Audley Intelligence
On global business, politics and culture
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‘After all – there is nothing like a good book!’
To mark World Book Day, the Audley team to tells us about a book they’ve read that changed the way they think.
The power and perils of the social media ‘community’
Amid the rise of Nextdoor, Lucy Thompson, a Senior Associate at Audley looks at the power and potential of social media
Crucial leadership skills are being forgotten and gender equality is suffering because of it
Audley’s Chairman, Sir Michael Lockett explores the impact the absence of leadership skills could have on gender equality
Next steps for the arts
Venues will close post-COVID, but that doesn’t mean the arts shouldn’t still exist. We need to shift our emphasis from objects and institutions onto community experience. Everything we’ve created has been around the importance of buildings themselves, rather than the people within them and the communities around them.
Responsible investment takes centre stage
The global conversation about the environment, at all levels, has sky rocketed. 2020 was, broadly speaking, an unhappy stew of events. The ongoing swirl of the climate crisis mixed with persistent societal inequality and a dollop of pandemic thrown in for good measure, has caused more of us than ever to sit up and engage with the world we live in.
Post-COVID business world – a total restructuring?
As of January 2021, vaccines are being deployed across the world. Soon the lockdowns will end but can we expect to go back to the business world we knew before the pandemic?
The year of global Britain
Four years ago, while searching for a theme to headline the prime minister’s ‘Lancaster House’ speech on Brexit, I coined the phrase ‘Global Britain’ to capture the government’s vision for the role a post-Brexit UK would play in the world.
Prospects for the US
Last year, the US experienced one of the most tumultuous years in our history – and certainly in my lifetime. Globally, the Trump era saw America loosen bonds with our allies and contend inconsistently with our rivals and adversaries.
The next wave of globalization:
While many commentators claim we have entered a new era of geopolitics and left an old era of globalized commerce, it is wrong to oppose these two scenarios. Globalization and geopolitics are not antithetical forces, as if rivalry reverses interdependence. Without the imperial ambitions of the Romans, Mongols, Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, British, and Americans, we would have no globalization.
Let loose the (robo) dogs of war
During the recent conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, drone technology appears to have proved decisive in defeating conventional armoured forces – tanks, to you and me. This suggests that we are entering one of those periods when the equilibrium between offensive and defensive technologies on the battlefield becomes mismatched; the latest chapter in the old story of longbow versus knight, machine gun against mass infantry attack, carrier-borne aircraft and battleship.
Recession in real-time
In the face of the second wave of the pandemic, the government reimposed restrictions on economic activities, which are still in place today. These differ significantly from those seen in March in several respects. Manufacturing and construction are not subject to new restrictions, and many ‘non-essential’ retail stores have improved their capabilities for online ordering and home delivery, while consumers are more accustomed to using such services. This will mitigate the short-term impact on output.
What’s next for digital media?
Post-Brexit and post-Trump, where does the media go next? In 2016, the EU referendum and presidential elections took place in quick succession, suggesting that on both sides of the Atlantic we were more polarised than ever before.
Welcome to the GET World
European CEOs and board members need to prepare for three new drivers of change that will determine their agenda in the 2020s: geopolitical and geoeconomic risk; the drive for sustainable business models according to environmental, social and governance criteria; and the ongoing technological revolution. In short: get ready for the GET world.
Let alone Jackie Weaver, no one has authority in a virtual world
In light of the viral Handforth Parish Council video, Audley’s Imogen Beecroft reflects on communications in the virtual world
Nigella Lawson's Cook. Eat. Repeat. is the Christmas tonic we've been waiting for
Audley’s Imogen Beecroft writes about the phenomenon that is Nigella’s pre-Christmas cookery series.
Episode 3 - Peter Singer
In episode three, Audley's Lucy Thompson is in conversation with New America strategist and author Peter Singer. They discuss the power of his concept of Useful Fiction and its application in a corporate setting.
Great power competition or leading from the middle?
Lucy Thompson reflects on the outcomes of the Atlantic Future Forum 2020 and the future of the global order
Why, whatever happens next week, Trump won’t ‘lose’
Chris Wilkins reflects on his experience of the Trump presidency from the inside and the threat he presents to the Democrats
Caring CEOs: do they really and does it matter?
Fiona Johnston argues that we need business leaders who aren’t afraid to show their own vulnerabilities.