One more from my side to the sea of books. Rgds Pawan
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One more from me.:icon6:
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File Type: pps Coffee_Bean_-Motivational.pps (471.0 KB, 2249 views)

This is from my end for the community. Proud to be associated among great hearted HR fellows. Great Thought HR Prop!!! Regards, Muthukumar K Knowledge is Power and Sharing is Mighty.
From India, Mumbai
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File Type: pdf Jonathan Livingston Seagull.pdf (318.6 KB, 1979 views)

[Its very Good, I am also ready to take challenge]
Dear all....................
Lets come together and share the e-books that we have with us with all the CIteHR members ...................... This will help loads of HR guys there to learn and implement things .........!!!:huh:
Are you ready to take this challenge to share all the knowledge that you have ??????????????????:huh:
Then here's your chance..................... Lets share and multiply our knowledgebase with this Unique excersise..........:lol:
So guys lets pour in as much as we can...........
NOTE : IF YOU VIEW THE POST then REPLY TO THE POST IS MUST .......... hehehehe :)
Cheers
HrProp:lol:[/quote]

From India, New Delhi
Happy and nice to see every member is contributing very enthusiatically.. Great going...
From India, Bangalore
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Here are two e-books on SAP HR....
From India, Delhi
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File Type: pdf SAP - HR.pdf (1.23 MB, 2964 views)
File Type: pdf SAP - Training and Event Management.pdf (4.10 MB, 3007 views)

GUYS..... I HAVE TO PREPARE FOR AN INTERVIEW... IS THERE ANY ONE WHO COULD HELP ME IN GETTING AN E-BOOK ON
LEARNING AND DEVELOPMENT....
THANKS IN ADVANCE...
REGARDS
RAKESH--

From India, Secunderabad
Thanks everyone for your posts... Here is my contribution: SIX SIGMA FOR DUMMIES
From India, Pune
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File Type: pdf Six Sigma For Dummies.pdf (3.41 MB, 2712 views)

Hi HrProp!!!
I should highly appriciate your thought and efforts to make other to participate and sail on this "e-Book Sea".
All the e-Books presented here by the team members are seems to be wonderful and
the MISERABLE PART of this initiative is
that the attached books and Zip files are not openning properly after downloading.
If you can able to download the files without any problem, then I kindly request you to forward the same to [IMG]https://www.citehr.com/misc.php?do=email_dev&email=YWt1bWFuYW5AeWFob28uY2 9t[/IMG].
Thank you
Regards,
Kumanan. A

From India, Madras
hello All,

Thanks a lot for your cooperation. I dont have a book as such but here I have posted some 'good to have hold on' points I found. It is meant for fresher but everybody can learn from this.

Hope you people like it.
So, here it is:

