Books tagged: best practice

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Found: 5 results

The Best Of Twitter Marketing    by Hosea Lim
Price: $2.99 USD. 4790 words. Published on June 13, 2010. .

In my quest searching for marketing strategies using Twitter, I found many successful tested methods, I can use on my own websites. This book is the result of my research, sharing my ten favourite Twitter marketing strategies. This book is written for busy internet marketer that want instant answers that are already proven methods out in the wild wild web. Here, I present this book to you. Enjoy!
Summary of Best Practices for Information Technology    by Robert Perrine
Price: $0.99 USD. 55130 words. Published on July 29, 2010. .

The theme in this book is the need to align all the efforts in an Information Technology shop. The chapters describe the need for vision, best practices for projects, operations, governance and how to measure the results. The book is filled with short stories about how things really work today and how they will be better tomorrow.
Survey of HR for Projects    by Robert Perrine
Price: Free! 58120 words. Published on August 7, 2010. .

The theme in this book is the human relationship aspects of project management. The chapters survey the best known models of organizational psychology, leadership and organizational management. The concluding chapter describes an integrated model of organizational psychology and explains how this is relevant to project management and team formation.
Presentations on Classical ITIL    by Robert Perrine
Price: $0.99 USD. 16530 words. Published on August 30, 2010. .

This ebook contains a series of presentations regarding Version 2 of the Information Technology Infrastructure Library (ITIL) standard. It includes quizzes on ITIL, a synopsis of each topic and graphical images useful as memory aides.
ITIL Integration Exercises    by Robert Perrine
Price: $0.99 USD. 7240 words. Published on September 1, 2010. .

This ebook contains an ITIL case study and ten questions about the integration of the ITIL disciplines. These are the types of questions you see when responding to a Request for Proposal or when working as an ITIL consultant. Following each question there is a brief synopsis of how the author would respond to the question.