Wednesday, 12 November 2014
Wednesday, 12 November 2014
By: Tania de Jong AM
Disruption! How to manage the threats and opportunities
Retail, the media, airlines, telecommunications, even governments globally are all in the throes of fundamental change in response to disruption. Is it a threat to your industry or profession, a problem to be managed – or an opportunity to be seized?


Thursday, 6 November 2014
ImagineNation – Janet Sernack
I recently participated in the Disruptive Innovation Festival where I presented an exciting new webinar on ‘How the lean start-up is disrupting business as usual’.


Thursday, 30 October 2014
Tansel Ali is a 3-time Australian Memory Champion who speaks and coaches internationally helping people to remember and learn faster. He shot to fame worldwide for memorizing two Yellow Pages phone books in only 24 days. He is author of the best-selling book, The Yellow Elephant and is a media celebrity and authority on the topic of Memory in Australia. Tansel will present a master class at Ci2015 on the topic of “Master your Memory”.
When I’m training I get two types of people – Creative and the not so creative. About half the people I train are not on the creative side. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. It’s just that I need to focus on different strategies to attend to their needs, rather than play the strengths of the creative.
One of the greatest things I’ve come across in my twelve years as a memory trainer is ‘SMASHIN SCOPE’ by Tony Buzan (Creator of Mind Mapping). SMASHIN SCOPE is an acronym created by the brilliant Vanda North, which outlines how we can use our brain to greatly enhance our visual perception of it. These principles help us to not only remember better, but become a more creative and lateral thinker.
So here are 12 ways you can become more creative:
Whilst these 12 tips are memory principles, using them is actually exercising your creativity. So exercise away and let me know how you do. And if there’s any funny associations you create feel free to pop them in the comments below and share with others. We can all use a laugh. Cheers.


Thursday, 23 October 2014
By: McKinsey Quarterly
Throughout history, economic growth has been fueled by two factors: the expanding pool of workers and their rising productivity. From the perspective of rising prosperity, however, it is productivity that makes all the difference.


Thursday, 23 October 2014
By: McKinsey Quarterly
Catching up to the labor-productivity benchmark established by the United States’ performance and expanding that frontier further ultimately will depend on the actions of individual firms and their management teams.

