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Mobility, performance and engagement

About the report

Mobility, performance and engagement is an Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) report sponsored by Aruba, a Hewlett Packard Enterprise company. It draws on a multinational study of 1,865 full-time employees in nine countries—Australia, France, Germany, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, the UAE, the UK and the US—conducted in March 2016. The respondents, who represent a range of ages and an even gender split, work in healthcare, finance, legal, retail, education, government and the telecommunications industry.

Mobility, performance and engagement

There is no question that mobile technology has changed the way we work in the last 10 years, enabling new patterns of work and reshaping the employee experience. But how can CIOs tailor their mobile technology strategies to promote employee productivity and engagement, and in so doing boost their organisation's business performance? 

Why EU environmental policy adds value to UK business

Despite the need for some improvements, EU environmental policy has on balance been positive for UK businesses, argues Nick Molho, executive director at the Aldersgate Group.

The quest for digital skills

Key findings: 

- Most companies are worried about a looming skills gap. The vast majority (94%) of executives cite a “moderate” or “severe” digital skills gap. Financial services and manufacturing had the largest enterprise-wide skills deficits, while healthcare and retail survey participants were concerned with department-specific shortages

- Cyber-security and web/mobile development are the most important digital competencies today. “Big data” will top the list by 2018

The quest for digital skills

The research is based on an online survey of 422 European and US executives, from functions including strategy and business development, marketing, sales and human resources. Survey data is supported by in-depth interviews with senior commentators and experts, including:

Balancing the skills equation

What skills do we need to unlock growth and for business and people to thrive in the future? And how can they be taught and developed? This infographic looks the skills and capabilities that employers of the future require.

Eastern promise: Young philanthropists in Asia

Unable to afford next month’s rent, Kathy Gong was aghast when her boyfriend donated Rmb100 (US$15) each week to his church in Beijing. “Even though rationally I understood the need to be kind, when it came to real actions it was hard,” she recalls. “So that year I set a goal to train myself to let go.” Life is vastly different today for the 30-year-old entrepreneur who runs investment and business advisory companies with a technology start-up in the works. But she has not forgotten that earlier lesson: Ms Gong donates 10% of her personal dividends each year.

Europe’s philanthropists: Building a self-sustaining legacy

High-net-worth individuals and families in Europe are a diverse group and approach philanthropy in many different ways. Foundations, most of which bear the family name, have been the primary vehicle, not only to engage in charitable giving but to preserve family values and culture from one generation to the next, explains Cathy Pharaoh, co-director of the Centre for Charitable Giving and Philanthropy Research at Cass Business School, City University London. “Carrying on the family name is very important.”

Investing in future skills

Economists agree that the UK needs to close the “productivity gap” with countries like France and the United States. But to do that effectively requires trust, confidence, sustained commitment and shared responsibility, argues Dame Fiona Kendrick, Chairman and CEO of Nestlé UK and Ireland.

By how much will the world warm: 1.5, 2 or 3 degrees Celsius?

By John Moorhead, Managing Director at BSD Consulting, and Tim Nixon, Managing Editor of Sustainability at Thomson Reuters

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