Showing results by archive : April 2009

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Womenomics
posted by Precious Ncayiyana  on April 28, 2009

Womenomics literally means "Women's Economic Contribution to Business and Society”. Statistically, women represent most of the talent pool globally, based on a number of female graduates passing out each year. Isn't it time that organisations took women’s contribution to the next level? For any Tomorrow's Company to be successful, Wittenberg-Cox and Alison Maitland, authors of "Why Women Mean Business" argue that women's economic contribution is far more substantial and women shouldn't be referred to as "diverse", as university statistics show women outperform men academically and there are more women entering workforce than men.


India & China: Stop copying Western approaches to talent!
posted by Jonathan Winter  on April 23, 2009

Performance rating systems - especially forced ranking - are controversial and widely unpopular even in the West. Yet fast-growth companies in India and elsewhere (yes there are still some) are copying damaging Western practices in their desire to professionalise.   If we’re going to bring to life a new vision of talent for tomorrow’s companies, illustrated by the TGT report launched  yesterday, we need to encourage them to take a more thoughtful approach.


Investing in talent and skills for growth
posted by Sir mike Rake  on April 22, 2009

Today, especially with the global economy moving into unchartered waters, talent underpins not only our ability to compete successfully on the global stage, but our ability to deal with and master the major issues for our generation: climate change, social inclusion and market innovation. This is the ‘triple context’ that the Tomorrow’s Global Talent report describes.


It’s the difference that makes the difference
posted by Caroline Waters  on April 21, 2009

Engaging people starts with an organisation’s culture, values and leadership, it does not depend on an individual’s educational or professional background. The current education system rewards people on their ability to learn, assimilate and feedback. We have absolutely no evidence that the best people to lead organisations in the future are those who have firsts from leading universities. Success in these terms tells us nothing about a person’s empathy with the world, nothing about their capability to work with people and motivate people. But currently there is no entry system to the world of work unless you conform to a certain model. We constantly sift different people out when we should be finding ways of sifting them in, otherwise we risk losing their potential and our competitive advantage. In the future talent must focus not just on developing products and services but developing an empathy for the environment in which they will be delivered, for example developing products that flourish in a lean energy economy. This will create the value economy that will supersede the so called knowledge economy: how can we build an economy on something that is ubiquitous and free?


Good work matters - let's do the timewarp again
posted by Tony Manwaring  on April 21, 2009

I've just done the timewarp ... just a jump to the right (media interviews for Tomorrow's Global Talent, encouraged by the interest in our reframing of the talent agenda) ... And a jump to the left (attending the launch of 'advancing opportunity' at the Smith Institute) ... Let's do the timewarp again.

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