Business leaders focusing on productivity and reducing overheads miss the point: human beings are social beasts so intentional, in-person interactions are critically important.
A triple whammy of rising energy, fuel, and food prices is forcing people to sacrifice luxuries – and necessities – but how can businesses help consumers during the cost-of-living crisis?
What trends and technologies are moving the needle on supply chain resilience? Gary Connors outlines what should be on the radar for supply chain leaders.
Is a lack of visibility still plaguing your supply chain and hindering your risk management efforts? Looking at upstream activities could be key to turning this situation around.
The pandemic put a strain on company finances and created huge administrative and fiscal burdens for organizations trying to cope with furlough schemes around the world. As a result, the role of finance director became even more important.
Research suggests that the number one reason why business transformation fails is that employees are not signed on. This may suggest if a business transformation effort is to succeed, people are more important than any tech solution.
It’s clear businesses have a role to play in cutting costs, but some ideas present potential long-term concerns.
The short-sightedness of strategic purchasing has led to flying blind for years - after all, the supplier market often remains a black box.
Balancing entrepreneurial spirit with scalable infrastructure will helps SMEs build resilience and opportunity against a backdrop of economic unpredictability and rising costs.
Over the past few years, gender diversity seems to have improved. For a while, it felt like there were a select group of NEDs who were on multiple boards to prop up the numbers, but this seems to have moved on.
Over the past few years, gender diversity seems to have improved. For a while, it felt like there was a select group of NEDs who were on multiple boards to prop up the numbers, but this seems to have moved on.