New Job Proverbs

Following is a collection of “new job proverbs” to assist you in the sometimes difficult world of work that is just ahead:
Your first few days:
  • Understand fully what your company does for a living. Be ready to give a thirty-second overview to anyone who asks, from your friends to your grandma to your next-door neighbor.
  • Understand your role in contributing to the bottom line of the company. Keep your eyes (and your career) focused on the big picture rather than on your own little cube.
  • Get a copy of your company’s most recent annual report and read it cover to cover (if you haven’t already). Read all of it. Then read it again.
  • Dress conservatively—at or above the conservative median within the company. You should always speak louder than your clothes.
  • Remember the names of those to whom you are introduced. In your first few days on the job, jot down names until you remember them. They only have to remember one new name, while you will have multiples.
  • Take the time to understand your company benefits plan. Don’t wait until you need to use one of the benefits to understand it.
  • Personalize your work area, but not too personal. Frame your degree and hang it on the wall. Put a small picture on your desk. Get a nameplate so everyone will know who you are.
  • If your employer provides the option, have your paycheck set up for direct deposit. It will save you the time and hassle of depositing each paycheck and will give you quicker access to your money.
The daily routine:
  • Rehearse what you need to accomplish that day during your morning commute.
  • If you can take public transportation to work, do it. It not only saves energy, but also gives you time to read. Always have beneficial work-related and professional development reading materials with you. And no, the daily paper does not qualify.
  • If you drive to work, get in the habit of “reading” books on CD or iPod. It’s amazing how much reading you can accomplish over the course of a year.Your real education begins after graduation.
  • Always carry a notepad or pocket organizer with you. If you drive to work, get a windshield-attached notepad. Get in the habit of writing down both your brilliant thoughts and daily reminders as they occur to you. Otherwise, you may lose them forever.
  • Be a morning person. Always be on time.
  • Plan your day. Ten to fifteen minutes in the morning will equal an extra hour or more of productivity throughout the day.
  • Develop a routine only where it increases personal productivity; don’t get into the rut of doing something only as part of a standard routine. Make sure everything you do have a value add.
  • Be the first person to say “Hello” to others in the morning. And say it with a smile.
  • Never leave a half cup of coffee in the coffee maker for the next person. Always make a fresh pot.
  • Keep a toothbrush and breath mints in your desk for bad breath emergencies. And remember, just because you can’t smell your breath doesn’t mean it’s sweet and clean.
  • Keep an extra shirt or blouse, pressed and boxed, in your car or tucked away in your workspace. Also consider having an extra tie or an extra pair of nylons available at the ready. You will need them, it’s just a matter of time.
  • Always check your appearance in the mirror before leaving the washroom. If it’s windy or raining on your way in, stop at the washroom on the way to your workspace.
  • Arrive at meetings on time. Bring extra work so that you can pass the time with while you are waiting for others.
  • Don’t doodle or daydream at meetings. If topics being covered are outside of your area, take out your pocket planner and review what you need to accomplish that day.
  • Eat lunch in. You will save both time and money. Even just $8 per lunch eating out (and it can easily be quite a bit more) adds up to $4,000 per year. Plus it’s healthier to bring your own. Use a resealable lunch container and bring last night’s leftovers or soup or pasta. And as a by-product, you will often be viewed as a hard worker for consistently staying in when others are going out.
  • If you do go out for lunch, make it work related. Take others in your company out to lunch to learn more about their jobs and their departments. Let them do the talking. You do the listening.
  • Go for a brisk walk each day. Park at the far end of the lot in the morning. Or stretch your legs during lunch. It will clear your mind and make you more productive for the remainder of the day.
Work ethics:
  • Draw a solid ethical line and never cross it. Especially when others are encouraging you to do so.
  • Integrity sold cannot be repurchased. Do not allow yours to go on the trading block, for there will always be a ready buyer.
  • Integrity means doing what is right, even if it is unpopular, unfashionable, and unprofitable. Actually, especially when it is unpopular, unfashionable, and unprofitable.
  • Develop a reputation for honesty and integrity. If you have failed in these areas in the past, your new job is an opportunity to start fresh. It is a reputation you must earn over time. And live up to that reputation at all times, at work and everywhere else.
  • Don’t use profanity, even when others do.
  • Never tell dirty jokes, racist jokes, or sexist jokes. And simply walk away from those who attempt to share them with you.True ethics are not situational.
  • Don’t lie, cheat, or steal, even when the temptation is great—stand for honesty and integrity in all you do, and you will be amazed how far it sets you above your peers.
