Wednesday, February 4, 2009

The Nielsen Consumer Insight Magazine February 2009


In this Issue :
While current economic conditions may be causing consumers to trim back, marketers need to resist that impulse on new product development. The key learning is that innovation can succeed during recessionary times if the fundamentals are right... Read More

Channel Shifting in a Tough Economy.
Battered by the economy, U.S. consumers are shopping less frequently, demanding value, trading down, buying less, moving to private label and shifting department purchases across channels... Read More

Global Economies Adjust.
Like a house of cards, one slight move and it all comes tumbling down. Around the world, the operative word in today’s economic climate is value. How are manufacturers and retailers coping? What are the biggest opportunities…and surprises for 2009?... Read More

Transforming China’s Growth Engine.
No longer able to rely on buyers in the rest of the world to drive its economic growth, China is relying on its own consumers to help stimulate its economy. But what will it take to get them to spend?... Read More

Awards Shows Take Centerstage.
And the winner is…. the retailer. Turns out there’s a very practical reason for performers wishing to win a Grammy or Academy Award—music sales skyrocket!... Read More

Gautrain News

Here is the latest on the Gautrain:

GAUTRAIN CELEBRATES HOMECOMING OF GAUTRAIN
"Our golden train is now finally where she belongs. And although Gautrain's physical home is in Gauteng, her real home is in the hearts and minds of all South Africans," said Gauteng Premier Paul Mashatile.
Read more

VIEW GAUTRAIN'S JOURNEY HOME
Having spent several months in an icy workshop in the United Kingdom, there could be no better homecoming for Gautrain than the hot African sun warming her golden body.
View her journey here

GAUTRAIN DEPOT AND WORKSHOP
The Gautrain Depot in Midrand is in a central location in relation to the operation of the system and is the operational hub of the system. All train movements will be controlled from the Operations Control Centre housed at the depot and the entire train fleet will also be stabled and maintained there. The bus operations control centre as well as stabling and maintenance facilities for the buses will also be housed there.
Read more

TESTING AND COMMISSIONING
Before entering into commercial service, each Gautrain train-set will be subjected to a long and rigorous testing and commissioning process. This process entails progressively more onerous tests on all systems and sub-systems from brakes and power, to air-conditioning and communications. In total, each train-set will complete approximately 3000km on the test-track before being certified for operations.
Read more

SIGNALLING SYSTEMS
Gautain's signalling solution comprises Bombardier's CITYFLO 250 system which is a fixed block signalling system based on ‘distance to go' principles with vital information being transmitted to the onboard automatic train protection (ATP) system from balises in the track. The ATP supervises the driver and train movements.
Read more

ELECTROSTAR NOISE
Gautrain will comply with international best practice in respect of noise and vibration emissions. Design noise levels both inside and outside the train (assuming good quality track) will be compliant with the relevant European standards regulating noise and vibration emissions by rail vehicles.
Read more

Bus funding crisis SATAWU briefing



The Parliamentary Monitoring Group for Transport recently heard SATAWU briefing on the Bus industry funding crisis. The briefing consisted of a five page document presented by Jane Barrett, SATAWU Policy Research Officer and outlined SATAWU's view on the issue.

Here is the Summary:
The Committee was addressed on the NCOP amendments to the National Land Transport Bill [B 51D-2008].

The original amendments in the B-version of the Bill reflected a failure by the State Law Advisor to present all the consequential amendments.

The NCOP had dealt with this matter in the C-version. The amendments dealt mainly with cross-referencing, grammatical changes and the addition of four clauses.
The Chairperson emphasised that no further amendments could be entertained as there was no time to refer the Bill back to the NCOP. The Committee committed itself to ensuring that an Amendment Bill was drafted by the new Parliament to deal with all further amendments.

The Committee was briefed on the bus subsidy crisis by the South Transport and Allied Workers Union. Corrective budgeting by the Department was questioned, and it was explained that there was some guesswork involved, as the oil price was an uncertain variable and elasticity in subsidy contracts was required. The Committee questioned the non-involvement of the taxi industry in this crisis.
The Committee resolved to host a meeting with National Treasury, the Department and all other available key players on 3 February 2009 to appeal to Treasury and the Department to make urgent contingency arrangements regarding the bus subsidy crisis.

