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23JULY2021-FRI
Four key steps to appeal to Gen Z technology talent
Friday 23rd July 2021
Sydney-based automotive company Baraja has struck a deal with NYSE-listed automotive technology company Veoneer to industrialise their trademark Spectrum-Scan LiDAR technology for use in autonomous vehicles.
Australian employees would rather quit their job than work for a company that they don’t see eye-to-eye with on social matters, a new Atlassian Corporation study has found.
In the battle to secure top technology talent and attract a pipeline of young people, it’s important to understand that Gen Z is attracted to organisations that offer a sense of purpose and the ability to make a difference. This young cohort wants to be part of a team with a true diversity of thought, a mix of age, background, culture, gender and experience, where they can both learn and contribute meaningfully.
Each of us can do our part to reduce our carbon footprint, sure. And we all should. But individual actions can only do so much. Businesses need to be setting examples for sustainability, even where governments fail to do so.
With fake news, data breaches and what feels like a new scam alert daily, we’re no longer the trusting souls we used to be and have moved into an era of distrust. Why is this important when it comes to clients? It’s important because we need our clients to trust us.
About 50,000 small to medium businesses in South Australia will have access to emergency payments from the state government to help cover losses during this week’s state-wide COVID-19 lockdown.
The government’s $100 million packages will pay $3000 to businesses forced to close, including gyms, hairdressers, nail salons, restaurants, cafes and hotels and $1000 to sole traders.
The money can be used to help cover ongoing operating costs such as rent, power bills, supplier and raw material costs and other fees.
The SA government will also expand income assistance state-wide to people who lose work during the lockdown after the federal government announced payments of up to $600 a week to people in the Adelaide hotspot zone.
More financial support is needed to help small businesses offer click and collect, and delivery services to help them survive lockdowns, according to a leading e-commerce coach.Kelly Slessor, who has worked with big players like Westfield and Woolworths and more than 1000 small businesses, said owners are hurting due to a lack of online presence.She added that many delivery companies charge such high premiums that it doesn’t work for small businesses, who need a cash injection to tap into local networks.
With around half of Australia’s population and economy now subject to hard lockdowns, the country’s ‘V’- shaped economic recovery could quickly become ”W’- shaped if persistent Covid-19 outbreaks aren’t brought under control. Already Commonwealth Bank (CBA) Group economists expect GDP to contract by 0.7 per cent in the September quarter alongside a likely lift in the unemployment rate in July 2021. With lockdowns extending in Sydney and Victoria alongside mobility curbs in South Australia, it’ll be interesting to observe whether businesses see the latest outbreaks as being transitory – preferring to retain workers by cutting hours rather than jobs.
Nearly 600 IPOs rolled out globally in the second quarter, dominated by traditional listings while SPAC activity cooled, says EY.597 IPOs came online in the second quarter of 2021, the busiest quarter for that market in 20 years, says EY.There were 59 SPAC IPOs during the period, a slowdown from 299 during the first quarter. SPAC activity is poised to pick up again in the third half of 2021.
Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com and the world’s richest man, and three other civilians completed Blue Origin’s space flight, rocketing 62 miles (100 km) above Earth after launching from Mr Bezos’ West Texas ranch.“Technically speaking, once you pass that 62-mile mark, you will be in space and therefore have travelled in space, which is the definition of an astronaut,” former astronaut Janet Kavandi, now executive vice president of Sierra Space, a unit of Sierra Nevada, said in an interview with BloombergBillionaire Richard Branson soared to 53.5 miles above the Earth aboard a space plane, after it was carried to high altitude by another aircraft.
Twitter announced that it would begin testing a new set of features for TweetDeck, the company’s often-ignored social media dashboard aimed at Twitter’s power users, which Twitter may soon turn into a new subscription service.
Billionaire investor Bill Ackman said the US economy would see a ”massive” economic boom in the fall despite the Delta variant of the coronavirus.He said trillions of dollars in stimulus, pent-up savings, and the rise in vaccinations would lead to a “massive, massive economic boom.”Ackman also said higher inflation is likely to be a new normal for the economy.
President Joe Biden and his national security team plan to meet next month in August with business executives about cybersecurity, an official said.The Aug. 25 meeting comes as the White House is scrambling to help companies protect against ransomware attacks from Russia-based criminal syndicates. The administration also confronts an aggressive cybersecurity threat from the Chinese government.A National Security Council spokesperson disclosed the meeting but did not identify the business leaders who would be participating. The meeting will focus on “how we can work together to improve the nation’s cybersecurity collectively.”
Netflix has confirmed that it will include video games as part of subscription packages at no extra cost.In a letter to investors, it said it was in the early stages of expanding into games, and those for mobile would be added to the platform first.“The time is right to learn more about how our members value games,” it said.The California-based company said it expects to sign up 3.5 million new customers in the three months to the end of September – less than the 5.86 million analysts had estimated.
Ford Motor Co. and a self-driving vehicle company it partly owns will join the Lyft ride-hailing service to offer autonomous rides on the Lyft network.The service using Ford vehicles and a driving system developed by Pittsburgh-based Argo AI will begin in Miami later this year and start in Austin, Texas, in 2022. It will begin with human backup drivers and go fully autonomous at an unspecified date. The cars will gather data to lay the groundwork to deploy 1,000 robotaxis on the Lyft network in multiple markets during the next five years, the companies said in a statement on Wednesday.
As enterprises worldwide move to digital and invest more in cloud and cybersecurity, Indian software majors are now ramping up their cloud portfolios. The latest is Wipro, which has unveiled a plan to invest $1 billion in cloud technologies over three years.The Bangalore-headquartered company has now launched Wipro FullStride Cloud Services, a platform that brings together its cloud-related capabilities and offerings to provide comprehensive cloud transformation services to its clients.The Bangalore-headquartered company has now launched Wipro Full Stride Cloud Services, a platform that brings together its cloud-related capabilities and offerings to provide comprehensive cloud transformation services to its clients.