“Tales of a Scorched Coffee Pot” — B11

<p>One cool aspect about his taking the AP position is that it makes him realize the potential benefits in bouncing people around in various roles. Not just for a person&rsquo;s own experience, but how if someone has performed two specific functions with a company, they might be able to make certain connections that nobody else has up to this point. From a workflow standpoint, or just generating new ideas, period, either of which might prove highly advantageous to the company.</p> <p>In this instance, nobody has ever held his data coordinator role before, not truly. Teri was the only one ever performing some of those tasks, though, and she moved on from there to IT. So he&rsquo;s been the first person to work as data coordinator and also accounts payable, though in the future, if they were smart, they might wish to&nbsp;<em>always&nbsp;</em>make this a natural progression. Reason being that, unless an invoice came in that was only ever coded to one specific department, yet showed up on her desk coded to an entirely different one, Kathy would never have known the difference. She basically had to accept these at face value, which is what made Edgar&rsquo;s former function, intercepting and correcting them, so vital. Particularly as the larger vendors were typically the ones with were likelier to have hundred if not thousands of items on them, all jumbled together. Something like a Universal Foods would of course dole out a few different account numbers for ordering, yet you were still frequently left with bulk squeezing theirs onto grocery or produce onto deli or countless other variations thereof.</p> <p><a href="https://jasonmcgatheywriter.medium.com/tales-of-a-scorched-coffee-pot-b11-2cc3149be02f"><strong>Read More</strong></a></p>