SA Marketing News



Advertising News
D&AD Student Annual goes online
Not only will D&AD student and professional awards judging coincide for the first time this year, 2009 also marks the launch of the Student Annual Online, which will allow featured students to link to their portfolios. Read full story... Send to a friend

DBB SA out of Jupiter's orbit
A consequence of the 49% acquisition of The Jupiter Drawing Room (South Africa) & Partners by WPP, announced late last week, is that Jupiter shareholders will be releasing their shareholding equity in DDB SA. "DDB SA has enjoyed its short association with The Jupiter Drawing Room,” DDB SA CEO Glen Lomas told Bizcommunity.com on Friday, 30 January 2009. “We mutually benefited from the working relationship on a number of levels.” Read full story... Send to a friend

Dubai Lynx 2009 juries announced
The members of the four juries of the Dubai Lynx Awards have been announced. Judging will take place in Dubai, where 29 creatives and media experts from 14 countries will convene to discuss and award the best creative advertising from the MENA region. Read full story... Send to a friend

Cannes Lions open for entries
LONDON: Entries are now open in 56th Cannes Lions International Advertising Festival for all categories - Film, Press, Outdoor, Direct, Media, Cyber, Radio, Promo, Design, Titanium, Integrated and the new PR Lions category. There are also changes to Integrated, Media, Direct and Promo Lions, and more ways to enter Digital work in various categories. Read full story... Send to a friend

MMA releases mobile banking, updated mobile advertising overviews
NEW YORK, LONDON, SINGAPORE & SAO PAULO: The Mobile Marketing Association (MMA) released its Mobile Banking Overview yesterday, Thursday, 29 January 2009. This educational resource is designed to provide analysis of the marketing opportunities and attributes that the mobile channel represents for the financial sector. Also updated this week was its Mobile Advertising Overview. Read full story... Send to a friend

The US president Barack Obama has undoubtedly inspired art, street art and fashion
The Getty Images Creative Research team finds how a politician is influencing marketing and advertising and how his look is becoming a visual reference. Read full story... Send to a friend

Loeries weekend date change
The 31st anniversary of The Loerie Awards will depart from its traditional Saturday and Sunday timetable; this year's festival weekend runs 25 - 27 September 2009 in Cape Town. With Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, starting on the evening of Sunday 27 September, the awards ceremonies will take place on Friday and Saturday nights. Read full story... Send to a friend
Branding News

Meltdown creates new global champions
We have now arrived right in the middle of that second half of the hyper-accelerated phase, where western brands start to fall like dominos. As pointed out in my column first printed in 2006, Global image repositioning race heats up, in the US alone hundreds of its world-class brands are being erased. From monster banking to mega manufacturing, some 73 000 stores alone being closed in the first half of 2009, according to the International Council of Shopping Centers. Read full story... Send to a friend

One crucial factor
Every brand relies on one crucial factor: what happens inside the company behind it, or what is known as the ‘inside out' factor. This is the specialist focus of Interbrand Sampson Inside, the new brand engagement consultancy in the Interbrand Sampson Group. Read full story... Send to a friend
Exhibition News
What happens offline drives online
When the IEC recently announced a second voters' registration weekend, where did you first go to find more information on where to register? What about when Thabo Mbeki resigned? Where did you find the lineup of the Coke Zero music fest or the photos of Barack Obama's inauguration? Most likely, your first point of call was an online search for information. Read full story... Send to a friend

Thebe goes greener in 2009
Thebe Exhibitions and Projects will ensure that all steps are in place towards a greener events industry in future. Managing Director Carol Weaving says the company's greening policy will be further refined and presented to exhibitors as part of its marketing strategy. Read full story... Send to a friend

Even more to talk about at Design Indaba
Despite the tough economic climate, Design Indaba Expo 2009 has reported that it has grown with more than 60 new exhibitors and has secured more than 20% extra floor space since 2008. With a month to go until the event, already more than 100 buyers have pre-registered, including 70 international buyers. Read full story... Send to a friend
Youth Marketing News
Campaign on the alert for smarties
Sasol regularly awards university bursaries to over 250 up-and-coming Grade 12 learners and BEng, BSc and BCom students every year. “To promote Sasol's bursaries programme among the smarties out there, we've launched a campaign that uses an awesome cast of seven characters,” explains Bronwyn Watt, Sasol group brand and marketing manager. Read full story... Send to a friend

