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6 Tips and Tricks Caring for batik

As an active person on the move, of course you need to look neat, one with batik wear to various events. Family members have a batik pet at home? Of very dear if batik is moldy because of the treatment. Various practical tips and tricks caring for batik. Find information was.
 

1. Washing Batik Using Hair Shampoo. Previously, Dissolve used shampoo to no more part of thickened. After that new dyed batik cloth. You can also use a special laundry soap for batik cloth on the market.
 

2. In Washing Batik As polished and Do Not Use Detergent. If your batik is not too dirty you can wash it with warm water. But if you batik stains so you can wash it with soap enough alone. However, if the stain is stubborn, then you can remove it with orange peel on the dirty part of it. Do not wash your batik cloth by using the washing machine.

Batik from Indonesia

Batik from Indonesia 
Batik comes from Indonesia.Batik is a lot of variety.Batik is the famous batik made from the island of Java, especially Central Java.Batik is usually made by craftsmen batik with manual drawing tool called a canting, but because it advances the development of the batik industry is now being made with the print.To preserve batik culture, so the craftsmen still developing batik in Indonesia, the Indonesian government even gives more support for the preservation of batik.

examples of batik cloth from Yogyakarta, Indonesia


examples of batik cloth from Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia



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Globalization

Globalization

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HBS Cases: Developing Asia's Largest Slum

In a recent case study, HBS assistant professor Lakshmi Iyer and lecturer John Macomber examine ongoing efforts to forge a public-private mixed development in Dharavi—featured in the film Slumdog Millionaire. But there is a reason this project has languished for years. From the HBS Alumni Bulletin.

HBS Cases: Looking Behind Google's Stand in China

Google's threat to pull out of China is either a blow for Internet freedom or cover for a failed business strategy, depending on with whom you talk. Professor John A. Quelch looks behind the headlines in a new case.

Does Product Market Competition Lead Firms To Decentralize?

There is a widespread sense that over the last two decades firms have been decentralizing decisions to employees further down the managerial hierarchy. Economists have developed a range of theories to account for delegation, but there is less empirical evidence, especially across countries. This has limited the ability to understand the phenomenon of decentralization. Nicholas Bloom, HBS professor Raffaella Sadun, and John Van Reenen assembled a new data set on about 4,000 firms across 12 countries in Europe, North America, and Asia, and then measured the delegation of authority from central headquarters to local plant managers.

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    Strategy

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    One Strategy: Aligning Planning and Execution

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    Conceptual Foundations of the Balanced Scorecard

    This article documents the precursors of the Balanced Scorecard (BSC) strategic performance management tool and describes the evolution of the BSC since its introduction in 1992 in the Harvard Business Review. During the last 15 years, the BSC has been adopted by thousands of private, public, and nonprofit enterprises around the world. HBS professor Robert S. Kaplan, who created the concept and tool with David Norton, explains the roots and motivation for their original article as well as subsequent innovations that connect it to a larger management literature.
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      Entrepreneurs on Tour--Wannabe Reality TV Show Hits the Road

      By: Carol Tice


      cringely.jpgWhere are the Microsofts of tomorrow?

      Poplular author, documentarian and former InfoWorld columnist Robert Cringely would like to know. So he's holding a contest to find the 24 most interesting startups outside Silicon Valley and then hitting the road to visit them. His hope is to film the whole process and make a reality TV show out of it.

      Launched last week, Cringely's (NOT in Silicon Valley) Startup Tour contest attracted more than 100 nominees in just a few days. By summer, finalists will be chosen and Cringely plans to pack his family into a Winnebago and visit the winners, camera crew in tow. Cringely's project enjoys the backing of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, home of many entrepreneurial efforts including the Build a Stronger America movement.

      Has Your Business Got a Secret?

      By: Carol Tice


      secret-menu-items.jpgRecently, I discovered a list of secret menu items that two dozen popular chain restaurants serve only to those in the know. No joke--I devoured it! From wet fries at Arby's (hot fries in cheese sauce) to the Suicide Burger at Burger King (four patties, four cheese slices) to Fatburger's Hypocrite (a veggie burger topped with bacon), secret menu items make regular customers feel special. (Who knew Chili's will actually serve you chili on request?)

