to your Entrepreneur Assist Bookmark page.
Article Contents
Introduction
Target Market
Location and Employees
Income & Billing
Marketing
Resources
The dictionary defines a consultant as "an expert in a particular field who works as an advisor either to a company or to another individual." Sounds pretty vague, doesn't it? But unless you've been in a coma for the past decade, you probably have a good idea what a consultant is.
Businesses certainly understand what consultants are. In 1997 U.S. businesses spent just over $12 billion on consulting. According to Anna Flowers, spokesperson for the Association of Professional Consultants in Irvine, California, the association has recently noticed an increase in calls for information from people who want to get into the business. "The market is opening up for [the consulting-for-businesses] arena," Flowers says.
Melinda P., an independent consultant in Arlington, Virginia, thinks more people are getting into the consulting field because technology has made it easier to do so. "The same technology that has helped me to be successful as a consultant has made it easier for others to do the same," she says.
more
The contents of this Startup Kit are excerpted from How to Start a Consulting Service, an Entrepreneur Startup Guide. Visit SmallBizBooks.comfor more ...www.entrepreneur.com/startingabusiness/businessideas/startupkits/article41384.html - 61k - 18 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages
How to Start a Consulting Business Everyone has an untapped reservoir of knowledge. Put yours to work for you as an independent consultant by teaching your skills to others.
Article Tools
T TTEXT SIZE:PrintE-MailMy Bookmarks
.floatlink
{
float:none;
}
Add to My Bookmarks
How to Start a Consulting Business
Everyone has an untapped reservoir of knowledge. Put yours to work for you as an independent consultant by teaching your skills to others.
Adds Article to your Entrepreneur Assist Bookmark page.
Article Contents
Introduction
Target Market
Location and Employees
Income & Billing
Marketing
Resources
The dictionary defines a consultant as "an expert in a particular field who works as an advisor either to a company or to another individual." Sounds pretty vague, doesn't it? But unless you've been in a coma for the past decade, you probably have a good idea what a consultant is.
Businesses certainly understand what consultants are. In 1997 U.S. businesses spent just over $12 billion on consulting. According to Anna Flowers, spokesperson for the Association of Professional Consultants in Irvine, California, the association has recently noticed an increase in calls for information from people who want to get into the business. "The market is opening up for [the consulting-for-businesses] arena," Flowers says.
Melinda P., an independent consultant in Arlington, Virginia, thinks more people are getting into the consulting field because technology has made it easier to do so. "The same technology that has helped me to be successful as a consultant has made it easier for others to do the same," she says.
more
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)