What is your reaction to the confirmation of Joko Widodo as Indonesia’s President-elect?

A conversation with Scot Marciel on US-ASEAN relations

Talent Management 2014: Raghu Krishnamoorthy

Presentation on Building the future's great leaders with Raghu Krishnamoorthy, Vice-President, Executive Development and Chief Learning Office, GE. 

Walking the wire: Exploring new opportunities and managing risks

An expert panel at The Risk Summit 2010 discuss: 

  • Can risk management be seen as an enabling factor, rather than a restraining factor?
  • Can it offer organisations a competitive advantage?
  • If the risk function were more central to an organisation's executive, what sort of value would it add?
  • Is it possible to prove that risk management is cost-beneficial?

Promoting a culture of leaders developing leaders

As part of The Talent Management Summit 2011, this panel discussed how senior team members can be easily turned into talent leaders and how can a cross-functional and cross-company collaboration in developing talent be encouraged.

Leadership

As part of The Talent Management Summit 2011, this interactive session led by Steven Carver tested the ability to prepare leaders to cope with the risks and uncertainties presented by a changing environment that continues to push businesses to new limits.

Forced conversation at Google

People tend to fall back on hierarchical modes of working, notes Laszlo Bock, vice-president of people operations at Google, the California-based Internet search and advertising technologies corporation. “As you get bigger as an organisation, you have to work harder and harder, and more deliberately, to unpack the biological and cultural trappings that people normally bring with them,” he says. The company has a leadership training programme—the Advanced Leadership Lab—designed to create meaningful personal connections across its global operations.

IBM: Watching workers

In 2004 IBM, a global technology and consulting organisation, introduced a workforce management system that allows the company to oversee its global resources while employees manage their own careers.

Two-hundred fifty distinct roles (eg, project manager, IT architect) were identified across the global organisation and given descriptions. The descriptions comprise skills, which are also defined uniformly across the organisation. Each role description is “owned” by a practitioner of that job, who updates it as necessary.

Enterprise Rent-A-Car: Super recruiter

At Enterprise Rent-A-Car, the largest car rental company in North America, everyone begins as a management trainee, and all higher-level positions are filled through internal promotions. Recruitment is therefore critical. “If we’re not getting the right people coming in the front door, we’re not going to be able to grow and sustain our operations,” says Donna Miller, HR director for Europe. “So, from our point of view that’s always the biggest focus. It’s not just a function that falls into the HR or the recruitment teams.

Engineers unite at GM

“Ten years ago, we were much more regionally based,” says Mary Barra, vice-president of global HR at GM, a US-based automaker. Now the company is benefiting from a strong push towards global integration. The objectives are saving money, responding faster to the market, speeding up the innovation process and producing better cars. How does the company operate globally?

Holiday Inn’s image improves as teams overhaul brand

Intercontinental Hotel Group (IHG), the world's largest hotelier as ranked by number of rooms, has implemented knowledge-sharing by bringing team members together in a dedicated room for the duration of the project – whether three months or one year. Tom Conophy, executive vice-president and CIO, is using these teams to achieve a company goal: making IHG's technology a key brand differentiator.

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