      Reading the list and enjoying the creative names and items each chain had created, I realized secret menu items aren't just for fast-food places.

      Homepreneur Winners Keep Growing Despite Downturn

       By: Carol Tice


      home-business-growth.jpgHome-based businesses have been steadily earning more respect from the business world for the powerhouse businesses many are building from their back bedrooms. In the past week, CityMax.com announced winners of its Homepreneur of the Year contest. These are home-based e-commerce business owners who've seen rapid growth straight through the downturn. If you need a little inspiration, here are their stories:

      Contest winner Marco Barberini quit his gas-jockey job in 2007 to focus on his home-based Web business, OvernightPetTags.com. Barberini told CityMax the site now grosses upwards of $8,000 a month and needs 10 hours a week or less of his time. He found a way to make and ship pet-tags cheaper than the competition, and now his goal is to make sure every pet in America has a tag. His advice: "Most people give up too quickly. Just make sure it's going to be something that's in demand and do it."

      Business Owners Doing Crummy, Feeling Upbeat

      By: Carol Tice


      businessman-upbeat.jpgThere's a real paradox out there in small-business land: American business owners have seen business shrink more drastically than have owners anywhere else in the developing world. Yet, most say they're feeling upbeat about 2010.

      A study from City Business Journals Network showed 75 percent of business owners feel business prospects will be either "a lot better" or "a little better," a level not seen since before the recession.

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      States Step up with Small-Business Assistance

      By: Carol Tice




      small-biz-help.jpgWhile some small-business owners continue to groan over the slowness of federal movement to aid them, many states are stepping up with their own assistance programs. Some of the aid is trickling down from the federal stimulus bill, some comes from state and local agencies, while some funds seem to be flowing from nonprofits and other organizations.

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      In Connecticut, Gov. Jodi Rell announced $250,000 in available grants for small manufacturers in her states. For its part, Massachusetts took over a privately administered small-business insurance program and slashed the fees, projecting the move would save $300 per employee for businesses in the program.

      Your 2010 Small-Business Tax Strategy


        By: Carol Tice
      2010-tax-strategy.jpgThere hasn't been a zanier year in recent memory to try to do some tax planning for business owners. But there are a few basic strategies that are sure to work, no matter what Congress does in 2010.

      For those who don't closely follow the tax scene, there are a heck of a lot of provisions up in the air, awaiting Congressional review. For instance, this is supposed to be the year the estate tax falls to zero for just one year. But don't bet on it, as President Barack Obama has indicated he's not in favor of this single-year tax break and wants 2010 estate taxes set to a level similar to other recent years. At the same time, expect activist business groups such as the American Family Business Institute to campaign for a permanent repeal of this "death tax."

      The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act  had some nice business tax breaks in it, including increased bigger first-year and bonus depreciation write-offs. Tax watchers such as Kiplinger believe these will be extended into 2010, but we don't know for sure. Also possibly extending: the COBRA changes that made businesses pick up much of the premiums for laid-off workers.

      Figure Skating's Lessons for Small-Business Success

      By: Carol Tice

      Every Olympics, one of the big highlights for me is watching the figure-skating competitions with my family. This year, I find myself not just enjoying the amazing lifts and jumps, but thinking on the many ways in which these amazing athletes' achievements can provide inspiration for small-business owners.

      Here's some tips for business success I gleaned from watching figure skating:

      1. Be willing to invest a lot of effort before expecting a payoff. These athletes train for four long years for their Olympic moment, spending hundreds of hours of time practicing without any recognition whatever. Sometimes, as with this year's gold-medal pairs skaters Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo of China, they have an injury and can't compete, and then they train for four more years for another shot.

      In our instant-gratification society, the skaters' commitment reminds us that sometimes it's a long slog before your hard work will be recognized. Everyone dreams of instant business success, but great businesses are usually built slowly, over many years. If you hang in there, one day you might find an opportunity to create something truly amazing, that could take your business to a whole new level.
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