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Creating Generational Legacies

Sunday, May 22, 2022

Thumbs up for Climate Action by new Government



Mr Albanese mentioned some amazing policies and strategies covering climate, foreign workers , women in business, indigenous and medical .


Climate

"Together, we can end the climate wars," he said, adding that Australia had the possibility to be "a renewable energy superpower".

Some commitments made in Prime Minister Albanese’s speech:- 

  • investment of  $20 billion towards upgrading the electricity grid so it can handle more renewable energy. 
  • remove taxes on electric vehicles to make them between $2,000 and $12,000 cheaper
  • install hundreds of community batteries across the country that will be charged by rooftop solar and provide shared energy storage for up to 100,000 households.
  • install 85 solar banks to benefit more than 25,000 who can't access rooftop solar, such as renters and low-income households.
  • public service sector would be required to reach net-zero emissions by 2030, although the Australian Defence Force, Australian Federal Police, Australian Border Force and security agencies would be exempt from this.
  • $3 billion to invest in clean energy technologies like green metals (minerals used in green energy technologies), and seek to adjust the government's so-called "Safeguard Mechanism".The Safeguard Mechanism would make heavy emitters pay for their emissions, by gradually reducing, over time, the eligibility threshold from 100,000 tonnes to 25,000 tonnes
  • phasing out coal and gas
  • sign up to  US President Joe Biden's Global Methane Pledge to phase out methane gas, which is the second biggest contributor to human-caused global warming, after carbon dioxide.

Foreign workers 


granting foreign workers permanent residency m- given they are already living in the community and paying taxes.


"fix the crisis in aged care", after pledging to increase the number of nurses in aged care homes   Through reskilling and opening up migration to nurses 


Indigenous 

Mr Albanese said he committed to "the Uluru Statement from the Heart in full".


To be proud to have the oldest living continuous culture in the world - We will allow First Nations people to have a say in policies that affect health, education and housing. 


Wiradjuri woman Linda Burney would be the government's Indigenous Affairs minister.


Women into work and Childcare 

Get more women into work by making the childcare subsidy universal Mr Albanese claims the policy will make childcare cheaper for 96 per cent of families.


Medical


Solve busy hospital emergency departments and cut down wait times through implementation of Medicare Urgent Care Clinics —


 a trial of 50 urgent care clinics across the country, offering an alternative to for families.


The clinics — will treat patients needing urgent medical attention, including broken bones, minor burns and stitches for cuts, to free up congested emergency departments.


They will be based at GP surgeries and community health centres nationwide and cost more than $135 million over four years.


A few Suggestions that come to mind 

  • Higher pay for essential workers - Education,  daycare providers and nurses - increase the base rate - these people are key to our future 
  • Education - more public high schools
  • GP remuneration - Medicare rebate improve -funded by Stopping  universal bulk billing - people need to inderstand cost of going to gp - so they have an idea how much they paid for Medicare
  • Get rid of Payroll Tax - and rather incentivise employers  to employ more people  
  • Support Exporters and Innovators through EMDG and R&D Tax Concessions

Saturday, April 30, 2022

Thursday, April 14, 2022

85% of Australians don’t feel “digital ready or capable



I read an interesting report based on a a Salesforce survey on Dec 21 on “digital readiness and capability” across 19 countries - with a view  to close the skills gap and succeed in the workplace. 

The IDC predicts that by 2026, Australia and New Zealand will have 130,400 net new technology jobs - and yet 85% of  ANZ workers don’t feel adequately equipped when it comes to digital skills! 


In Dec 2022 Salesforce surveyed people’s “

The  “digital readiness and capability” findings 

  • The global index score for digital readiness (the average) is 33 out of 100. New Zealand scored 28 and Australia scored 21.
  • Of the surveyed Australian respondents for the report, 55% are only somewhat digital ready and 19% are not ready at all. In New Zealand, those figures are 57% and 16%.


Digital reskilling and upskilling is clearly now a worldwide priority, particularly in ANZ - some say as important as reading , writing and arithmetic! 


