Big investment coming to Manchester


Property investment company RWinvest will open a new site in Manchester, planning to invest in the area.

The company specialises in buy-to-let investments on luxury residential developments. They intend to £250m and create 200 jobs over the next five years.

Currently the company has sites in London and Liverpool. The new site in Manchester’s Media City will create twenty direct job openings, and is intended to support increased work with its development partners.

Director Julian Ramsden said: “Our new base at MediaCityUK will see the creation of a significant number of new jobs over the next five years and will help us to attract millions in investment for a variety of forthcoming developments, such as Merchant’s Wharf, which we just launched in Salford Quays.

“Our investment is great news for Greater Manchester and comes after one of our busiest trading periods to date.”

Lewis Francis, who will be managing RWinvest’s Manchester office, added: “The population in Manchester is going to double in the next five years, so new housing and apartments are in high demand throughout the area.

“Our new developments in Manchester will provide luxury accommodation for young professionals and families, and the new Manchester office at MediaCityUK will be a great base for meeting investors and showing them around our exciting new properties.”


An area which is often overlooked as companies expand and grow is how they measure their time and attendance. This is particularly important when they are recruiting new staff, since this puts more strain on existing processes.

The least effective form of time and attendance management is still practiced by hundreds of companies all over the country – the self-reporting paper timesheet.

The process typically goes like this: every week or month an employee hand-writes on a printed sheet how many hours they worked on which days during that period.

As you can imagine, this is very likely to lead to people forgetting exact details of their shifts (not to mention being a massive waste of paper). Inexact recording of hours can lead to issues like infringements of the Working Time Directive and tax or minimum wage discrepancies.

Once the first hurdle of employee submission is cleared, this method still has problems up ahead. The next stage is that somebody needs to collect all of those individual timesheets and enter all that data number by number into a spreadsheet in order to send it to the payroll software for processing.

There are a number of workarounds to these problems. Letting employees submit timesheets via email gets rid of the handwriting and environment issues, and making your employees fill in their entrance and exit times on a sign-in/sign-out sheet on the desk makes it less likely they will forget what they have worked.

However, the best solution is to centralise and automate both those parts of the process. With our clocking stations and top-quality time and attendance software, we can do exactly this.

Employees no longer have to spend time and energy filling in the forms, because all they need to do is just clock in or out using their smartcards or fingerprints. The process is over in less than a second, and the data is then automatically sent to the central database.

Payroll staff no longer need to squint at bad handwriting and hope that this number is a 7, not a 1, because the collected data can be exported quickly and easily, in a format suitable for all the leading payroll programs.

Please get in touch for more information. Our software is suitable for businesses of all sizes, from one person to multi-national corporations.

hairy pussy
http://kissjav.ninja
naughty america teen deepthroats lover.