Monday 23 April 2018

God's Silence

God’s Silence

When we see all the misdeed that is dominating the Global scenario, in the recent years, we start to question our intuition. A simple yet thoughtful question hover in our mind, why God is silent, why he is not doing anything to restore our faith on the holiness, divineness and humanity. Why he is not doing anything when thousand or rather million innocent life are being slaughter in his name. Is He enjoying? Do he wants us to suffer all this pain? Is He blind or rather forced himself not to see our suffering.
The answer to all these question seem to be found nowhere but if we dig out little from our past, history will tell a clear cut perspective. Every time God tried to help human-being to realize his true purpose and humanity, the plan seems to backfire the holiness.
Whenever he sent a messenger or a prophet or avatar, human being mess with holy intension of the almighty. God send Jesus to teach us the listen of love and what we human perceive, made an entire different religion, and stared discriminating based on it. Church domination and suppression of other minorities clearly ruled over an era. The witch-hunt and forced conversation are some of the misdeed that prevail the church dominated century.
Again God (Allah) sent Prophet Mohammad spread the lesson of compassion and humanity. But again we separated us from the holy path. We made another religion not on his teachings but on aggression and extremism, we degraded the beauty of Islam and the teaching of beloved and Great Prophet.
He even send Gautama Buddha, Krishna and other avatars but all we did is fight a war in their name. We discriminate, we made caste, and we made groups, just to fulfill our devilish requirement of barbarian urges. We want to see blood, that’s is in our core, and we can’t deny it.
Every avatar, prophet and messenger of the Almighty want us to be in the path of humanity. It doesn’t matter which name you use for God (Allah, Krishna, Shiva, Buddha…etc.), but all he needs is love. The divine energy consists of love and humanity, which God want to spread across the globe.
God’s silence and he will be silent till the day we not understand what he truly wants. He wants us to love, he want us to be human first and arose humanity in our heart. And will be the day God will break his Silence…………

Tuesday 17 April 2018

Branch Transfer letter format for any BANK


From

            <your name>

<new address>

<phone Number>

 

 

To

            The Manager,

            <bank name>,

            <new branch, city>

           

 

Subj : Transfer of Savings Account# <account number>, <old branch, City>

 

Sir,

 

I am holding a savings bank account with your branch at <old branch, city>. I recently moved from <old city> to <new city> and for operational convenience, I would like to transfer my savings account to the new <new branch, city>.

 

Kindly transfer my savings account to <new branch, city>.

 

If you have any questions, kindly call me at <phone number>

 

 

<place>                                                Yours truly,

<date>

                       

                                                                                               

                                                            <name & signature of each joint account holder>

Monday 16 April 2018

Fishbone or Ishikawa Diagram

The fishbone diagram identifies many possible causes for an effect or problem. It can be used to structure a brainstorming session. It immediately sorts ideas into useful categories.

When to Use a Fishbone Diagram

  • When identifying possible causes for a problem.
  • Especially when a team’s thinking tends to fall into ruts.

Fishbone Diagram Procedure

Materials needed: flipchart or whiteboard, marking pens.
  1. Agree on a problem statement (effect). Write it at the center right of the flipchart or whiteboard. Draw a box around it and draw a horizontal arrow running to it.
  2. Brainstorm the major categories of causes of the problem. If this is difficult use generic headings:
    • Methods
    • Machines (equipment)
    • People (manpower)
    • Materials
    • Measurement
    • Environment
  3. Write the categories of causes as branches from the main arrow.
  4. Brainstorm all the possible causes of the problem. Ask: “Why does this happen?” As each idea is given, the facilitator writes it as a branch from the appropriate category. Causes can be written in several places if they relate to several categories.
  5. Again ask “why does this happen?” about each cause. Write sub–causes branching off the causes. Continue to ask “Why?” and generate deeper levels of causes. Layers of branches indicate causal relationships.
  6. When the group runs out of ideas, focus attention to places on the chart where ideas are few.