  • Make good on your promises. If you are not sure you can deliver, don’t promise.
  • If you are not sure, don’t do it. That’s your conscience talking. Listen closely.
  • Always seek the good in others, and they will be more likely to find it in you.
Interpersonal skills:
  • Talk 20 percent and listen 80 percent. And avoid those who talk 100 percent.
  • Always take the opportunity to praise others who are worthy of praise. If someone has done well, take the time to compliment them. Praise publicly. In front of others whenever possible. And copy their boss if your praise is via e-mail.
  • When someone is telling you a story, don’t interrupt. And don’t try to upstage them with a better story of your own.
  • Smile. A lot. Even when you feel like frowning.
  • If someone is confrontational with you, avoid the confrontation. Take time to cool off before you respond.
  • Be the person in your office who makes everyone else smile. Everyone loves a cheerful person.
  • Look for solutions, not problems. Anyone can identify problems.
  • When someone compliments you for your work, don’t say “It was nothing” or try to talk them out of it. Just say “Thank you” with a smile and move on. Nothing more, nothing less.
  • Life isn’t fair. And sometimes work isn’t either. There will be some days when just getting through the day is the best you can do. Wait until tomorrow to see if things clear up. They usually do.
  • Don’t be a complainer. Every work environment has a person who somehow feels responsible to fill the role of office complainer. Let someone else fill that role. And ignore them when they attempt to practice their art upon you.
  • When you are unhappy on the inside, do your best to stay happy on the outside. You will eventually turn inside out.
Office politics:
  • Show respect for your boss in everything you do. Don’t join in when others are boss bashing. It can be contagious.
  • As a subordinate, you must be willing to submit to the plans of others. Submission is not found in obeying the requests of those with whom you are in agreement. True submission is found in obeying another when you are not in agreement.
  • Never discuss your salary with your coworkers. Your refusal to discuss will drive them crazy wondering why you are making so much more than they are.
  • The work washroom is located at work. Don’t let your conversation change to match the surroundings.
  • When you are personally complimented for something that was a team effort, always give proper credit to the team.
  • When others begin to criticize, fight the urge to join in the slaughter.
  • Be a builder, not a destroyer.
Education and training:
  • Know and understand the company training and development program. And take advantage of it.
  • Seek to match your training with immediate application of what you have learned. Apply it and it’s yours forever. Don’t apply it and it’s lost.
  • Continue your education. Even if you do not pursue a formal degree, make learning a lifelong vocation. What you learn will affect what you earn.
  • If you are a “hunt and peck” typist, learn to type properly. It will save you immeasurable time over the course of your career. And keep you from looking silly.
  • Become fully computer literate. You don’t have to be a computer wizard, but you do need to become proficient in the use of technology in your work. Stay ahead of the technology curve.
  • Learn to become a team player. College rewards individual performance. Employers reward team performance.
  • You probably don’t know nearly as much as you think you know. It often takes the maturity of a lifetime to come to this realization, but if you are willing to acknowledge this fact early in life, you will capture a lifetime of learning and growth.
Financial:
  • There is more to life than the endless accumulation of wealth. There will never be enough money. You must find your wealth elsewhere in your life.
  • Money does not buy happiness. Happiness is found in being content with who you are and what you have.
  • Read your company’s annual report every year. And study the President’s Message to the Shareholders. That’s both the history of the past year and the vision for the coming years. Keep your career focused on doing your part in helping your employer reach that vision.
  • Sign up for your 401(k) plan as soon as possible and have 10–15 percent automatically deducted from your paycheck. You will never have it, so you will never miss it. And you will be well taken care of later in life while others continue to struggle just to survive.
  • Buy some stock in your company. If you are not willing to invest financially in your company, why are you investing your entire career with them? If they have an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) where you can buy at a discount, sign up. But remember to diversify—don’t put all your savings here.
  • Always pay your bills on time. Especially credit cards. And student loans. An unblemished credit record is an asset that should be cherished and protected.
  • Don’t run a monthly balance on your credit card. If you can’t pay it off, don’t buy it.
  • When someone offers you “the opportunity of a lifetime” in the form of multi-level marketing (a/k/a MLM, a/k/a network marketing), save your time and professional reputation with a polite yet firm “No thanks.”
  • Regarding any financial venture or investment, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
Extracurricular:
