by Graeme Codrington | Oct 27, 2010 | Archive, Change
How Teenagers Consume Media: the report that shook the City This is the full copy of the research note written by Matthew Robson (aged 15 years and seven months), an intern at Morgan Stanley, which caused a stir after it was published by them. Reported in The...
by Graeme Codrington | Oct 27, 2010 | Archive, Future Trends
In today’s S+B newsletter, there is an excellent article highlighting the structural and institutional changes that the airline industry is facing over the next few years. You can read the original in the S+B newsletter or an extract below. The Airlines’ Global...
by Dean van Leeuwen | Oct 26, 2010 | Archive
I’ve noticed recently that Loyalty schemes are making a come back. Following the recession, companies have discovered that coupons and points schemes are a good way to entice struggling customers back to their shops. The trend of developing a points based system that...
by TomorrowToday Global | Oct 25, 2010 | Archive, Clients Feedback and Media, Future Trends, Organisational Development
Forced rankings and other merit ratings that breed internal competition are bad management because they undermine motivation and breed contempt for management among people who, at least at first, were doing good work. These systems require leaders to label many people...
by TomorrowToday Global | Oct 25, 2010 | Archive, Clients Feedback and Media, Future Trends, Organisational Development
Forced rankings and other merit ratings that breed internal competition are bad management because they undermine motivation and breed contempt for management among people who, at least at first, were doing good work. These systems require leaders to label many people...
by Graeme Codrington | Oct 20, 2010 | Archive, Change
A manifesto for the future of meetings As the global economic meltdown struck in September 2008, one of the first things that most companies did was to cancel all their conferences and staff development. This was an instinctive response for many companies, probably...