Fishbone Diagram Example

This fishbone diagram was drawn by a manufacturing team to try to understand the source of periodic iron contamination. The team used the six generic headings to prompt ideas. Layers of branches show thorough thinking about the causes of the problem.
Fishbone Diagram Example
Fishbone Diagram Example
For example, under the heading “Machines,” the idea “materials of construction” shows four kinds of equipment and then several specific machine numbers.
Note that some ideas appear in two different places. “Calibration” shows up under “Methods” as a factor in the analytical procedure, and also under “Measurement” as a cause of lab error. “Iron tools” can be considered a “Methods” problem when taking samples or a “Manpower” problem with maintenance personnel.

 

Quality Management System in Service Industries

In every organization, both management and the general workforce tend to resist change, whether it be in systems, culture or environment. That is natural – people are usually happy to continue with what they have always done. The change brought about by the introduction of a quality management system (QMS) – particularly in service industries – is no exception. However, companies that resist this change will find that they become less effective, and thus less competitive, in markets where customers demand trouble-free products and services.
To address the resistance, it helps to look at the questions that stakeholders may have about QMS in their company:
  • “Why do we need to document a process?”
  • “Why do we need an organization chart?”
  • “Why do we need version control and document control?”
  • “Do we need QMS if we only have 100 or less employees?”
  • “Does QMS provide any internal efficiency or is it only to provide a competitive advantage?”
These are the questions that all stakeholders need answered before embarking on the journey of installing a quality management system in their company. In addition, there are other questions mainly for the management of the company. Here are two important ones:
  • Does leadership want a quality management system for some type of certification or does it really want the company’s work to have a systematic process-oriented approach?
  • Does leadership understand how the current “pain” areas can be minimized or eliminated if the company has more efficient processes?

A System for Developing or Improving Processes

Establishing a quality management system is not rocket science. The intent of any QMS is simply to provide a system for developing or improving processes through a structured approach, effective deployment and better control. Answering a couple of the stakeholders’ questions can help explain this and make the need for a quality management system more clear.
“Why do we need to document a process?” Some might argue that everyone knows the process and has been trained in how to do their work, so why document it? The response must be that in service industries, especially in a high-attrition environment like business process outsourcing (BPO), it is all the more imperative to have documented processes.
Documented processes help in the following ways:
  • Processes are optimized when best practices are documented.
  • Processes do not become person-dependent – any new employee knows how to do the work.
  • Key activities run smoothly when responsibilities and accountability is clearly assigned.
  • Defects are easier to capture and eliminate at the earliest stage.
  • Prescribed corrective actions can be taken as soon as defects occur.
  • Written changes in procedures and policies reduce ambiguity and increase change control in the environment.
  • Consistent process measures help gauge if everything is going well.
  • Better understanding of processes ensures compliance in service delivery.
The quality management system not only provides a structure and framework, it also ensures the rigor of an audit mechanism that enforces corrective action. Continuous improvement happens within all processes in a systematic manner.
“Why do we need an organization chart?” An organization chart outlines the support structure for every individual process and also gives the roles and responsibilities required for each of the blocks on the organization chart. The benefits are:
  • An organization chart allows clients to see the support structure for products or services.
  • The roles and responsibilities give a clear understanding of the job for the person who is new to the system.
  • The documentation of roles and responsibilities does not leave anything to interpretation that might vary from person to person.
  • The roles and responsibilities define the skills that are required to do a particular job.
  • Once the skill has been defined, then it can be verified to see if it is resulting in a high-performing individual.
Clearly, something as small as having an organization chart can bring a great deal of value and clarity to the system.

The Basis of Quality Management System

A quality management system works on eight key principles:
  1. Customer focus
  2. Strong leadership
  3. Involvement of people
  4. Process approach
  5. System approach
  6. Continuous improvement
  7. Decision making based on facts
  8. Creating value for the company, its clients and its suppliers
Many times companies embark on a methodology like Six Sigma, Lean Six Sigma or others to solve problems without realizing that these methodologies center on process improvement. For any improvement methodology to be successful, it is important to first have a process management and process measurement system. This helps in identifying defects and then, once a process is improved, a quality management system provides better control for sustaining outstanding performance.