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Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
IoT Business Index 2017: Transformation in Motion

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What can you do? How businesses and governments can encourage sustainable behaviour

Reducing society’s impact on the environment requires the whole human race to change its behaviour. For organisations seeking to encourage that change, the key is to identify sustainable behaviours that are achievable but still have an impact.

In 2000 disappointing sales of its Earth Light prompted Philips Lighting to rename the compact fluorescent bulb “Marathon”. With long life, rather than low power consumption, as the selling point, sales of the Marathon bulb began to rise.

Encouraging sustainable behaviour

Many government and corporate sustainability drives have so far focused on infrastructure. They have sought to promote renewable energy generation, for example, or to cut the power consumption of buildings and vehicles.

That has its place, but the threat to our environment will not be resolved unless consumers change their everyday behaviours, such as choosing low carbon options and avoiding waste where possible.

The digital single market

Interview with Michel Combes, CEO of Alcatel-Lucent, about the potential for a common market for telecommunications in Europe

Improving livelihoods in China: The challenges

How can China sustain economic growth and generate more resources to improve livelihoods?

Reshaping livelihood opportunities for marginalised populations

This August, the Rockefeller Foundation, in partnership with the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and The Economist Intelligence Unit, will convene thought leaders from corporations, government, universities and civil society to envision new strategies for securing the livelihoods of the world’s poor and vulnerable populations.

Sharing the blame

A recent survey on data security by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) shows that while governments try to work together to develop effective regulation to prevent data security breaches, the onus is on companies to collaborate to minimise their damage.

Untethered employees

Report Summary 

The landscape of the workplace has changed dramatically, even in the past year. The same forces that have shifted the barriers to remote work—the ubiquity of Wi-Fi networks and high-speed cellular service, the move from boxy desktop computers to sleek laptops and tablets, and the migration from traditional landlines to mobile phones—are also changing the way we work within our office walls. 

Visionaries Unbound

Sharing the blame

Report Summary

Sharing the blame: How companies are collaborating on data security breaches, is an Economist Intelligence Unit research project, sponsored by Akamai Technologies, exploring the ways in which organisations are collaborating to deal with the disclosure of data security breaches. How are they co-operating with governments, other companies and third parties in areas such as requirements for the public disclosure of such breaches? Do they have consistent cyber security policies? To what extent are they sharing best practices?

Beyond spreadsheets

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