Salesforce ANZ Sustainability, Skills & Reconciliation Lead, Alexandra McDonald points out that Australia has produced the likes of  Canva, Afterpay, Atlassian , MYOb , Referron , Redbubble, Aconex , myOB , my Recruitment Plus, Rhipe , Netreturn and Xero 


And yet 


The digital readiness of our workforce and the shortage of digital skills - has presented a big problem - and for those who are keen to reskill and upskill - this presents a big opportunity!


Alexandra says it’s time to take action with #digitallearning as the digital skills shortage takes hold !!!


According to the report the top five skills that are now most desirable for organisations are:

  1. Collaboration technology: Slack, Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Google Chat
  2. Digital administrative: Digitising and filing paperwork, virtual stakeholder meetings, digital-first processes, digitally presented pressing information
  3. Encryption and cyber security: Skills to protect data and systems from unauthorised parties
  4. Ecommerce and digital trade: Sales order management, payments to shipping and fulfilment processes
  5. Project management technology: Utilising project management software to manage projects, processes, people, timelines, and more


59% of Australian respondents and 64% of New Zealand respondents say digital collaboration skills are of the utmost importance now and will be over the next five years, yet only 17% (Australia) and 22% (New Zealand) rate themselves as advanced in that department. 


For a business and indeed our economy to survive and thrive in this  #nexttechrevolution  - a future-minded, digitally fluent workforce needs to be nurtured. 


  • How do we reskill and upskill our population to take advantage of these employment opportunities ?

  • How can we upskill and reskill our communities in the top 5  digital skills


In an all-digital world, we need to invest more in enabling our workforce to reskill - and University degrees won’t cut the mustard 


  • How can Schools, Governments and Organisations  in the Private and Public Sector train, reskill and upskill  our population to match the digital skills demand? 
  • How can we develop ‘real world’ digital skills in the workplace so we are ready for the #nexttechrevolution ?
  • How can organisations partner with learning facilities with a view to  develop internal upskilling/cross-skilling programs?
  • How can you as an individual or corporate - overcome digital overwhelm?

Maybe  - understanding the digital world through training and learning is part of the solution .


  • How can we get people to engage ?

- An increase in the number of digital skills-specific micro-credentials and courses .
An easy seamless way for people to do these courses - (maybe Duolingo or Nexttech for Digital Learning) 
- Broadening the awareness of training options.
- Supporting employers to create a portal to help provide a way for their employees in their quest for lifelong learning 
- Empowering them to drive digitisation within an organisation and
- Providing targeted support for underserved communities (Prisons maybe?)


Maybe Nexttech for the #Nexttech Revolution ?


Post script




Sunday, March 27, 2022

Digital Training and Learning is key for staff retention



Research conducted by AlphaBeta in Australia for AWS has shown that companies which had invested in digital skills training have seen increased revenue and improved employee productivity, PLUS higher employee retention and satisfaction amongst those interviewed .1


The report, Building Digital Skills for the Changing Workforce in Asia Pacific and Japan looks at the increasing skills gaps - and emphasises  the need for digital skills training.


Digital skills training will not only boost productivity, but will help retain your staff.


Over 80 percent of NZ and Australian companies surveyed who had implemented training say that digital skills training helped with a higher employee retention - but  not more than 30% have a digital skills training plan in place.


Fraser Thompson, co-founder and principal of AlphaBeta, says the survey shows implementing digital skills training has ‘really important’ impacts on employee engagement and retention.


“A huge portion of the reason people work for us is actually learning and development opportunities.”


Learning is not only a 5 year stint at university - it is Lifelong journey .” Says Cassandra Parton - CEO of Nexttech Learning 


The opportunity to learn and grow was one of the top two key attractions for employees in a survey of Datacom staff last year. 2. 


Greg Davidson, Group CEO of Datacom - who invests heavily in learning says the importance of fostering continued growth in the workforce can’t be understated.


