
Application @ MindSay 
HealthrajSoft is global Healthcare Information Technology company having offices at U.S.A., U.K. and India.
We have various Healthcare IT products which serves the need from a large Hospital, Health Insurance Company to a small Healthcare Practitioner
The company has Healthcare IT training division that takes care of various training required for Healthcare Providers (Doctor, Hospitals, Lab, Pharmacy, Medical Device Manufacturing company), Healthcare Payer ( Health Insurance Company, Third Party Administrator) and Healthcare IT Software Professional .
We also provides Healthcare IT consulting and development services to the Healthcare Client. HealthrajSoft is a key player in the Healthcare IT offshoring.
Our overall focus is to improve Interroperability, Safety/Security, Quality/Reliability, Efficiency/Effectiveness and Communication (verbal and written to improve understandability) by use of computerization in Healthcare Information Technology.
Recent conversations with learning executives, conducted through Expertus Learning Intelligence Forums, revealed that attitudes about learning measurements are changing for the better.
Overall, executives are talking much less about traditional measurements and much more about business-related measurements. The Kirkpatrick measurement model is mentioned, but most often in reference to what organizations are NOT doing.
Getting visibility into the business impact of learning has become increasingly important because corporate learning is now widely viewed as a business service. The vast majority of training reporting is done for internal business customers, such as sales executives, call center managers, and business unit leaders.
One VP of learning said, we have to move from measurements based on training by the pound to those that are relevant to our business. Measurements such as total learning hours, pages accessed, class registrations, completions, and assessment scores have little if any value to internal customers ñ as well as to business-focused learning executives.
According to a senior director of education services, We can’t train just for the sake of training. We have to be able to answer questions about business impact. The Kirkpatrick model is great theory, but itís very expensive and time consuming to get to level five. Practically, you have to find a measurement system that uses what’s already in place.
Our many hours of discussion with learning executives can be summarized into a few simple guidelines for effective training measurement:
- Make sure your metrics are meaningful to your customers.
- Keep metrics simple and practical. The fewer the better.
- Invest time in identifying metrics up front, not after the fact.
- Go out of your way to communicate and explain findings to your customers and to senior management. Don’t wait for them to ask you.
In addition to providing real insight into the value of your training programs, practical and meaningful metrics can help you educate your stakeholders and raise important business issues. By taking a proactive and collaborative approach with your customers, you have a chance to define the playing field and establish realistic expectations.
If you’ve got questions about learning strategies or if you have a good example of measurements done well, contact us. We’d be happy to offer an objective and practical perspective.
For more information log on to www.expertus.com
Fresh on the Internet in August 2008, Blabble is a new Facebook application that lets people add captions to photos in their galleries. Now you can record your friend’s witty banter right on his picture. This service is different than all other free photo doctoring software becausethere’s no download or lengthy sign-up process. And that's because Blabble is a virtual workshop that exists right inside Facebook. Registered users simply browse their photo galleries, select a picture, and then Blabble it – which means they customize it with snappy text.
The best thing about Blabble is how easily it is to save your blabbled images. Users are presented with four different save options, where one of which is on your computer's desktop. The platform was built by Rethink Communications specifically as a Facebook application - the page is sponsored by Solo Mobile for everyone's benefit. I created my own Blabble Set on Flickr.
Inspired by this wonderful high tech service I was invited to showcased my freshly created blabbles in the Blabble Squidoo Lens which has been programmed by developers to search perpetually surf the web looking for new and interesting Blabbled photos and blogs.
The Speech Bubble Battle on Facebook on WebUpon.com is my first published article on the competition between five different photo bubbling companies. And I was soon thereafter invited to submit the same media, with minor tweaks to become The Speech Bubble Battle on Orato.com where it will no doubt merit a top five rank until Xmas.
On my own antiques and collectibles social networking platform, Dumpdiggers.com, my experiments led in another social marketing direction. I've had a great time using Blabble to mark up items that I intend to sell on eBay. For example here is a 1974 Fisher Price FUN JET on eBay bearing the blabbles full of relevant information.
The Fisher Price Family FUN JET makes a great discussion forum topic on Buy and Sell forums, and while merchandising this curiously attractive vintage object, I can offer my readers a Blabble brand experience.
Finally, I'd like to give a shout out to Keely Valentine and her Young Chic and Social blog, because she is one of the most productive young bloggers I know, and her blabbled photos are the best. Her first batch of images were amazing, and her next batch were also equally packed full of interesting insights into her life as Captain of the Cheerleaders in high school. I'm also a big fan of Heather Mary Smith and her Beautiful British Columbia blog post on Blabble.
originally, i was going to apply to 10, maybe 15 schools. much less than the average (which i think is around 20). i ended up applying to 20. $730!! ah well, such is the sacrifice we make for our dreams, eh? actually my dad ended up paying for most of it. he does have a lot more money than i do...
at some point i'll find out which schools liked my primary application enough to send me a secondary application. hopefully that will be soon. first, the application service has to verify all my information, grades, test scores, etc. then i get to request my committee letter/recommendation letters. those get sent to the application service and then the entire application is sent to my schools. who send me another application. fingers crossed.
i don't know if that process made sense the way i said it.
anyways, to celebrate, i'm going spend money at the apple store (.com). my dad gave me a $500 apple gift card (yeeha!) for my birthday. it's from grant money, so it's less of a deal than it he'd paid for it out of pocket. i went to the apple store, but there wasn't anything these that i needed or wanted. i thought about getting an iphone, but i'm sure those will get even cheaper in the future and i already have a cell phone. on verizon ;) i was also thinking about a camera, but i have one of those also. not as good as some in the store, but i'm not much of a photographer, so it's not a big deal. i wanted speakers, but the ones in the store were ugly. or for ipods. which i don't have. so to the online store i went. here's what i've found so far:
coolio messenger bag/backpack hybrid that's supposed to be pretty comfortable
pretty speakers, small but works well for its size (i don't need huge ones anyway)
microphone, because the one in my macbook stinks and this one's pretty :)
i haven't made these my final purchases yet, i'll look around for a bit longer.
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