How Can Businesses Provide For Our Most Pressing Life Needs?

Three focuses of my blog are Health/Wellness, Financial Literacy/Money and Business/Entrepreneurship. Businesses are often solely thought of as money generating entities. The can also play crucial roles in our qualities of life. The following contributed post is entitled, How Can Businesses Provide Four Our Most Pressing Life Needs?

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When we think about it, the services and products we utilize are not just nice adornments, additions or conveniences, but means through which we structure our lives. You’re likely reading this on a device you purchased and did so either by the guidance of someone else or thanks to your own research. However, it was made by a company looking to make revenue and ultimately profit.

The same goes for the telecoms firm you pay your internet bill to every month, and the people who designed the clothing you’re wearing right now, no matter how humble and comfortable. In this regard, then, it’s important to recognize that in some way, we rely on businesses to provide us with our daily conveniences, and their output is rarely a distinctive separation from who we are, as if businesses lived in some kind of imaginary corporate world where no people existed.

We can see this with how companies intend to iterate on their products to make them more user-friendly and convenient to use in the long run. In this post, then, we’ll take that spirit and provide some advice as to how this mindset can impact your firm, and why a people-first approach can help you optimize your strategy:

Tackling The Sensitive Life Topics With Care

Many businesses make a business plan out of the most sensitive and difficult elements of life, be that caring for end-of-life patients in private hospice facilities, to managing funerals for those we care about. Additionally, preparing for any eventuality with highly regarded professionals such as Shawn Meaike and his life insurance plans can be key. With profound professionalism, confidentiality, sincerity and a means of going the extra mile, firms have the chance to truly thrive by presenting their values with consistency.

Providing Dignity, Worth & Value To Your Clientele

It’s important to note only provide a service or product, but to notice how that value is enjoyed, undertaken, and preserved. For instances, providing accessibility features to products can enhance how inclusive and effective they are. It also means helping you provide dignity and care to a wider clientele. This is why sometimes, looking at your designs from multiple angles and speaking to those with authentic life experience can be so informative.

Ultimate Confidentiality Can Be Worthwhile

In many cases, companies provide essential services that need to be confidential in order to make us feel comfortable using them. This means protecting our personal, financial and even tangential information. Patient-doctor and client-attorney privilege are two examples of this, where unless there is a threat to life, professionals are obligated to provide their discretion and do so in a manner that helps them stick to their principles. If you run a firm, it can be healthy to offer this kind of value. As consumers, demanding it, especially in sensitive areas, is key.

With this advice, you’re certain to provide for your most pressing life needs going forward. If you can do that, then firms will continue to provide our pressing life needs with consistency and clarity.

Author: anwaryusef

Anwar Y. Dunbar is a Regulatory Scientist. Being a naturally curious person, he is also a student of all things. He earned his Ph.D. in Pharmacology from the University of Michigan and his Bachelor’s Degree in General Biology from Johnson C. Smith University (JCSU). Prior to starting the Big Words Blog Site, Anwar published and contributed to numerous research articles in competitive scientific journals reporting on his research from graduate school and postdoctoral years. After falling in love with writing, he contributed to the now defunct Examiner.com, and the Edvocate where he regularly wrote about: Education-related stories/topics, Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM), Financial Literacy; as well as conducted interviews with notable individuals such as actor and author Hill Harper. Having many influences, one of his most notable heroes is author, intellectual and speaker, Malcolm Gladwell, author of books including Outliers and David and Goliath. Anwar has his hands in many, many activities. In addition to writing, Anwar actively mentors youth, works to spread awareness of STEM careers, serves on the Board of Directors of the Friends of the David M. Brown Arlington Planetarium, serves as Treasurer for the JCSU Washington, DC Alumni Chapter, and is active in the Dave Ramsey Financial Peace Ministry at the Alfred Street Baptist Church. He also tutors in the subjects of biology, chemistry and physics. Along with his multi-talented older brother Amahl Dunbar (designer of the Big Words logos, inventor and a plethora of other things), Anwar is a “Fanboy” and really enjoys Science-Fiction and Superhero movies including but not restricted to Captain America Civil War, Batman vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice, and Prometheus. He is a proud native of Buffalo, NY.

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