“There’s no point just doing academic learning without applying it to project oriented activity. We have a  really conscious program that follows up any training people do with reassignment to work that is relevant to help cement the skills”


A strong mentor culture is also required , he says 

“Everyone in leadership in our company is encouraged to help connect there teams to development opportunities  and career pathways.”



Simon Dewar of BSI Digital Learning talks about the danger of digital overwhelm!


- When we’re unable to focus because of competition for our attention from multiple sources causing  stress and anxiety 

 - COVID-related uncertainty and unpredictability. The end of the pandemic won’t be well defined, and we won’t ‘get back to normal’ but will have to find a new sense of equilibrium.

- Environmental factors such as a lack of physical and social structures around work and learning – no training room or office.

- Social factors causing more  distractions than usual – Children at home, mobile phones with notifications, apps specifically designed to give dopamine rewards for our attention.


How can you as an individual or corporate - overcome digital overwhelm .


Obviously - understanding the digital world through training and learning is part of the solution .


Best practice to get people to engage 

  • An increase in the number of digital skills-specific micro-credentials and courses .
  • An easy seamless way for people to do these courses - (maybe Duolingo for Digital Learning) 
  •  Broadening the awareness of training options.

Examples of Portals Available 

Australia’s Skill Finder portal, a one-stop portal for digital skills, suggesting similar is needed in New Zealand.


Nexttech’s Elearning Portal https://elearning.nexttech.edu.au/


Singapore’s Industry Transformation Maps creating the digital skills frameworks. It  takes a holistic approach, looking at a sector, key trends for the sector and works backwards to understand the skills and training required to support that, and wrap it into the education framework. 




Thomson recommends a 3 pronged approach 

  • Supporting employers to create a portal to help provide a way for their employees in their quest for lifelong learning 
  • Empowering them to drive digitisation within an organisation and
  • Providing targeted support for underserved communities

References 

  1. The research surveyed 7,193 workers and 2,166 employers across seven countries: Australia, India, Indonesia, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea, and Singapore.
  2. Inspired by Heather Wright’s article https://istart.co.nz/nz-news-items/digital-skills-training-for-productivity-staff-satisfaction/

Saturday, March 26, 2022

How to hire and retain the right talent


In a McKinsey article - the stats are validating what we all seen to be feeling …… it’s harder to recruit, retain and maintain the right people and if you want to win the war on talent - you’ve gotta come to the party! 


According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than 4.3 million people voluntarily quit their jobs in December 2021, slightly below a record high in November 2021.

Their departures have left a huge hole in the labor market. 


The number of current job openings (10.9 million) exceeds the number of new hires (6.3 million). At a recent survey at Mckinseys recent survey of almost 600 workers who voluntarily left a job without another in hand, 44 percent said that they have little to no interest in returning to traditional jobs in the next six months. 


The rules of the game have changed. 

    • you need to pay higher compensation,
    • offer flexibility, 
    • community, and 
    • an inclusive culture 


The cost of switching jobs has gone down significantly.

There is less of a stigma associated with showing a gap in your résumé. 

Employees in many industries are confident that they can find work anywhere, whenever they are ready - They have seen friends and colleagues depart and survive, and they are confident that they can, too.


You need to redefine your attraction and retention strategies and build a value proposition that takes employees’ whole lives into account.


Why they left

  • uncaring leaders, 
  • unsustainable expectations of work performance, 
  • lack of career advancement
  • Overwork with less staff


Those that took new jobs cited

  • Professional development - ability to learn
  • workplace flexibility, 
  • adequate compensation and 
  • reasonable expectations about performance as top factors in taking a position 


What can you do to retain your team . How do you bring them back—and keep them?


Paul Findlay of Reach shared some interesting insights at our Nexttech Transformation forum facilitated by Bill Mclellan 




  • life balance  - maybe offer subsidised cleaning services, gym memberships, free learning or on-site childcare services that would allow employees to eat lunch with their children
  • Have a reason that makes them feel they are adding value and making a difference 
  • providing extra days off for professional development or mental-health breaks
  • Bonuses for great work 
  • Recognition and create a feeling that your team is being listened to 
  • Pay 100 percent of the tuition costs for employees seeking higher education. 