Africa's first family and children's industry network
Being leaders in connecting families and children with brands, and building on the success of their monthly newsletter, Chirp, Egg Marketing & Communications will be launching Chirp Network, Africa's first family and children's industry network platform, in February this year. Read full story... Send to a friend

The State of Green Business in the USA


Greenbiz.com releases an annual State of Green Business report and recently released the newest one.
The report assesses how, and how well, companies are doing from an environmental perspective. The free 62-page report offers 10 trends of the past year as well as their GreenBiz Index, a set of 20 indicators that, in aggregate, provide a picture of U.S. companies' environmental achievements.
Here is the table of contents

Top Stories of 2008............................................................................ 4
The Green Economy Gains Currency.............................................................. 4
Water Becomes the New Carbon.................................................................... 5
Building Efficiency Rises Again........................................................................ 7
Universities Take Class Actions........................................................................ 9
Green Moves Up, and Down, the Chain of Command................................. 10
Product Stewardship Creates a Material Change.......................................... 11
Green Marketing Suffers a Failure to Communicate..................................... 13
Carbon Becomes a Business Imperative....................................................... 14
Information Technology Plugs Into Green..................................................... 16
Greener Design Comes Out of the Lab........................................................ 17
The GreenBiz Index
Introduction ................................................................................................... 19
Summary Chart .............................................................................................. 20
Building Energy Efficiency ............................................................................ 22
Carbon Intensity............................................................................................ 24
Carbon Transparency .................................................................................... 26
Cleantech Investments ................................................................................. 28
Clean-Energy Patents.................................................................................... 30
Corporate Reporting..................................................................................... 32
Employee Commuting.................................................................................. 34
Employee Telecommuting ............................................................................ 36
Energy Efficiency........................................................................................... 38
E-Waste......................................................................................................... 40
Financial Impacts............................................................................................ 42
Fleet Impacts.................................................................................................. 44
Green Jobs..................................................................................................... 46
Green Office Space ...................................................................................... 48
Green Power Use .......................................................................................... 50
Packaging Intensity ....................................................................................... 52
Paper Use and Recycling............................................................................... 54
Toxic Emissions ............................................................................................. 56
Toxics in Manufacturing.................................................................................. 58
Water Intensity................................................................................................ 60
Credits / About Greener World Media........................................................... 62

Take Overs- December 2008 to 4 February 2009


Please see a summary of this month’s TakeOver Talk activity below. Additional information and search / sort facilities are available on our website (click on TakeOver Talk):


click on image to enlarge

Access to South African Institute of Race Relations

The library recently acquired access to the South African Institute of Race Relations (SAIRR).

This website is home to the largest and most comprehensive database tracking trends on South Africa. It provides a wide variety of statistical and other data on South Africa, ranging from education, health, social development and welfare to business, employment, the economy, and politics.

It really is a terrific website and well worth bookmarking it or subscribing to its RSS feed.

The Research and publications section covers the following:
  • South Africa Survey
    The South Africa Survey has been published annually by the Institute since 1947. It is a 500-page statistical reference work on every area of the country’s socio-economic development. Made up of statistical tables and charts, the Survey tracks trends over time and offers forecasts where available. It also contains international comparisons and limited analysis.
  • Fast Facts Online
    Fast Facts is a monthly bulletin providing analysis of key development and policy indicators. It is designed to be read quickly by busy people. Fast Facts also tracks 170 socio-economic indicators in each issue.
  • Resource Centre
    The Institute's Resource Centre tracks and updates files on over 1200 political, social, and economic subject headings on a daily basis. It is the best and biggest current affairs library in South Africa. It also contains significant holdings of books, journals, historical documents, and biographical files. It provides an Information Service for Business and Corporate subscribers to send electronic requests for any available data on South Africa. Queries are answered within 24 hours.
  • South African Mirror
    The South African Mirror is a state-of-the-nation style briefing presented annually by the Institute at venues around South Africa. Briefings are also available in-house for Corporate subscribers
  • Special research projects
    The Institute operates a number of Special Research Projects which range from information services for public representatives to in-depth research on race relations, affirmative action, and other topical issues.
  • Outreach projects
    The Institute is regularly consulted by the local and international media on all aspects of South African development. Literally hundreds of Articles and News Reports cite the Institute annually. This section contains selected references to the Institute from the media.
  • Annual Report
    The Annual Report contains the activities and accounts of the Institute for any given year
  • Historical publications
    The Institute has published widely on South Africa since 1929. A selection of these historical documents, reports, and papers will be uploaded to this section of the website from time to time.
  • Hoernlé Lectures
    The Hoernlé memorial lecture honours Professor R F Alfred Hoernlé, and his wife, Agnes Winifred Hoernlé, both of whom, as presidents, shaped Institute thinking during the organisation's early existence.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Logo's after the financial crisis (a bit of fun)



























