HEAR WHAT OUR EXPERTS HAVE TO SAY

Our Blog

Looking for Incredible Intelligence

Looking for Incredible Intelligence

This morning I took my daughter into a computer store (click here) near to where I live. Our objective was to buy a PayStation 2 game suitable for a 5 year old. It was the first time I'd been in this particular store, and was really impressed with the layout and...

Africa Leaps Forward

Africa Leaps Forward

The Newsweek of 11 July 2005, carried a multiple page on Africa (read it here). It is fairly upbeat, arguing that Africa cannot wait for foreign assistance or aid, but needs to sort its own house out. It goes on to point out that money countries are doing this now....

Business good in China

American businesses are doing well in China. The front page of the China Daily business section reads, “US firms upbeat on China.” The article says that most US businesses operating in China reported increases in annual revenues last year, as reported in the American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in China’s “White Paper 2005 American Business in China.” Almost all of the businesses surveyed were equally divided between being “optimistic” or “cautiously optimistic” for the next 5 years.Some interesting stats on their no. 1 goal:62% – produce goods or services in China for the China market14% – Produce good or services in China for the US market11% – Export to China5% – Produce good or services in China for other markets5% – Serve as regional headquartersIn another front page article James Green (AmCham Shanghai’s director of government relations) says Shanghai’s biggest business challenge is human resources. “Finding, training and keeping management,” Green said. “It’s a hot labour market and people are in high demand.” Seems like their question is along the lines of “How do we attract, recruit and retain talent?”Intellectual property rights protection remains a prominent problem (in both Beijing and Shanghai). The article says that “Many companies don’t expand beyond a representative office for fear of losing proprietary information and technology.” Seems like going the Open Source way – with both people and information – is a plausible solution.

Die-hard brand loyalty

Die-hard brand loyalty

Over at my China travel blog I’ve written about how much I love my Apple iBook laptop. It doesn’t give me any problems, runs really well, has excellent battery life and is very portable (when I bought a camera memory card reader the other day in Mudanjiang, China, I whipped out my iBook from my backpack, plugged in the card reader, checked it worked and then bought it – without a word of English being spoken).

Lessons from anarchy

Lessons from anarchy

The 18 August 2005 Economist magazine carried one of the most brilliantly written critiques of world governments' responses to terrorism. By looking back at the Anarchist movement of the late 19th century, and seeing what governments did then and what effect it had,...

Watching a Master

Watching a Master

I have played the trumpet since I was 11, and even spent two years doing it professionally, including a year as lead trumpeter of the National Serviceman's Orchestra of the South African Air Force (whilst conscripted in the late 1980s). I love the instrument, and...

What Skype's doing – way kewl

What Skype's doing – way kewl

A previous post by Mike introduced Google's new desktop search tool (worth getting) as well as Google Talk. Certainly a threat to the likes of Skype who dominate currently. But Skype isn't sitting back waiting for Google to attack. Check out Mark Evan's Blog on...

start.com – kewl

start.com – kewl

Got to be honest that I don't know what it's about, but it is interesting. Check out Start.com It's a Microsoft test site. I know some of that cos of what's wrtitten at the bottom of the front page "this site is not an officially supported site. It is an incubation...

Builders Wanted

Builders Wanted

From the Futurist Update, September 2005: A building boom, an aging workforce, and higher technical demands of workers are laying the foundations of a potential skills crisis in the U.S. construction industry. Now employing nearly 7 million carpenters, electricians,...

iPod:  The Quintessential CGM Example

iPod: The Quintessential CGM Example

Ok, so this is not the first time we've mentioned iPod's on this blog. It also won't be the last. I want to refer back to two previous posts, Graeme's Could 16 million iPod users be wrong? and my CGM: Consumer-Generated Media. It is no secret that Apple "get it". Pete...

Samsung – The Perpetual Crisis Machine

Samsung – The Perpetual Crisis Machine

http://www.fortune.com/fortune/technology/articles/0,15114,1097317,00.html “The biggest barrier to management innovation is the ego – a self that never changes�. These are the words of Jong-Yong Yun, the man accredited for taking Samsung from being a follower in...

The one thing you need to know about Great Managing, Great Leading and Sustained Individual Success – by Marcus Buckingham

The one thing you need to know about Great Managing, Great Leading and Sustained Individual Success – by Marcus Buckingham

I’m a Marcus Buckingham fan, but then I’m generally a fan of anyone that thinks the same stuff I do, so I am about to start giving away copies of the book to all my colleagues. This book should not be recommended reading, it should be compulsory reading for all...

MyCircle.co.za

MyCircle.co.za

You remember Barrie's The Oracle of Kevin Bacon post? So just how prevalent is social networking in South Africa? (with a truly South African flavour, that is). Yahoo! Groups is a facility that some of us use, and we're becoming pretty au fait with Skype and other IM...

First "Who", then "What"

First "Who", then "What"

In "Who Comes First: Good to Great Marketing" at Marketing Profs, 23 August 2005, Paul A. Barsch uses Jim Collins' "Good to Great" concept of getting the right people on the bus and applies it to the marketing function. This concept applies both to who we have in our...

Language limits

Language limits

Edward de Bono, the famous lateral thinking guru, suggests that language is really difficult to work with, and often doesn't convey what we actually mean, or takes too long to convey complex thoughts and emotions without being misunderstood. Although I have not heard...

CV's and the Connection Economy

CV's and the Connection Economy

I read this article today, written by Reg Lascaris - of Hunt Lascaris - after I had a similar conversation with a potential client, discussing the need to balance work teams, using expertise vs personatity types. I thought others may enjoy the article, especially the...

Archives

Some of our Courses