Tagged with “work” (7) activity chart

  1. RSA - The RSA President’s Lecture: Why Creativity is the New Economy

    The RSA President’s Lecture: Why Creativity is the New Economy, (10th Sep 2012)

    We are living in a time of "Great Reset" - when economic crisis provides an opportunity to rethink virtually every aspect of our lives - from how and where we live, to how we work, to how we invest in individuals and infrastructure, to how we shape our cities and regions.

    Taking a deeper look at the forces reshaping our economy, and giving us a provocative new way to think about why we live as we do - and where we might be headed, Richard Florida shows how these forces, when combined, will spur a fresh era of growth and prosperity, define a new geography of progress, and create surprising opportunities for all of us.

    Using lessons from the last ten years to show how Creative Class theory has grown from a prediction to a prescription for an economy in turmoil, Florida argues the need for a new social compact to put us back on the path to economic growth. Florida’s Creative Compact commits to developing the full human potential and creative capabilities of every person, and suggests a new set of institutional supports to ensure a more robust and sustainable social system around the new world of work.

    Speaker: Dr Richard Florida, director, the Martin Prosperity Institute and Professor of Business and Creativity at the University of Toronto and NYU; senior editor, The Atlantic and is the author of several influential global best sellers, including the award-winning ‘The Rise of the Creative Class’.

    Introduced by: HRH The Princess Royal, RSA President.

    Chair: Luke Johnson, RSA Chair.

    http://www.thersa.org/events/audio-and-past-events/2012/why-creativity-is-the-new-economy

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 2 months ago

  2. RSA - Tomorrow’s Work. Why Yesterday’s Expectations Are Ruining Today’s Future

    RSA Keynote 7th Feb 2013; 18:00 (full recording including audience Q&A)

    Technologist and writer Ben Hammersley explores the role of the internet and digital technologies in today’s workplace.

    As social media, mobile devices, constant communication, online sharing, and open collaboration become the norms in the rest of our lives, the traditional workplace is failing to adapt.

    How do our traditional workplace models conflict with our new internet-driven expectations of how we might live and work to our full potential, and how might companies and organisations learn to adapt in the 21st century?

    Speaker: Ben Hammersley, Prime Minister’s Ambassador to TechCity, contributing editor, Wired UK, innovator in residence, Goldsmiths, University of London and author of ‘64 Things You Need to Know Now for Then’.

    Chair: Matthew Taylor, chief executive, RSA.

    http://www.thersa.org/events/audio-and-past-events/2013/tomorrows-work.-why-yesterdays-expectations-are-ruining-todays-future

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 3 months ago

  3. The airport of the future: An interview with Ben Kraal

    Ben Kraal talks to Gerry Gaffney about conducting research for the Airport Of The Future, about frames and mental models, and about how services are co-created.

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 9 months ago

  4. Is Spec Work Evil? The Online Creative Community Speaks

    The ‘no-spec’ movement has long held sway in the design community but the web has created a new model for design that allows a freer exchange of ideas and inspiration and more ways to enter the design profession than ever before. What does social creativity look like?

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 2 years ago

  5. Malcolm Gladwell - The Ecology of Success

    Now, Malcolm Gladwell is taking on success itself, in a new book called “Outliers.” He’s looking at how society and culture determine who we are, and in particular, what accounts for super-success — for the outsized success of superstars.

    It’s not what you may think, he says. Not genes or bootstrap grit. There’s a whole ecology to it, he says. Time Magazine calls his new book “a frontal assault on the great American myth of the self-made man.”

    This hour, On Point: Malcolm Gladwell, on the ecology of success.

    http://www.onpointradio.org/shows/2008/11/malcolm-gladwells-outliers/

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 3 years ago

  6. The missed trick in the new pay reality

    With employees paid to stay at home, the relationships between work and leisure, and money and no money are breaking down.

    22 June 2009 Financial Times, Listen to Lucy podcast

    Lucy Kellaway, the FT’s management columnist, pokes fun at management fads and jargon, and celebrates the ups and downs of office life.

    From http://podcast.ft.com/index.php?sid=18

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 3 years ago

  7. 43f Podcast: Gangs, Constraints, and Courageous Blocks

    Learn how ganging and constraints can help you create the blocks of time you need to devote 100% of your attention to making your best work. (10:32)

    http://www.43folders.com/2009/02/03/courageous-blocks

    —Huffduffed by briansuda 3 years ago