I recieved this in an email and am unable to trace the orginal source. Some can be found here, however, if you know who the legal copyright author is please let me know.

Intelligence 2.0 Webinar


Hosted by the Center for Business Intelligence - Presented by Aurora WDC, Digimind, Comintell & Traction Software - February 12

Web Seminar Overview:
The first generation of competitive, business and market intelligence systems were designed to produce asymmetries of information between a company and the forces of risk arrayed against it. But ubiquitous, real-time open source information access has given desktop access to even the most granular of industry market information. The result is that competitive advantage based on an information gap is fleeting at best and, if relied upon too much, can even lead to errors in judgment when deciding which direction to take the company.

The age of asymmetric interpretation is upon us. Decision makers everywhere must now look at the same massive data stream as everyone else, but see things differently to create competitive advantage based on these differences. We call this inflection point "Intelligence 2.0" as it is also characterized by a new, deeper level of engagement and collaboration by and between the employees of the firm in order to help the system function properly.

There are a variety of tools that can help automate the routine information processing activities of a company's intelligence team so they can see indicators of change more clearly, think ahead about what and how to manage their businesses, and make decisions that create breakthrough value for customers and performance for the company.

Join us for detailed case studies by three of the top vendors in the software business today about how they have helped healthcare and life science companies to use their systems to understand risk, create value, and drive performance and success.

Register Today!
Enroll online. Use Promo Code WDC212 and receive a $50 Discount
Call toll free (800) 817-8601. Use your American Express, Visa or MasterCard.
Can't Attend?
Choose between the MP4 or listening in on the Encore presentation:
MP4 File / Event Recording:
  • $295
  • You'll receive an electronic file for you to save and play as many times as you wish. This file includes the entire web seminar, including the Q&A period and all presentation materials, within two weeks of the live date.

24/7 Instant Access Web Seminar Presentation:

  • $145
  • You'll have access to one dial-in for an archived recording of the entire web seminar, including the Q&A period. You can log into the URL in any time of day or night for three months from the live air date

OECD: Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and Local Development news



5th Annual Meeting of the OECD LEED Forum on Partnerships and Local Governance
The meeting will focus on Building Strong Partnerships with the Private Sector for Better Jobs and Inclusion. Public sector institutions increasingly understand that working with business at the local level is crucial for promoting quality jobs and social inclusion. Localities are gearing education and training to business needs. Some regions are upgrading local skills demand, working with business to improve productivity thus increasing the availability of good quality jobs. A collective response is required from industry, government, educational institutions, trade unions and community.

Increasing the Attractiveness of Places through Cultural Resources: Publication and Follow-up Seminars
The Tourism Committee has recently completed a study on “Increasing the Attractiveness of Places through Cultural Resources”. The main documents and case studies are summarised in "The Impact of Culture on Tourism " (published January 2009). Two follow-up seminars will be organised to disseminate the outcomes: “Culture and Tourism: A Strategic Partnership ” on 23-24 January 2009 in Mexico; and “A new Design for Tourism: culture, tourism and creative industries; driving forces for local development” on 26-27 February 2009 (visit www.vorarlberg.travel).

Monday, January 26, 2009

University news from Africa




NIGERIA: Government in court over ruling councils
Tunde Fatunde
The Academic Staff Union of Universities, the ASUU, has dragged the N igerian government before the Federal High Court, challenging as illegal President Shehu Musa Yar'Adua's failure to reconstitute the governing councils of federal universities. All councils were dissolved in 2007 and the lack of the decision-making bodies has hampered university operations. The court action has jolted the presidency which claims to champion the rule of law.


