Saturday, March 29, 2008

Social and demographic / lifestyle trends -- impact on ...

Need for students to understand demographic challenges, global challenges. Issues of injustice (perceived) and potential for future conflicts. Example of oil industry in Nigeria. Militant activists, moral passion, attacks, sabotage, kidnapping, security issues. Small numbers of activists will have huge power in tomorrow's world. Video on future of education, high schools, colleges, universities, curriculum, trends, syllabus, exams, assessments, business schools, MBAs, degree courses - by Dr Patrick Dixon, Futurist conference keynote speaker for NAIS.

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Friday, March 28, 2008

What are we educating people for? Preparation for Life

What kind of world will students and MBA participants face? Fundamental global changes. Obsession with exams, grades, syllabus and traditional methods of assessment. Need to prepare students for life challenges, for rapid change, to make wise choices with long term aims in mind. Failure of students ability to form long term relationships. Need for education on relationships, marriage, friendship, conflict resolution, anger management, communication. Romantic dream still alive in young people, teenagers. Why students are looking for answers on love and relationships. Failure of colleges and schools to teach students about relationships, obsessed with narrow view of what education is about. Secrets of long term relationship success. Divorce and relationship breakdown is major cause of failure to achieve in other areas. Teaching secrets of personal happiness and contentment. Why personal fulfilment is increasingly important in education. I am a physician and welfare of pupils is a deep concern. Ultimate purpose and meaning. Video on future of education, high schools, colleges, universities, curriculum, trends, syllabus, exams, assessments, business schools, MBAs, degree courses - by Dr Patrick Dixon, Futurist conference keynote speaker for NAIS.

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Monday, March 24, 2008

Migration, immigration and ageing crisis in Europe

Falling fertility rates. Economic impact of ageing. Social policy impact on government. Pensions crisis. Older workers and rising retirement age. Migration and immigration policy -- UK and Poland, and other EU new countries. Remittances impact on emerging economies. Rising unemployment. Political tensions and ethnic tensions. Racial prejudice. Falling labour costs. Economic migrants. Pressure on public services. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon.

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Sunday, March 16, 2008

Why business has to make life better - values matter

Values really matter. People want to make a difference and feel proud of who they work for. Aditya Birla example of corporate responsibility and community involvement. Increasing motivation, winning war for talent, staff and customer retention and stronger brand and corporate image. Work of AIDS charity ACET as expression of corporate responsibility. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon.

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Saturday, March 15, 2008

Why business has to make life better - values matter

Values really matter. People want to make a difference and feel proud of who they work for. Aditya Birla example of corporate responsibility and community involvement. Increasing motivation, winning war for talent, staff and customer retention and stronger brand and corporate image. Work of AIDS charity ACET as expression of corporate responsibility. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon.

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Friday, March 14, 2008

Motivation at Work - how to increase workplace motivation

Motivation at work. People don't get passionate about shareholder value or business profits or excel spreadsheets. They get passionate and motivated about challenge, great teams, vision, important goals, having fun, about family and friends, about the community and world they live in. Connect with passion and you will motivate teams to change organisation, business and world. Work-life balance, family, children. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon. Business productivity and motivating teams. Team leadership, targets, bottom line profit, increasing shareholder value. CEO speeches, annual general meetings. Publicly listed corporations. Attracting talent, retaining talent, winning the war for talent. Human resources and making a difference. Why workplace motivation depends on corporate vision, workplace passion and clear purpose. Connectedness and engagement at work. Business priorities, strategy and objectives must connect with individual passion - key to business success.

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Friday, March 07, 2008

Construction industry trends -- conference speaker

Lifetime use of carbon in buildings. Polymer concrete reduction in carbon use. Real estate development. Energy saving and construction of commercial offices, property development, factories and residential buildings. Commodity inflation. New materials, e-concrete and concrete polymers. Building techniques, architects, surveyors, planning approval and government regulartions. Life expectancy of commercial buildings. Building techniques and intelligent buildings. Retro-fitting of commercial buildings. Built-in redundancy in construction industry. Patrick Dixon, conference keynote speaker and futurist.

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Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Why business has to make life better - values matter

Values really matter. People want to make a difference and feel proud of who they work for. Aditya Birla example of corporate responsibility and community involvement. Increasing motivation, winning war for talent, staff and customer retention and stronger brand and corporate image. Work of AIDS charity ACET as expression of corporate responsibility. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon.

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Monday, March 03, 2008

Motivation at Work - how to increase workplace motivation

Motivation at work. People don't get passionate about shareholder value or business profits or excel spreadsheets. They get passionate and motivated about challenge, great teams, vision, important goals, having fun, about family and friends, about the community and world they live in. Connect with passion and you will motivate teams to change organisation, business and world. Work-life balance, family, children. Conference keynote speaker and Futurist Dr Patrick Dixon. Business productivity and motivating teams. Team leadership, targets, bottom line profit, increasing shareholder value. CEO speeches, annual general meetings. Publicly listed corporations. Attracting talent, retaining talent, winning the war for talent. Human resources and making a difference. Why workplace motivation depends on corporate vision, workplace passion and clear purpose. Connectedness and engagement at work. Business priorities, strategy and objectives must connect with individual passion - key to business success.

