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A 2016 round up on international trade

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Chair's summation and close of the talent management summit

In this video, Robert Guest, Business Editor at The Economist, provides the summation and closing remarks as Chair of The Talent Management Summit 2011.

Redesigning Business Summit - Penguin Books

In this video, part of the Redesigning Business Summit, Anna Rafferty explained how Penguin publisher is engaging more readers with Penguin books by responding to consumer demand for more active, creative engagement with companies.

Autodesk and the Internet of Things

For some companies, opportunities are emerging to offer new products and services directly to consumers. For others, such as Autodesk, a US-based maker of design software, the opportunity is to support clients as they create new connected devices that power the Internet of Things (IoT). 

“We are working to help existing customers transition to the new world of the Internet of Things,” says Chris Bradshaw, Autodesk’s CMO. 

Wal-Mart shows how physical stores remain a core pillar of an omnichannel strategy

Only one bricks-and-mortar retailer makes it into the top five for customer service in our survey: Wal-Mart of the US, which has embraced omnichannel as a way to compete with Amazon and in response to changing shopping habits. For now, its online sales remain small. However, it is experimenting with a host of initiatives designed not just to integrate its big store presence with its online one, but also to make shopping easier and quicker—and to make its store network useful to today’s connected consumer.

Marks & Spencer's aspiration to become omnichannel

Go back to 2009, and Marks & Spencer (M&S) looked to be in some trouble as it announced the appointment of a new boss, Marc Bolland. The 150-year-old British retailer was still the biggest clothes seller in the country, and its (relatively upmarket) food sales were healthy. But the problems were mounting, reflected in a slide in general merchandise (including fashion) sales, and indeed in the company’s reputation for value and quality.

Bright lights, big cities

 

 

Rapid urbanisation is driving the agenda from the boardroom to city hall

Roughly 2% of the global population lived in cities before the industrial revolution; now the figure is closer to 50%. This rapid urbanisation, set to continue at pace, is the “mega trend” having the biggest impact on the big decisions being made by businesses worldwide – more so than ageing populations or climate change.

Umicore: Succeeding in Europe

While its CEO is downbeat about economic prospects for Europe, Umicore, a Belgium- based materials technology group, is pumping a large portion of its investments into the region. The reason? Europe’s tough environmental regulations.

When contemplating the economic landscape, Marc Grynberg certainly pulls no punches. “I expect Europe to continue to stagnate,” he says. “Europe is in a scenario of very slow recovery, and that’s probably going to prevail for
the next few years.”

Terror-bite: Small companies come under attack

Smaller businesses are traditionally considered to be less of a target for cyber-attacks and consequently less prepared for these threats. During a study of Austrian organisations, Stefan Fenz, a researcher at the Vienna University of Technology, found that size of a business is much more of a useful indicator of preparedness levels than industry or sector.

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.

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