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Mission Statement:
Date: 15-Mar-2008
Version: 0.813

The mission of Ineffable Solutions, LLC. as a company is:

1. The permanent commitment to Constant And Never-ending Improvement; CANI!

2. To give our customers the largest amount of value from the smallest amount of resources.

3. to provide a higher quality of service than any amount of money could possibly pay for.

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1. CANI!, "that's a WORD" is a philosophy created by Anthony Robbins that is closely based on the Japanese word 'Kaizen' (good change[s]) that was created by an American named Dr. W. Edwards Deming. The philosophy of CANI! involves making small incremental improvements to a system on a daily basis. When compounded over time, CANI! is a belief system that provides the motivational framework to transform a total failure into an absolute success.

2. A large percentage of a computer tech's work involves pressing buttons on a keyboard in a very defined and specific manner. To quote a Wikipedia article on Dr.Deming, "a small amount of knowledge could save many hours of hard work." Oftentimes an average technician Laboring Under Correct Knowledge accomplishes in 30 seconds what a highly knowledgeable AND highly experienced technician accomplishes in 30 hours!! These are the type of gains that Ineffable Solutions, LLC. actively seeks; gains that wage asymmetrical warfare against informational poverty.

3. This is nearly a direct quote from an email sent to me by Travis Miller of Gravitational Marketing. In it he was telling me about a book he had "started (and finished) reading" in one night; The Go-Giver by Bob Burg and John David Mann. Below is an excerpt from the email Travis sent me:

You see, last night I started (and finished) reading the Go-Giver by Bob Burg and John David Mann. That book reveals the Five Laws of Stratospheric Success, the first of which is that "Your true worth is determined by how much more you give in value than you take in payment."

A character in the book (a restaurant owner) who exemplifies this first law explains, "A bad restaurant tries to give just enough food and service, both in quantity and quality, to justify the money it takes from the customer. A good restaurant strives to give the most quantity and quality for the money it takes. But a great restaurant ... strives to defy imagination! Its goal is to provide a higher quality of food and service than any amount of money could possibly pay for."

Until next time,

Rodney Hamm
CEO/President
Ineffable Solutions, LLC
http://www.rodneyhamm.com
http://www.linkedin.com/in/rodneyhamm
http://www.jedi-geeks.com

Affiliate:
http://www.hammdesigns.com