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Tuesday, July 03, 2007

Future of leadership and management teams

Published in Business Times Singapore last month:

It's seldom that topics as broad-ranging as anti-aging drugs, radio frequency identification, carbon trading, consumer
behavior and corporate leadership get tossed into the same presentation, and even less often that such a presentation makes
coherent sense.

Dr Patrick Dixon, a UK-based consultant and author who conducted a seminar in Singapore yesterday, manages it. Yet for
all his mention of cutting edge technologies, he boils leadership down to plain old common sense.

""Its an ancient truth about human beings that they want to feel like they matter, but it is so profoundly ignored'', he
said in an interview.

Strong leadership is central to improving profits and productivity, but is also crucial to attracting talent. Building a
good team is in turn critical to and is indeed ""the best way'' to manage risks in a fast-changing world, said Dr Dixon,
who has advised the likes of Microsoft, IBM, UBS, Siemens and others on the strategic implications of future trends.

Dr Dixon said he had examined speeches by historial leaders like Gandhi, Mao Zedong, Stalin and Hitler and that ""all
leadership speeches have a similar structure''. This goes loosely along the lines of: Follow me, because together I believe
we can build a better future for us, our family and friends, and not only those we care for but for humankind...

That some of the above leaders have used this motivational technique to commit atrocities only demonstrates its
seductive power, which derives not from an appeal to naked self-interest but to a collective sense of purpose, or a
""higher moral principle'', said Dr Dixon.

He gave the example of a pharmaceutical manager who wants to motivate staff to develop new packaging for their drugs --
young children are finding it too easy to open, while the elderly are finding it too difficult. It is easier to motivate
the team members if you can help them identify with the purpose for better packaging, such as that children might poison
themselves, or that older folks might be struck down by heart attacks before they can get to their medicine.

""People will only follow yo if they think you know where you're going and they think where you're going is important'',
he also said.

Most senior executives understand this but do not realise that their communications to staff are often bogged down in
rhetoric about shareholder value and returns on equity. Dr Dixon offers an exercise -- imagine explaining what you do to a
ten-year old child in under two minutes and in a way that gets them excited about the job.

Trained as a medical doctor at Cambridge, Dr Dixon also founded Medicom, a medical software start-up, and the AIDS care
agency Acet International. He is the author of Futurewise: Six Faces of Global Change, among other books.

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Saturday, June 09, 2007

Motivation, leadership, change management, passion

How to make things happen. Connect with passion. Why people get out of bed in the morning. How to motivate people at work to do great things. Secret of leadership and ultimate leadership speech. Ethics and values in business. Sustainable business success. Work life balance and lessons from non profits / volunteering. Why building a better world is such a powerful motivation. Lecture by Dr Patrick Dixon for MTN, author of Building a Better Business, Futurewise and conference speaker.

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Wednesday, June 21, 2006

How over-emphasis on shareholder value can destroy a business

I was speaking today to 50 executives responsible for corporate and social responsibility today:

 

RISK:  In pursuing only shareholder value and bottom-line profit, loose the plot and damage the business

OPPORTUNITY:  Drive the business on a broader and more profitable mission, that motivates, inspires and wins consumer as well as community, worker and shareholder approval

 

Bad news about corporate values can hit any corporation like a tornado, ripping the guts out of the business, shattering market confidence, scandalising customers and causing outrage in the general public. 

 

          7 out of 10 chief executives report that Corporate Social Responsibility is (now) an essential issue to their business

          89% of marketing directors believe (now) that business should be involved in addressing social issues of the day

          90% of workers feel proud of their companies' values when they support a good cause

          87% of workers feel a strong sense of loyalty

 

For more see http://www.globalchange.com/ppt4/sustain

           

 

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Sunday, June 11, 2006

Searching for people motivated to make shareholder value

I am still on a search to find people who wake up in the morning excited at the thought of making more shareholder value and bottom line profit.  At every executive event I speak at I ask for nominations of people I can interview who in the opinion of the participants are motivated by such things…. Or indeed for people to say they are themselves.

 

Sure, when people own their own companies, or have taken them public, they often feel passion about these things.

 

But it is very rare in my experience to find people who are inspired by such target-setting.

 

This is a fundamental challenge for CEOs who often continue to trot out the business mantra about the next quarter, despite the fact that such language is a turn-off for most people inside the corporation.

 

Personal challenge, a fun team, achieving something worthwhile, having a life outside of work, being fairly treated and so on…. These are far more powerful than an obsession with numbers.

 

 

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