The bottom line is that companies must take a different approach, focused on the following core principles.


Doing something bigger than yourself




Fostering psychological safety and a sense of community, and measuring outcomes. Rather than conducting only exit interviews, adopt “stay” interviews, asking people how they are doing and what they need to continue in those roles?


As Mark Purbrick of Peoplogica said - have a joining party instead of a leaving party! 





Cultural factors can make a company more attractive to join and, ideally, provide more incentive to stay.


The power of collaboration 



Stack the deck in your favour - Expand your talent pool

Think more creatively about candidates: 


What about the nontraditional workers who aren’t even on their radars? 


Bring in Diverse groups 


As Fiona Love says - being innovative without Diversity and Inclusion is like playing sport with one hand tied behind your back! 




Based on Mckinseys research , this untapped source of labor could be as many as 23 million people. 


Lower the barriers to entry and rethink requirements for certain roles. 


Remove bias from the recruitment process!!


Consider students , those doing part-time or contract work , people you can train . 


Consider ex inmates - remove any questions about convictions or arrest records from job applications and to delay background checks until later in the hiring process.




Use Referron and encourage your team to find their friends using referral programs—for instance, launching a personalized “refer two friends” campaign, asking existing employees to recruit within their networks—and acknowledge that the best candidates may be outside the immediate radius of the company’s headquarters.


Use AI or overseas assistants to augment your team members skills Could functions be outsourced or automated ? 


In one company it was found that salespeople were spending the bulk of their days processing orders and managing documents rather than pursuing actual sales.


How can you create more value for both employer and employee using AI VR and BPO (business process outsourcing )


Thanks to the team at Mckinseys 


Aaron De Smet , Bonnie Dowling , Marino Mugayar-Baldocchi Bill Schaninger, Bryan Hancock, Laura Pineault, and Nicolette Rainone at Mckinseys for their article 


 The team at the Nexttech Transformation Forum - Cassandra Parton, Bill Mclellan, Mark Purbrick, Craig Saphin , Jane Valmadre, Paul Findlay , Ayon and Emma Sidney for their contribution at the Nexttech transformation forum 


The team at the BSI Diversity Equity and Inclusion Yarning Circle - Martin Stark, Kala Philip , Bindi Kuroz, Arthur Backouche, Peter Mousaferiadis, Imy Banaken , Ivan Schwartz, Anne Marie Elias,  Scott Hoskin and Ivan Kaye



https://www.mckinsey.com/business-functions/people-and-organizational-performance/our-insights/gone-for-now-or-gone-for-good-how-to-play-the-new-talent-game-and-win-back-workers?cid=other-eml-alt-mip-mck&hdpid=e880de8e-a068-4ae9-a966-0e38c7f892a1&hctky=1453454&hlkid=a7d555df1afd491f814df284bba8d570


women in business





Supporting disability (or coolability in the workplace )


 

Thursday, March 10, 2022

Effects of Russia being Isolated from Global Internet


What will the effects  be if Russia is cut off from the  Global Internet ?

For Russian population ? No tiktok, Facebook or insta - aaaargh

For world - will there be ramifications of increase in global cybercrime? 


Monday, February 28, 2022

UN Warning on Climate Change in Australia




According to a recent United Nations climate change report, a rise of temperatures by 1.5 - 2°C will scorch northern Australia, kill the Great Barrier Reef, cause snowfields to disappear and cause flash floods from high intensity rainfall. 

Frequency of heatwaves will increase by 85 percent, with up to 70 percent more fire weather days by 2050 in some regions, causing a collapse of alpine ash, snowgum woodland, pencil pine and northern jarrah forests.

If global temperatures increase by 3°C, think Armageddon. We must come together and take Climate Action “that transforms virtually every human activity - now!” says Climate Activist Herman Gyr.





See full forum