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Sales and marketing

Our survey of 50 sales leaders and 34 marketing executives found that the former are especially confident that they will have more control over technology in future. Collectively, sales and marketing are confident in their ability to manage technology themselves. However, they nevertheless recognise the need for collaboration with IT.

Finance

This helps to explain why, as our survey of 50 finance leaders revealed, they are confident they will have more control over technology in future, while acknowledging the importance of data quality and information security. 

Taking control of technology

Every department of every business relies on technology to do its job. Until recently, though, business units were almost entirely dependent on the IT department to meet their technology needs.

That is changing, as a new programme of research by the Economist Intelligence Unit has discovered. 

Why running 5k can help young people get a job

George Osborne might have looked pleased in his latest budget address, as he reported that the UK’s economy is “recovering faster than forecast”. But for some it is a jobless recovery: nearly one-in-five young people (aged between 16-24) in the UK are still unemployed.

What's the damage?

How much money do cyberattacks cost companies, economies, society? It seems safe to say that the financial fallout is severe and growing worse, but the details are all too murky.

Article - Taking the lead

A return to—albeit slow—growth in the UK economy in 2013 has helped to improve the situation for the UK’s young and jobless. But a number of underlying challenges remain, not least employers’ concern that some young people simply lack the necessary and basic skills to enter the job market. 

Article - Decoding one million jobless youths

 

Since the 2008-09 global financial crisis young people in the UK, lacking in both seniority and experience, have tended to be the first to be let go by a number of companies that have scaled back. The few companies that continued to hire often preferred to take on older, more experienced workers. According to the UK Commission’s Employer Perspectives Survey 2012 (UKCEPS 2012), only 27% of employers in England recruited a young person in the previous 12 months, compared with 40% in 2007, before the recession. 

Article - Strength in numbers

After he lost his job at a design studio in 2008, owing in part to health problems, Jimmy Gregory, from Leeds, spent two years unemployed, relying on government benefits. The Prince’s Trust, a charity, came to his rescue, and provided guidance on how to draft a business plan through a workshop and a year of follow-up support, followed by a £2,500 loan to start his own design studio. Today, Mr Gregory, 28 years old, is doing well enough to offer freelance work to other young people introduced through the Trust.

Article - Mind the employment gap

 

Youth unemployment has surged across Europe since the 2008‑09 global financial crisis, in what the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, has described as “perhaps the most pressing problem facing Europe at the present time.” In the UK, nearly 1m young people (aged between 16 and 24)—or one-fifth of the youth population—are jobless. The crisis is not just affecting individuals and society today, but it also threatens the long-term growth and competitiveness of the British economy. 

Wasted youth?

Wasted Youth? is a series of EIU articles, supported by , examining the role of business in tackling youth unemployment in the UK. 

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