Entrepreneurs as change agents of sustainable development

With the UN Millennium Development Goals, followed by the Agenda 2030 and the Sustainable Development Goals, entrepreneurship emerged as a key factor in generating economic value and making a positive impact both from a social and environmental standpoint.

What's really driving today's young innovators?

An entrepreneur's perspective

Collectively, young entrepreneurs are innovative by nature and their thinking is an important source of growth and job creation across the world. Today, with digital tools in hand, leaders are better positioned to expand their businesses across borders, seize niche opportunities and shape the global economic future.
 
Yet, most of today’s young entrepreneurs want more than status and a global corporate footprint. Their ideas of success arise from powerful social, political and economic convictions.
 

Next-generation Africa-GCC Business Ties in a Digital Economy

Africa’s middle class numbers more than 300m by some estimates. This increasingly affluent and aspirational young cohort is driving a consumption revolution across the continent, increasing demand for consumer goods, technology and services. In parallel, young business leaders in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are starting to look beyond the Middle East. As GCC startups mature and Gulf investors seek more fertile opportunities abroad, entrepreneurs and investors are starting to eye the value of business links—and expansion—to sub-Saharan Africa.

Next-generation Africa-GCC Business Ties in a Digital Economy

Next-generation Africa-GCC Business Ties in a Digital Economy is an Economist Intelligence Unit report, sponsored by Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry. The report explores the perspectives of young entrepreneurs and investors in Africa and the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries on building business relationships, identifying challenges to overcome and spotting opportunities that await.

Social Innovation Index 2016 Infographic

Informal innovation: Networks that power start-up cities

This research is based on a survey of 1,000 entrepreneurs across ten cities with reputations as innovation hubs. It finds that start-up founders value informal meet-ups and virtual communities more than other factors in overcoming challenges such as identifying funding sources, grappling with red tape and dealing with the fear of failure.

Innovation Ecosystems

The global labour market is undergoing massive structural changes that will have potentially far-reaching implications for the workforces of the future.

Inspiring entrepreneurs

If the UK doesn’t change its attitude towards failure then it will fail to create global businesses, argues Stuart Miller, CEO and co-founder of ByBox, an international logistics firm.

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