Neelofar Aleem's Bio

I am passionate about innovation, networking with people and explore new opportunities.
Driven by new ideas, I appreciate diversity and learn to adapt. I work to connect, train and develop entrepreneurs. I can relate well with people at all levels and has the flexibility of working well as part of a team or individually in a fast paced environment.

Areas of Expertise:

Research in Digital Entrepreneurship

Creating Liaisons Internationally

Marketing & Brand Management

Sustainable Technological Innovation

Fashion Merchandising

The writer 'Neelofar Aleem' is currently based at HINCKS Centre of Entrepreneurship Excellence, Department of Management and Enterprise CIT, Munster Technological University, Cork, Ireland. Neelofar Aleem is also the founder and director of AIM Concerns private limited company and dream to make the company 'One Stop Entrepreneurial Platform' for training, marketing, collaborating and growing entrepreneurs. Neelofar Aleem's research focuses on making an international entrepreneurial consortium to connect entrepreneurs digitally from around the globe.

Friday, June 29, 2012

Character...


"Character isn't something you were born with and can't change, like your fingerprints. It's something you weren't born with and must take responsibility for forming."
— Jim Rohn: was an American entrepreneur,
                       author and motivational speaker 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Working Women

http://blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2012/06/women-and-men-can-have-it-all.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+harvardbusiness+%28HBR.org%29

Working Women, Management of Life


Women (and Men) Can Have It All

Annie Marie Slaughter's article in the current Atlantic titled "Why Women Still Can't Have It All" had a familiar ring — hauntingly so.
More than two decades ago, the Harvard Business Review published an article titled "Management Women and the New Facts of Life," which made many of the same arguments that Slaughter does — most notably that the structure of organizational life makes it nearly impossible for a woman to have both a high-powered full-time career and to feel fully involved as a mother.
The writer of the HBR article happened to be my mother, Felice Schwartz, and what she wrote prompted a media firestorm. The New York Times published an article suggesting that my mother had advocated a separate "mommy track" for women who were willing to trade lower pay and less advancement for more flexible schedules and time with their families.
The Times article missed the larger point my mother was making. What women needed most, she had argued, was more flexibility from organizations in balancing family and work at different times during their careers.
Nearly 500 articles were written about the controversy, including a New York Times editorial that pilloried my mother as an enemy of women's progress and a stalking horse for sexist CEOs. This was ironic. My mother had founded an organization, called Catalyst, way back in 1962, to advocate for women in business, and seventeen years later, the Times itself still had virtually no women among its top management.
More ironic still was the story of my wife Deborah, one of a handful of female editors at the New York Times Magazine in the early 1980s. Following the birth of our first child, Deborah asked for the opportunity to cut back to working three days a week. The Times reluctantly agreed, but in return took away her accrued seniority and her health benefits.
So here we go again. Anne Marie Slaughter was the first woman director of policy planning at the State Department under Hillary Clinton. Slaughter left after two years because she felt her children needed more of her, and she needed more of them. The critics were quick to strike.
"The first set of reactions, with the underlying assumption that my choice was somehow sad or unfortunate, was irksome enough," Slaughter writes. "But it was the second set of reactions — those implying that my parenting and/or my commitment to my profession were somehow substandard — that triggered a blind fury. All my life I'd been on the other side of this exchange."
The key to making it possible for women (and men) to effectively combine work and family, both Slaughter and my mother agreed, is for employers to provide more options about how, when, and where to do their work.
Perhaps it's no great surprise that I've taken up this cause myself during the past decade at The Energy Project. We work with companies to shift their paradigm from getting more out of people by pushing them harder, to investing more systematically in meeting their needs, so they're freed, fueled, and inspired to bring more of themselves to work every day.
At the heart of our work is the conviction that it's not the number of hours employees invest that determines the value they create. Rather it's the quality and focus of energy they bring to the time they're working.
Give people time to renew — not just physically, but also mentally and emotionally — and the evidence suggests they'll get more done, in less time, at a higher level of quality, more sustainably.
The problem is that most employers still accord far more value to those who work long and continuous hours at the office and put obstacles in front of those who seek more flexibility.
Three of the top four executives at the Energy Project are women. Two have young children. Both spend more time working from home than they do from the office. I don't know how they work when they're out of the office although I assume they take care of family needs whenever that's necessary. What I do know is that they're both incredibly productive, and they deliver extraordinary value to our company.
The research strongly suggests that when you treat people with trust and respect, they perform better and feel more engaged.
This transformation won't happen until senior leaders make a fundamental shift away from the deeply ingrained view that more, bigger, faster for longer is better, and let go of the myth that face time is a useful measure of productivity and commitment.
The solution for employers and employees is a new value exchange: autonomy for accountability. To the extent possible, treat women and men like adults by allowing them to define when, where, and how best to get their work done. Then hold them accountable solely for their results.
That's the sort of win-win my mother had in mind

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Working Marketers (from HBR)

A study of Harvard Business Review:

All I'm Askin' Is for a Little Respect

Marketers get no respect, writes Ivey Business School professor Niraj Dawar on INSEAD's blog."The CEO wonders how you spend your time, the CFO wonders how you spend the company’s money, the sales folks think you’re too conceptual, too abstract, and not sufficiently focused on the immediate business, and the production and supply chain guys just think you’re full of hot air." 

to read full article Please Check the link below

http://blogs.hbr.org/morning-advantage/2012/05/morning-advantage-did-rodney-d.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+harvardbusiness+%28HBR.org%29

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Saying .. .. . . .. ..

Denis Waitley said Once: (An American motivational speaker and writer)


"A dream is your creative vision for your life
in the future. You must break out of your current comfort zone and become comfortable with the unfamiliar and the unknown."

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

My Designing Ideas . . . . .

Global Fashion Winter 2012
My new back to work (after winter holiday) fashion dresses collection is in process. Hope will be liked by customers.
Inspired by the Famous Celebs Wardrobe

Thursday, January 5, 2012

New Year Resolution 2012


New Year Resolution 2012
Here are some of the links to make a good New Year Resolution for 2012
Follow the link below to know


Hope You'll Make
Your Dreams Come True
This Year

New Year Resolution 2012



Before writing this post I've been gone through many websites to know how to write a new year resolution. In fact, I check out my priorities this year and find cool pics to attach here as a list of what I want this year most (the list can be seen in later posts after few days).

But then I realized that we make a resolution every year and then at the end of year most of what we want remained unaccomplished and will be added to next year's resolution

For Example:
Good Health
Spend more time with family
Quit Smoking
More dedicated to work
Get out of debt
Help Others
Get Organized
etc etc etc. . .

The above list tells only about what we want.

In my point of view that cannot be a resolution 'cause if we want to do really something important in our lives we have to take the responsibility to do it before even making the list

So,
This New Year
2012
I am going to start doing what I want and then take the pics of my starting points and post them.
So, this year

start taking Actions before even Dreaming

that's My New Year Resolution for 2012

Neelofar Aleem

Neelofar Aleem has updated her Bio at Blog