Sharing inspirations on Home, Travel and Fashion while solving the mysteries of each. We love to create a new fashion “look” a room redesigned or an itinerary imagined. Home travel and fashion blogger Jonelle Tannahill takes you behind the scenes to meet Innkeepers, fiber artists, fashion stylists and museum curators to give you the latest in lifestyle trends.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Family Vacations are always a lot of fun.

Check out our vacation photos

http://picasaweb.google.com/jonelle3/TripToUtahSeptember472009?feat=directlink

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Beauty & Style Best and Worst Dressed at the 36th Daytime Emmys Best: Tyra Banks


Beauty & Style Best and Worst Dressed at the 36th Daytime Emmys Best: Tyra Banks

Shared via AddThis

Love this look for evening. Bright and beautiful. I am so over black, black, and more black.

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

IMPORTANCE OF “a Vacation” featured in top executive coach blog


While looking for tips as to how to get more done in less time I looked to sucess coach Patty Azzarello on her blog http://www.azzarellogroup.com/blog I noticed the below article she wrote highlight the importance of the much needed vacation from work. Read along and tell me what you think.

Patty Azzarello's Blog:

I am on vacation this week, so I thought I would share 10 of the many sound business reasons to go on vacation — in additon to the fact that you deserve it and are supposed to enjoy your life and have some fun…

1. Going on a vacation shows you are competent at your job because you can manage and plan enough to free up some time in your schedule, and not leave a festering mess in your absence. Not being able to take a vacation for years shows that your work and your team are so out of control that you can’t even be gone for a week.

2. No one is impressed that you have not had a vacation If you think your company, or your team appreciates your extra-work ethic, they don’t.

3. Your team is motivated from seeing that you support and allow people to have a life — as long as you don’t send them email every day! Set the expectation you will be generally out of touch. Arrange 1-2 check-in points if you can’t stand to let go entirely, but don’t just go somewhere else and keep working.

4. Your team gets more productive when you go away. You give them a break from worrying about all the things you throw in their way when they are trying to get their work done. After about 2 weeks they will miss you and need you again, but in the mean time their productivity will go up.

5. Being unavailable is an effective technique for developing people. It forces them to step up. Just be careful not to un-do everything they did in your absence just because it was different than the way you would have done it.

6. If something comes up in your work that you can’t avoid and you need to cancel your vacation, reschedule another one while you are canceling. This will minimize resentment and disappointment, give you something to look forward to… and ensure you don’t go too long without a vacation.

7. You will be more productive at work, if you step away from it and give your back-of-mind processes a chance to chew on things while you are otherwise in a good (or at least different!) mood.

8. You will realize that some of the things that you thought were important before your vacation don’t actually need to get done after all. When you step away, the most strategic things re-assert themselves and all the clutter drops several notches in volume.

9. Your company prefers people who enjoy their life because they have more positive energy for their work.

10. You need a break whether you know it or not!

Patty Azzarello became the youngest general manager at HP at the age of 33. She ran a $1B software business at the age of 35 and was a CEO for the first time at the age of 38. A few of her roles included Vice President and General Manager of HP OpenView, CEO of Euclid Software, and CMO of Siebel systems.

Today Patty is one of the most sought after speakers and personal advisors to executives in the country.

Azzarello Group, Inc.
2225 E. Bayshore Road #200
Palo Alto, CA 94303
phone: 650-320-1786
email: info@AzzarelloGroup.com