A Time to Give Thanks

11.06.2011

Welcome to November and our monthly newsletter everyone.  November, unfortunately, gets a bad rap. October has cooling temperatures and changing leaves. December has the holiday season. But what is November left with? Having to rake up the leaves that fell to the ground and are now brown, a “Guns N Roses” song, the end of daylight savings time (did you remember to change your clocks on November 6?), a turkey, the first month of many where snow can be in the forecast every day in areas like Chicago, New York, and Boston, and no baseball for several months.

November is, of course, the time where we most remember to give thanks—even if it is in between bites of turkey or between halves of a Lions or Cowboys game. We all get busy and forget to say thank you, but in November, we seem to find the time.

I want to say thanks to our clients for allowing us to serve you and assist in your growth, but I also want to take time to thank some of the members of our internal team for helping us continue to grow:

Lisa Pickens: Many of you know Lisa quite well, either from your direct conversations with her or from seeing her name on the reports you receive from us. Lisa left us a few weeks back to pursue other opportunities but we certainly would not be where we are today without her hard work, dedication, knowledge, and passion for making RS a better place for our clients and employees. Her friendship is missed as well as I can’t call and bother her quite as much now as I could when she was working for us!

Jolene Pratt: We were lucky enough to be recommended to Jolene a few months ago and am really excited about the direction she is taking not just the inside team she manages, but the whole company. She started to take over some of Lisa’s responsibilities so Lisa could focus on different areas of the business and Jolene really has brought some new and great ideas to the table for us to get ourselves to the next level. Thanks to Jolene, I need to get less involved in some aspects of operations and marketing and can focus more on the areas I love, sales and how we can help more clients.

Wayne Sutherland: I don’t want to make either of us feel old, but Wayne and I worked together in the staffing industry before iPhone apps, back in a day when we all thought the world was going to end once a clock struck midnight on New Year’s Eve 1999. Wayne just started with us last month, but I thank him for bringing to Randolph Sterling not only some very strong sales experience and ability to close deals, but being from the Boston area, he also gives us additional coverage and the ability to assist more clients on a national level out of the northeast.

I mentioned our clients, but in this time of thanks, I think it bears repeating. We appreciate very much the opportunity to work with you every day and to help your business grow. We look forward to continuing to assist you for many years to come.

Let the Holiday Season, and Games, Begin!!!

11.29.2010

The Holiday season seems to come earlier every year.  There was a time when you typically didn’t see Christmas displays at stores, or hear songs about sleigh bells playing at Starbucks, or catch a commercial starring Santa until right around Thanksgiving , but now it seems like the stores are putting up decorated pine trees and garland the same day they take down the spider webs and Jack O’Lanterns.

Yet, regardless of when it starts, the Holiday season always brings with it pleasant memories that are often associated with particular songs or movies or foods. For example, Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life always reminds me of being a little kid and staying up late to watch it for the first time with my dad when I couldn’t sleep; or another year when we went to pick up Italian pastries on Christmas Eve and realized that while they were calling B-54, we were E-73, so we played It’s a Wonderful Life trivia for two hours while we waited (here’s an easy one…what was George’s wife’s maiden name?)

And the trip down memory lane is endless when it comes to Christmas songs. Just think, where were you when you first heard songs like Bruce Springsteen’s “Santa Claus is Coming to Town” and, well practically anything by Trans Siberian Orchestra or Manheim Steamroller? How about David Bowie and the late, great Bing Crosby singing “Little Drummer Boy?” Can you find an odder pairing this side of Frank Sinatra and Cyndi Lauper, but they make it work into one of the most beautiful Christmas songs out there. How about the “old time classics” like Gene Autry doing “Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer” or Burl Ives crooning about “Holly Jolly Christmas?”

The only Christmas song I really can’t stand is “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus” (If you clicked on the link, did you see how bad it was?). Now, I wasn’t traumatized as a child by waking up one Christmas morning seeing mommy kissing Santa Claus, but for some reason no matter what artist plays this song, I just have a problem with it. Seriously, who decided it was good to write a song about a little kid seeing his mom kissing Santa? Isn’t life confusing enough for kids already? Back in the day, all we had to worry about was whose house we were going to play at or trying to figure out how our parents somehow walked to and from school uphill in the worst weather climate possible, even worse than last winter’s February Fury. Now we have to add in concerns that our mom might be fooling around with Santa?

“What a laugh it would have been, if daddy had walked on in…” are you kidding me? A laugh, really? Where are our values? If I someday meet Miss Right and she becomes Mrs. Burghgraef, and we have kids, I really hope one day I don’t come home from a long day’s work to have Junior come up to me and say… “Hey dad, you will never guess what happened today. I came downstairs and saw Mom smooching with a guy in a red suit, grey beard, and about 50 lbs. of extra weight.” What are we teaching our kids?

That’s why I stick with the simple songs. Bruce asking “The Big Man,” Clarence Clemons, if Santa is going to bring him a new saxophone; and then later in the song you hear him laugh as he belts out “Santa Claus is Coming to Town!” I hope it is because he is having a great time doing the song and not because he just caught his wife kissing Santa (see, I just can’t get over that!)

Now, before I begin to sound anymore like a 3:00am infomercial for a Time Life Classics special, let me get to the point. This year Randolph Sterling will be holding not one, but two Holiday contests, one on the Randolph Sterling Facebook Fan Page, and on my personal Facebook Page. Here’s what you need to know!

Contest 1: Did You See Mommy Kissing Santa Claus?

Hopefully not! As you know, I‘m not a fan. And I will give a $25 restaurant gift card to one lucky winner who can find a better Holiday song and tell me why it’s great. Just post a link and a message on our Randolph Sterling Facebook Fan Page between December 1st and December 24th . Our winner will be announced in early January.

Contest 2:  What Is, “It’s a Wonderful Life?”

Our second contest is a trivia contest to test your knowledge about one of my favorite Christmas movies, Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life. Every day at 10:00am EST from December 1st through December 24th, I will post a trivia question about It’s a Wonderful Life on my personal Facebook page. Answers will be posted Sunday morning. The person to correctly answer the most questions will be declared the winner and receive a $25 restaurant gift card in January of next year.

So, let the games, and the Holidays, begin!