Thursday, September 18th, 2008
UK – 14th January, 2008 – A free service to help start-ups and small businesses increase their productivity and competitiveness through technology is now available to companies based in Yorkshire & Humber, the South East and the South West regions of England.
The Business IT Guide was developed by e-skills UK in collaboration with market leaders such as Oracle, EDS, IBM, Accenture, Cisco, Microsoft, HP, Smart421 and BT, and has been tested extensively with small businesses.
The Guide is a user friendly online tool that helps businesses access a wide range of high quality, independent advice to help them fully exploit technology. Advice includes:
- everything a new business needs to know – from complying with legislation to security;
- where to go for trusted information;
- how to properly introduce and manage technology;
- how to deal with the resource implications: cost, training, time; and
- how to plan for growth and changing needs.
There are five separate routes to advice and information via the Guide:
- a self help tool – designed to help those unsure of their ICT needs;
- facts – designed to encourage people to take action;
- hot tips – designed to have an immediate impact;
- The Guide library – with all 72 Business IT Guides listed; and
- search facilities.
Keri-Ann Davies, Business Adviser for the Welsh Assembly Government, said:
“In the past I have made use of the Business Link website and found the best practice IT advice very useful. The Business IT Guide seems to provide more advanced information than was previously available through Business Link, and also includes the built in search facilities and links. I found it extremely informative.”
“e-Learning can also greatly enhance a small businesses acquisition of skills and delivery of training”, said Sean Griffin, Co-Founder of Learn Skills, the web-based skills and compliance training company, “and it is for that reason that we are developing training programs tailored to the needs of both SMEs and new start-ups.”
Source: e-skills Passport Winter newsletter
Tags: Accenture, BT, Cisco, companies, competitiveness, compliance, cost, e-Learning, e-skills UK, EDS, HP, IBM, information, Learn Skills, manage, Microsoft, online, Oracle, productivity, programs, security, skills, small businesses, Smart421, SMEs, start-ups, technology, tool, Training, user friendly, web-based
Posted in e-learning | Comments Off
Wednesday, September 17th, 2008
Ireland – 15th May, 2008 – The skills challenge facing the Irish economy was the subject of a major seminar organised jointly by the National College of Ireland (NCI) and the National Centre for Partnership and Performance (NCPP), and held in Dublin on May 15.
The ‘Learning at Work’ seminar was chaired by NCPP director Lucy Fallon-Byrne and was addressed by Minister for Lifelong Learning Seán Haughey, Leo Casey of the Centre for Research and Innovation in Learning and Teaching and Prof Chip Bruce, National College of Ireland.
Four national initiatives, designed to promote and encourage learning at work, were showcased also at the seminar, providing the 100-plus delegates with real-life examples of innovative responses to the future skills challenge.
Among the issues discussed at the seminar were:
- The role of workplace learning in driving and growing the Irish economy;
- The opportunities for, and obstacles to, workplace learning that exist in Ireland today;
- Effective ways of engaging employers and employees to ensure Ireland is equipped for the future skills challenge.
National College of Ireland president Paul Mooney said the message was simple:
“For Ireland Inc. to succeed, the barriers to workplace learning must be identified and systematically removed. To survive and prosper in a tougher global environment, we need to collectively up our game to out-think the competition.
“The highest performing companies of the future are the ones that are becoming engaged in workplace learning initiatives today. The time is now and there is zero room for complacency on this. The future is decided by those who sense change and actually start to do something to respond to this. For everyone else, the time bomb is ticking.”
A new DVD was launched by Minister Haughey. Produced by NCPP, the DVD profiles the practical experiences of five Irish public and private-sector organisations that have recognised and embraced workplace learning as an enabler of change. Their stories illustrate the value of promoting human talent and creativity in the workplace, and make a powerful business case for lifelong learning and workplace training and development. Upskilling is now a necessity.
Copies of the DVD are available (free of charge) on request from the National Centre for Partnership and Performance. Simply drop an email to Conor (conor@ncpp.ie) with your contact details, and he’ll post them out to you as soon as possible.
Source: Education MATTERS
Tags: business, businesses, challenge, college, colleges, companies, company, competition, competitive, competitiveness, creativity, development, educated, education, employability, employees, employer, employers, Employment, engaging, environment, games, global, human talent, ing, initiatives, innovative, innovators, Ireland, Irish, Irish economy, learn, learning, Learning at Work, Lifelong National Centre for Partnership and Performan, Minister, National College of Ireland, organisations, partnership, prosperity, research, s, seminar, skill, skills, teaching, time, train, Training, up- up-skilling, upskill, upskilling, work, working, workplace
Posted in Ireland | Comments Off