ZIMBABWE: Universities demand US dollars
Clemence Manyukwe
Universities and their lecturers are demanding payment in foreign currency, with the institutions charging dollar tuition fees of US$700 and $1,500 per semester, as inflation in the crisis-torn southern African country plays havoc with the local currency and the education and health sectors collapse. Students are not sure whether they will get their results after lecturers declined to mark examination scripts, citing poor salaries and working conditions.


EGYPT: Corpse shortage affects medical students
Ashraf Khaled
When he applied to attend the medical school of Cairo University, Egypt's biggest public institution, Ahmed Masoud never dreamed he and fellow students with limited economic resources would face the problem of a shortage of corpses for autopsy training. "This badly affects our medical skills," says Masoud. "And, with examinations nearing, we are left with two options: either to buy corpses ourselves or attend private tuition classes in anatomy. Most of us cannot afford either."


UGANDA: Students protest 'discriminatory' fees
Kayiira Kizito
Late last year, Kenyan students enrolled at Makerere University, Uganda's most famous institution, protested against 'discriminatory' foreign student fees and other charges. As with many other universities around the world, Makerere charges differential rates for domestic and international students with those from East Africa pay around 1.5 times the local rate.



TUNISIA: Conference discusses Averroès project
Mobility of university students and teachers, and joint studies and diplomas, were on the agenda at the University of Sousse during a three-day conference to discuss the Euro-Mediterranean Averroès programme, reported La Presse of Tunisia

SENEGAL: Alumni demand dismissal of UCAD rector
The alumni association of the Université Cheikh Anta Diop (UCAD) of Dakar, Senegal's biggest university, last week demanded the immediate departure of rector Abdou Salam Sall, claiming he was the "principal obstacle to a calm academic year". If he did not leave, they said, they would "paralyse the university".


CAMEROON: Forgers of Slovakia university papers bust
A network of forgers who extorted large sums of money from parents hoping to enrol their children as students in Slovakia has been uncovered in Yaoundé and Douala, say newspaper reports.

MALAWI: Plans for a Muslim university
Malawi's former President, Bakili Muluzi, is planning to open a Muslim university. The institution will join other church-run universities - the Catholic University and Livingstone University (which is run by the Presbyterian Church) - to outnumber Malawi's two public institutions, the University of Malawi and Mzuzu University.

ZAMBIA: University to charge 'economic' fees
The University of Zambia will begin charging 'economic' fees this year after submitting proposals to the government. Vice-chancellor Professor Steven Simukanga said that although the government wanted affordable student fees, this was not possible because government grants were inadequate said.

University news from the West

GLOBAL: Ban sex between lecturers and students? Paul Rigg
When Professor Istvan Pogany, 57, began a consensual relationship with one of his students at Britain's University of Warwick, he did what many would consider 'good practice' and informed his line manager. But the student, who is in her 30s, then fell pregnant and her subsequent anguished decision to have an abortion led to lurid headlines that raised the question again whether intimate relationships between academics and students should be more strongly discouraged, or even prohibited.

US-INDIA: Boosting private-public partnerships Geoff Maslen
A high-powered taskforce set up by the US Asia Society to expand interactions between India and the new Obama administration has called for the creation of education partnerships between the two nations to cope with India's burgeoning higher education and secondary school populations. In a new report*, the taskforce says the training requirements for India's large population exceed current capacity, "a challenge uniquely suited for linkages with US institutions".

INDONESIA: Students swindled and stranded David Jardine
A scandal involving 49 Indonesian students who sought places in Egypt's prestigious Al-Azhar University has been revealed. Instead of enrolling in the Cairo university, the students ended up in Malaysia where 15 were discovered doing odd jobs to support themselves.

BANGLADESH: Private universities meet demand Mahdin Mahboob
The system of private universities is a relatively new concept in Bangladesh. Because of the ever-growing demand for education at the university level, and the fact that existing public universities could not meet the need, the government passed a Private Universities Act in 1992. Starting with a handful, the number of private universities has grown rapidly and stands at 54 to date, compared with 21 public universities.

UK: Reskilling and upskilling Diane Spencer
The higher education sector should play a greater part in the government's agenda of improving skills of the workforce, says a new report* by a parliamentary select committee. MPs looked at the review of leading businessman Lord Leitch, published in 2006, which was based on depressing statistics revealing the level of skills among the UK working population.

GLOBAL: New African research resource
A new online search portal called the HERANA Gateway provides access to the latest research on African higher education. Using Google technology, the Gateway returns focused search results from more than 15 sites worldwide - including University World News and the Centre for Higher Education Transformation in South Africa - making it one of the most specialised resources of its kind.

PHILIPPINES: Trikes spread telecommunications
Five young Filipino graduates are building the country's first self-contained and wireless-enabled mobile telecentres using the national mode of transport - the three-wheeled motorcycle called a Trike.

FRANCE: Inter-university information service Jane Marshall
Nearly 150 librarians from 14 Parisian university libraries have banded together to open Rue des facs, an online documentary information service for students and academics. They can send in questions - in French - and should receive a reply by email within three days.

The language of competition
Continental business schools are spearheading the attempt to access the lucrative market for higher education in English. Matthew Reisz reports

Get wise to the product'
Knowledge for its own sake' is as narrowly utilitarian a remit for universities as the business-facing alternative, argues Gary Day

When it comes to the crunch...
The economic downturn is affecting most sectors in the UK, including higher education. But, writes Hannah Fearn, it is not necessarily all bad news

The support troops are getting flak
Social scientists deployed in war zones to engage with civilians and advise US military commanders are under fire from their peers, writes Jon Marcus

The queue's the thing
National Theatre-going regular Rivka Isaacson finds compelling drama in the early morning cast of characters waiting to buy day tickets

Happy to be here
Times Higher Education's annual Student Experience Survey highlights a host of institutions bent on making the university experience first rate in every way. Rebecca Attwood reports


Here Comes the Flood
How to handle the constant pileup of scholarly publications? Scott McLemee takes a look at two alternatives.

Half Empty or Half Full
New report attempts to gather key data on women in higher education -- students, faculty, administrators -- and to analyze key issues. In just about every category, study finds progress and disappointments.
Assessing Assessment
New center with backing from key education groups will compile data and case studies on evaluation of student learning. And new coalition plans to speak on higher ed's response to demands for accountability.

'I Am Less Patient and Dress Better'
Research project outlines the changes -- positive and negative -- experienced by faculty members who become administrators.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Latest Key Findings




P6343.2 - Motor trade sales, November 2008
Motor trade sales for the three months ended November 2008 decreased by 0,2% compared with the three months ended November 2007, while the corresponding growth for the same period in 2007 was 6,0%. This decrease was mainly the result of the general decrease in new vehicle sales (contributing -6,2 percentage points). However, the negative growth was counteracted by the positive growth experienced in the form of sales of fuel and sales of accessories (contributing 3,8 and 3,1 percentage points respectively).

P6141.2 - Wholesale trade sales, November 2008
Wholesale trade sales, at constant (2000) prices, for the three months ended November 2008 increased by 2,7% compared with the three months ended November 2007. The annual growth rate for the corresponding period in 2007 was 6,0%. Seasonally adjusted wholesale trade sales, at constant (2000) prices, for the three months ended November 2008 increased by 0,3% compared with the three months ended August 2008.

Your clasroom in the future

The 2009 Horizon Report describes the continuing work of the NMC’s Horizon Project, a long-running qualitative research project that seeks to identify and describe emerging technologies likely to have a large impact on teaching, learning, research, or creative expression within Higher Education.

You can also view the reports for 2008, 2007, 2006, 2005 and 2004 if you'd like to check how accurate their predictions were.

So expect more of the following in your classrooms in the next:

One year or less:
  • Mobiles
    Mobiles are already in use as tools for education on many campuses. New interfaces, the ability to connect to wifi and GPS in addition to a variety of cellular networks, and the availability of third-party applications have created a device with nearly infinite possibilities for education, networking, and personal productivity on the go; almost every student carries a mobile device, making it a natural choice for content delivery and even field work and data capture.

  • Cloud Computing
    The emergence of cloud-based applications is causing a shift in the way we think about how we use software and store our files. Educational institutions are beginning to take advantage of ready-made applications hosted on a dynamic, ever-expanding cloud that enable end users to perform tasks that have traditionally required site licensing, installation, and maintenance of individual software packages. Email, word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, collaboration, media editing, and more can all be done inside a web browser, while the software and files are housed in the cloud.

Already, cloud-based applications are being used in the K-12 sector to provide virtual computers to students and staff without requiring each person to own the latest laptop or desktop machine; a handful of basic machines, provided they can access the Internet and support a web browser, are all that is needed for access to virtually unlimited data storage and programs of all kinds.

Two to Three years:

  • Geo-Everything
    Everything on the Earth’s surface has a location that can be expressed with just two coordinates. Using the new classes of geolocation tools, it is very easy to determine and capture the exact location of physical objects — as well as capturing the location where digital media such as photographs and video are taken. The other side of this coin is that it is also becoming easier to work with the geolocative data thus captured: it can be plotted on maps; combined with data about other events, objects, or people; graphed; charted; or manipulated in myriad ways.

A sampling of location-aware applications across disciplines includes the following:

Literature
Geotagging and virtual geocaching can be used to create annotated maps and real-world locations related to works of literature, enhancing the experience of reading the story. For instance, out of personal interest, one reader created a map of the course described in The Travels of Marco Polo, including passages from the text, photographs of the places mentioned (historical and contemporary), annotations and links, and other information
Medicine.
The University of Florida has used a 2-dimensional web-based Transparent Reality Simulation Engine to teach students how to operate medical machinery for several years. Recently, the addition of a GPS-enabled tablet device has allowed learners who are spatially challenged to experience the transparent reality visualization overlaid directly onto the real machine, enabling them to use the machine’s controls rather than a mouse as input to the simulation. Geolocation is used to track the tablet and align the physical machine with the visualization on the tablet.
Games-based Learning
The Local Games Lab at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is developing "local games," learning experiences set in real-life neighborhoods and ecological habitats. Combining geolocation and alternate reality games, local games immerse the learner in a physical space as they explore the unique characteristics of the location and its inhabitants.


  • The Personal Web
    Armed with tools for tagging, aggregating, updating, and keeping track of content, today’s learners create and navigate a web that is increasingly tailored to their own needs and interests: this is the personal web.

The tools that enable the personal web are also ideal toolsets for research and learning. The ability to tag, categorize, and publish work online, instantly, without the need to understand or even touch the underlying technologies provides a host of opportunities for faculty and students. By organizing online information with tags and web feeds, it is a simple matter to create richly personal resource collections that are easily searchable, annotated, and that support any interest.

Four to Five Years:

  • Semantic-Aware Applications
    The idea behind the semantic web is that although online data is available for searching, its meaning is not: computers are very good at returning keywords, but very bad at understanding the context in which keywords are used.

The capability of semantic-aware applications to aid in searching and finding has implications for research, especially in light of the rate at which web content is being created. As semantic search tools continue to develop, it will be more common to see highly relevant results that display desired information in the hit list summary itself, saving time that is now spent clicking through to each page in turn. Semantic search also promises to reduce the number of unrelated or irrelevant results for a given search and to facilitate natural-language queries, both potentially useful features for researchers.

  • Smart Objects
    Smart objects are the link between the virtual world and the real. A smart object "knows" about itself — where and how it was made, what it is for, who owns it and how they use it, what other objects in the world are like it — and about its environment. Smart objects can report on their exact location and current state (full or empty, new or depleted, recently used or not).

There are very few examples of smart objects in use in academia, although significant research is being done into how to create and track smart objects and how they might eventually be used. A sampling of applications for smart objects across disciplines includes the following:

Archaeology.
The way that a single smart object connects to a network of information is useful for many disciplines. Consider a student or researcher examining a group of objects from an archaeological dig. A tag attached to the label of each object, when scanned with a mobile device like a camera-enabled phone, would instantly bring up photographs of other objects from the dig, video of the dig site, maps, and any other media or information associated with the area.
Health Care.
Researchers and students at the University of Arkansas have created a simulated hospital environment in the virtual world of Second Life to test the practical and social implications of tagging and tracking patients, hospital staff, supplies, and locations.
Oncology
At Purdue University, researchers have developed a tiny smart object designed to be injected into a tumor. Once placed there, the device can report on the doses of radiation received at the site where it is implanted and indicate the exact location of the tumor during treatment.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

New releases from StatsSA

StatsSA released their newest statistics:
P6242.1 - Retail trade sales, November 2008
Retail trade sales decrease in real terms Retail trade sales, at constant (2000) prices, for the three months ended November 2008 decreased by 4,0% compared with the three months ended November 2007. Retail trade sales, at constant (2000) prices, for the same period in 2007 increased by 1,1%.

Retail trade sales at constant (2000) prices for November 2008 also decreased by 4,0% compared with November 2007. Retail trade sales at constant (2000) prices for the first eleven months of 2008 reflected a decrease of 2,4% compared with the first eleven months of 2007, while growth for the same period in 2007 was 5,8%.

Retail trade sales at current prices, for the three months ended November 2008, increased by 11,4% compared with the three months ended November 2007. The major contributors to this increase were general dealers (+5,7 percentage points), retailers in textiles, clothing, footwear and leather goods (+2,1 percentage points), retail trade in specialised food, beverages and tobacco stores (+1,8 percentage points), and all other retailers (+1,2 percentage points).

Retailers in household furniture, appliances and equipment contributed negatively (-0,6 of a percentage point) to the change in retail trade sales.

Retail trade sales at current prices for November 2008 increased by 10,7% compared with November 2007, while sales for the corresponding period in 2007 increased by 8,7%.

The total number of civil summonses issued for debt for the three months ended November 2008 increased by 5,2% compared with the three months ended November 2007. However, there was a decrease of 4,2% between November 2007 and November 2008.
The total number of civil judgements recorded for debt for the three months ended November 2008 decreased by 12,9% compared with the three months ended November 2007.
There was also a decrease of 16,4% between November 2007 and November 2008. The total value of civil judgements recorded for the three months ended November 2008 decreased by 3,4% compared with the three months ended November 2007. However, there was a 13,3% y/y increase in the value of civil judgements recorded for debt in November 2008.

The value of recorded building plans passed by larger municipalities (at current prices) during January to November 2008 decreased by 4,8% (-R3 649,1 million) compared with January to November 2007. This was due to a decrease of 15,1% (-R6 290,7 million) reported for residential buildings.
However, the decrease in residential buildings was partially counteracted by increases reported for non-residential buildings (17,0% or R2 475,7 million) and additions and alterations (0,8% or R165,8 million).

The preliminary estimates indicate that the value of buildings reported as completed to larger municipalities (at current prices) during the above-mentioned period increased by 9,3% (R4 000,9 million). Increases were reported for additions and alterations (25,2% or R1 912,9 million and non-residential buildings (24,4% or R2 100,0 million). Residential buildings decreased marginally by R12,0 million.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Business/Economics E-Reference Ratings

The Library Journal recently published an article comparing the various Business/Economic E-resources available.

Each database is rated based on the seven criteria librarians consider the most when making purchasing decisions:

  1. Scope - range and breadth of content
  2. Writing -quality of the writing; consideration of the audience
  3. Design - visual appeal; strengths and weakness of the interface
  4. Bells & Whistles - inclusion of multimedia files, interactive maps, blogs, and other features
  5. Ease of Use - logic behind the organization; efficiency of the search mechanisms
  6. Linking - cross-searchability with other files; ability to integrate with and link to other products
  7. Value for money - Value is a relative term, taking into consideration not only cost but myriad related factors. If a product is expensive, does its comprehensiveness and quality warrant the high cost? Are too much time and energy required to find material, given the price?

Below is the results in table format. (Click on image to enlarge)


Of the 14 databases used in the comparison UJ used to subscribe to 3:

  1. ABI/Inform - which we've cancelled. In the LJ comparison ABI/Inform did not receive a high rating for value for money, scope or writing. It did slightly better for ease of use.
  2. Business Source Complete - the Library subscribes to the Business Source package from Ebsco (the Complete package includes a few more journals). This database was rated as excellent in terms of scope and value for money; it also scored high in the other categories
  3. Emerald EMX - