BBG Enterprise Forum | |
Angela Lovegrove will be sharing her strategies and stories in her quest for innovation, diversity and inclusion in the workplace | |
It has been proven time and again that a culture of Innovation and a philosophy of Inclusion are cornerstones to the growth and well-being of a sustainable organisation, and will drive recruitment and retention in the future marketplace, How do you create and infuse this culture into your organisation? What magic potions and strategies do you have to do to make this happen? Angela Lovegrove has infused Innovation, Diversity and Inclusion into the culture of every organisation she has worked in – from managing a startup to a successful exit to leading teams as an executive at Salesforce, Telstra and now NBN Business. We are delighted to have her share her stories, strategies and insights with us at our BBG forum next Tuesday. Angela will share with us some of the strategies she uses to infuse those policies into the DNA of the day to day work-life of every employee who works with her. How she empowers people to take risks, knowing that their team has their back. "It's about working together, It's about trust" says Angela Angela has a knack of making every person in her team feel that they are important and that they belong, encouraging them to be the best that they can be and do the best that they can do. Innovation, DIversity and Inclusion is a culture – a way in which we behave…. and its not easy to lead as a women in a predominantly man's world!!
The session will also unlock the issues that may present in your business. . . and give angles to build that culture, that you may not have even thought of!
If you are interested in learning, collaborating and growing with us, and believe you have something to offer our members, I would like to invite you as my guest on Tuesday 26 March.
Click here to register
If you are interested, please don't delay! as there are only 6 places available, so please click on the link above and reserve your spot now. | |
Where & When | |
Date: Tuesday 26 March Time: 7:30am - 10:30pm Location: BSI Seminar room, L7 14 Martin Place, Sydney | |
About Angela Lovegrove | |
Angela has over 20 Years International Business Leadership experience in the Technology sector working across the Financial, Services, Government, Telco, Construction, Mining, Fast Moving Consumer Goods Industries, Retail, Not for Profits, Manufacturing and Health Angela has led the setting up of technology start ups – Quofore Europe, Asia Pacific, Masterpack Europe, Tenuteq Europe, High growth leadership Quofore Asia, Salesforce.com Australia, nbnco Business and Transformation leadership at Telstra Business NSW Australia.
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About Our Monthly Forum | |
Angela's presentation will be followed by a Think Tank session on her presentation and a series of interactive break-out group discussions. As a guest at our monthly Business Forum you will have the opportunity to network, learn and collaborate with other guests and BBG members in a way that will help you overcome common business obstacles whilst getting to know the members of our dynamic Sydney Enterprise Chapter. I'm sure you will find this forum useful, informative and stimulating. I look forward to seeing you there. Click here to connect with me on referron and download the app and upload your profile, as I plan to connect you to the room! Yours in business growth, Ivan Ivan Kaye Chairman
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Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Angela will be sharing her strategies and stories in her quest for innovation, diversity and inclusion in the workplace
Monday, March 18, 2019
Ten challenges the world needs to solve
Source - technology review https://www.technologyreview.com/s/612951/ten-big-global-challenges-technology-could-solve/amp/
- Greenhouse gases - where to store and repurpose the excess CO2
- Storing Renewable energy from solar, wind and sea - how to store enough to replace coal
- The universal flu vaccine
- Dementia treatment - The number of people living with the disease is skyrocketing. (10pc over 65, 30pc over 85 in USA) Advances in neuroscience and genetics are beginning to shed more light. Hopefully there will be a solution to shut down the devastating effects of the condition.
- Ocean clean-up - Billions of tiny pieces of plastic—so-called “microplastics”—are now floating throughout the world’s oceans poisoning birds, fish, and humans.
- Energy-efficient desalination - There is about 50 times as much salt water on earth as there is fresh water. As the world’s population grows and climate change intensifies droughts, the need for fresh water is going to grow more acute. Reverse-osmosis desalination facilities are being used is Israel, which now gets most of its household water from the sea. How do you make it cheaper. As far as climate-change adaptation technologies go, creating drinking water from the ocean ought to be a top priority.
- Safe driverless car - If they can be made reliably safe, traffic jams might be eliminated, cities could be transformed as parking lots give way to new developments and most of the 1.25 million deaths a year caused by traffic accidents would be eliminated
- Embodied AI - where imaginary can interact with real things as people and animals interact with each other. Will machines have souls?
- Predicting earthquakes Over 100,000 people died in the 2010 Haiti earthquake, and the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami—triggered by one of the most powerful earthquakes ever recorded—killed nearly a quarter of a million people in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, and elsewhere. Predicting earthquakes would allow people to evacuate unsafe areas, and could save millions of lives.
- Brain decoding- Cracking that code could lead to breakthroughs in how we treat mental disorders like dementia, schizophrenia and autism. It might allow us to improve direct interfaces that communicate directly from our brains to computers, or even to other people—a life-changing development for people who are paralyzed by injury or degenerative disease.
Saturday, March 16, 2019
What killed these companies - a culture of innovation is key
Inspired by Stephanie denning (Twitter @stephdenning
A Culture Of Innovation is the invisible asset that is often credited for its success, and it has been seen that it is key for the growth and sustainability of a business.
Kodak , NOKIA and RIM (BlackBerry Xerox, HP and Sears Incr giants - failed - because they stopped taking chances - they stopped innovating!
Why would good teams, with excellent people and the best intentions, kill great ideas?
What changes the collective behaviour from innovation to survival
Safi Bahcall a physicist, in a Harvard study identifies “A Cultural Tipping Point” - when the leader and employee would rather keep their “job” rather than take chances.
Company-wide innovation is forgone for personal career advancement and safety.
“In order for innovation to occur and for ‘crazy’ ideas to turn into successful products, people across the organization need to be incentivitized to invest their time in moving projects―not themselves―forward,” writes Bahcall.
So how do you Overcome The Cultural Tipping Point? Bahcall has an algorithm.... The Bahcall Culture Equation
M = (E x S^2 x F) / G
Leaders can tip the balance and raise the value of M—ensuring that radical innovation continues in even the largest company—by tweaking four key control parameters. They are equity fraction ( E), fitness ratio ( F), management span ( S), and salary growth ( G). Note that none of these are elements of “culture.” They are better described as elements of structure: organization design. As the equation below illustrates, a higher M results from increasing E, S, and F (the parameters in the numerator), and decreasing G (the denominator).
Bahcall’s equation, includes the relationship between “a certain size at which human groups shift from embracing radical ideas to quashing them…the magic number M,”
without going into great detail - the principal is
The greater the increase in salary between levels, the more likely people are incentivized to pursue salary over innovation.
It’s 4 p.m., should you focus on project work or on politics? You need to decide how you’ll spend the final hour of the workday. Should you experiment a little more with your design, or should you use the time to network, currying favor with your boss of other influential managers?
Such daily choices, says Bahcall, is what really determine the level of innovation at a company ― not cultural changes instituted from the top.
The culture of innovation, says Bahcall, is proportional to the perceived marginal return of an employee for an hour spent working versus politicking.
Bahcall’s culture equation, at its heart, is really a story of misaligned organizational incentives. How large organizations adopt structures that promote selfish behaviors and disincentivize innovation.
Creating a culture of innovation - one needs to set up structures, policies and incentives that is defined and measured the longevity of a company is determined by the quality of its cultural DNA
There is a great article in HBR where Bahcall explains his formula really well
Thursday, March 7, 2019
Company Secretaries need to make the move to Digital and Automation
- automation of Securities placement calculation (7.1 and 7.1A) utilising existing registry data
- automation of Appendix 3B (and future replacements) in a form that can be uploaded to the ASX market announcements platform
- director Management which includes onboarding, trading, resignation workflow automation and production of Appendix 3X, 3Y, 3Z and Form 484
- end to end circular resolutions management, including e-sign functionality for Directors integrates with existing Board Management software solutions
- standalone solution offering board management capabilities such as board meeting workflows, agenda management, prioritising action items and minute taking.
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
Experts say US anti-Huawei campaign likely exaggerated
By FRANK BAJAK
https://apnews.com/133c110a53b64a6da8bd449c8d0a9235
Since last year, the U.S. has waged a vigorous diplomatic offensive against the Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei, claiming that any nation deploying its gear in next-generation wireless networks is giving Beijing a conduit for espionage or worse.
But security experts say the U.S. government is likely exaggerating that threat. Not only is the U.S. case short on specifics, they say, it glosses over the fact that the Chinese don’t need secret access to Huawei routers to infiltrate global networks that already have notoriously poor security.
State-sponsored hackers have shown no preference for one manufacturer’s technology over another, these experts say. Kremlin-backed hackers, for instance, adroitly exploit internet routers and other networking equipment made by companies that are not Russian.
If the Chinese want to disrupt global networks, “they will do so regardless of the type of equipment you are using,” said Jan-Peter Kleinhans, a researcher at the Berlin think tank Neue Verantwortung Stiftung.
One of the most common U.S. fears — that Huawei might install software “backdoors” in its equipment that Chinese intelligence could use to tap into, eavesdrop on or interrupt data transmissions -- strikes some experts as highly unlikely.
Priscilla Moriuchi, who retired from the National Security Agency in 2017 after running its Far East operations, does not believe the Huawei threat is overblown. But she called the odds of the company installing backdoors on behalf of Chinese intelligence “almost zero because of the chance that it would be discovered,” thus exposing Huawei’s complicity.
Moriuchi, now an analyst at the U.S. cybersecurity firm Recorded Future, said she was not aware of the NSA ever finding Huawei backdoors created for Chinese intelligence but also cautioned that it can be extraordinarily difficult, when backdoors are found, to determine who is behind them.
European allies have been reluctant to embrace a blanket anti-Huawei ban even as U.S. officials continue to cast the world’s No. 1 telecom-equipment maker as little more than an untrustworthy surrogate for Beijing’s intelligence services.
The top U.S. diplomat for cybersecurity policy, Robert Strayer, says Huawei is obliged to heed Chinese Communist Party orders by a 2017 intelligence law that “compels their citizens and their companies to participate in intelligence activities.”
Strayer provided no specifics when pressed by reporters Tuesday as to how Huawei gear might pose more of a security threat than other manufacturers’ switches, routers and wireless base stations. The diplomat spoke at Mobile World Congress, the world’s largest wireless trade show, in Barcelona, Spain.
The American rhetoric has included threats.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo suggested in a TV interview last week any use of Huawei equipment could jeopardize U.S. intelligence sharing and might even be a reason to locate military bases elsewhere. The remarks may have been targeted at NATO allies including Poland and the Czech Republic where Huawei has made significant inroads.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. National Security Council declined to comment or to provide any officials to address specifics. A State Department spokesman referred The Associated Press to a press statement on Strayer’s remarks in Barcelona.
Huawei, founded in 1987 by a former military engineer, overtook Sweden’s LM Ericsson in 2017 as the lead company in the market for wireless and internet switching gear. It says it supplies 45 of the world’s top 50 phone companies and has contracts with 30 carriers to test so-called fifth-generation, or 5G, wireless technology.
U.S. companies are not serious competitors in this market, having pulled back over the years. Huawei’s major rivals are European — Ericsson and Finland’s Nokia.
The U.S. has provided no evidence of China planting espionage backdoors in Huawei equipment despite as 2012 congressional report that led the U.S. government and top domestic wireless carriers to ban it and other Chinese manufacturers from their networks.
“The backdrop for this is essentially the rise of China as a tech power in a variety of domains” said Paul Triolo, tech lead at the Eurasia Group risk analysis consultancy. Now, he said, “there is a big campaign to paint Huawei as an irresponsible actor.”
In January, U.S. prosecutors filed criminal charges against Huawei and one of its top executives, alleging the company stole trade secrets and lied to banks about embargo-busting company dealings with Iran. Canada earlier arrested that Huawei executive — who is also the daughter of the company’s founder — at U.S. behest; she is currently awaiting extradition to the U.S.
Huawei has denied wrongdoing. On Thursday it pleaded not guilty to charges that it stole trade secrets from T-Mobile.
One irony of the situation is that the U.S. has actually done what it accuses Huawei of doing. According to top-secret documents released in 2013 by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the U.S. planted surveillance beacons in network devices and shipped them around the world.
The affected equipment included devices from Cisco Systems, a Silicon Valley company whose routers were blacklisted by Chinese authorities after the Snowden revelations.
Washington’s closest ally has taken a different approach to any potential threats from Huawei. Britain’s National Cyber Security Center (NCSC) long ago placed multiple restrictions on Huawei equipment, including disallowing it in any sensitive networks, agency director Ciaran Martin noted in a speech last week.
According to Kleinhans, who has studied the agency’s practices, Huawei can’t conduct any direct maintenance on mobile base stations in the U.K., and instead must allow local wireless carriers to handle the work. Those carriers can’t use Chinese equipment to conduct any law enforcement wiretapping. The British agency also requires redundancy in critical networks and a variety of equipment suppliers to prevent overreliance on any single manufacturer.
In its annual review of Huawei’s engineering practices published in July, the NCSC found “shortcomings” that “exposed new risks in the U.K. telecommunication networks.” But none were deemed of medium or high priority.
Martin called the problems manageable and not reflective of Chinese hostility — though experts say it’s often difficult to tell if vulnerabilities are simply coding defects or intentional.
“With 5G, some equipment needs to be more trustworthy than ever. But probably not all,” NCSC technical director Ian Levy wrote in a blog.
Like the British, German officials have indicated they’ll reject a blanket Huawei 5G ban.
In December, the head of Germany’s cyber-risk agency, Arne Schoenbohm, said “for such serious decisions as a ban, you need evidence.”
Last week, the nation’s Interior Ministry told The Associated Press “the direct exclusion of a particular manufacturer from the 5G expansion is at the time not legally possible.”
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Eds: An earlier version of the story incorrectly stated that Moriuchi was among NSA agents tasked with searching for backdoors in Huawei equipment.
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Frank Jordans in Berlin, Joe McDonald in Beijing and Kelvin Chan in Barcelona, Spain, contributed to this report.