  • Limit yourself to one glass of beer or wine when dining out with coworkers or clients. And wait for someone else to order liquor first—don’t be the only one.
  • Don’t drink at all at the holiday party or other company social activities—besides, it’s much more fun to watch others who are drinking.
  • Don’t do drugs and avoid those who do.
  • Beware of office romances. Keep personal matters outside the work environment.
  • Listen to your home answering machine message from the perspective of your boss. If you don’t want the office to hear it, change it. Cutesy messages usually don’t sound cute when played over a speakerphone at the office. And if it’s real cutesy, they will probably tell others to call and listen to it as well.
  • Join a health club. Go before work, during lunch, or after work two or three times a week. It will increase your level of energy in your life. You will look better and feel better.
Career progression:
  • Watch and emulate those who are successful in the company. Allow them to be your mentors from afar.
  • Know who your boss’s boss is. This is the person who may either recommend or authorize your promotion in the future.
  • Ask your boss to point out areas for continuous improvement.
  • Become known either as the person who is the first in to work or as the person who is the last to leave. Or both. But don’t do both forever. It’s a good start in your career, but it’s not a good life balance in the end.
  • Develop a reputation as a problem-solver. If a problem lands on your desk, don’t pass it on to someone else.
  • Even if you receive a good performance review, ask what you can do to improve your future performance.
  • Be aware of the work that is going on around you. These are your vistas of potential future growth and development.
  • Get copies of your competitor’s annual reports. It will keep you in tune with your industry and help you to better understand and appreciate your company’s competitive edge.
  • If you love doing what you do, success will follow.
  • Learn to tap into the office network. Career progression is more like climbing a web than climbing a ladder. Make sure you tap into as many connection points as possible.
  • No one owes you a living. No one owes you a job. You earn it, each and every day, all over again. And when you cease to earn your job on a daily basis, you will cease in your career progression.
  • If you do more than what you are paid to do, you will eventually be paid more for what you do.
  • Don’t ask for a raise because you need more money. Ask for a raise because you are worth more money.
  • When faced with earning $30,000 and loving what you do versus earning $50,000 and hating what you do, take the $30,000 job and sleep well at night. Your life will be much richer than if you had taken the other job.
  • Take the pillow test to assess your career satisfaction. When you take your head up off the pillow in the morning, are you excited about going to work? And when you lay your head down on the pillow at night, are you happy about what you have been able to accomplish? The answer will not always be “Yes,” but if it is consistently “No,” it may be time to move on.
Skills for a lifetime:
  • Life is never exactly what we want it to be. Life just is. It is what we make of life that will bring it nearer to what we want it to be.
  • You are the best investment you will ever have. The dividends received on this investment will pay you back for the rest of your life.
  • Be proactive in planning for the future. To gain things in the future, you need to pursue them today.
  • Expect great things from yourself and hope for great things in others.
  • Set goals in your life. Break down your long-term goals into near-term goals. Then break down your near-term goals into annual goals. Then break down your annual goals into monthly goals. Then break down your monthly goals into weekly goals. Then break down your weekly goals into daily goals. Then break down your daily goals into specific tasks which will lead to results. And make sure it is all down on paper. Then do it. You are on your way to accomplishing all the goals in your life.
  • Begin to use a Day-Timer, Franklin Planner, or other pocket planner religiously. It will quickly become your daily guide to accomplishing your goals in life.
  • Be observant—learn from the mistakes of others so that they are not repeated in your life.
  • When you do make mistakes, take responsibility for them immediately. Denial will only prolong and intensify the error. Acknowledge you were wrong and move on. And do your best not to make the same mistake again.
  • Every journey begins with a single step. And with each new step, the objective comes into clearer view.
  • Don’t put your ballet shoes in the attic. Do your best to keep your life multifaceted.
  • Always give back to those who are less fortunate than you. No matter how hard you have worked to get where you are now, there is always someone who has not had the same opportunities that you have had in life. Do your best to give to help meet the needs of others.
  • Stop to smell the roses. And drink in of their fragrance until it emanates from within you.
  • Listen when children speak to you.
  • It’s not where you start out in life—it’s where you end up.
And finally, always remember that work should never be your sole purpose in life. No one ever said on their death bed, “I wish I would have spent more time at the office.”

All the Best!!

thanks,

Anshu


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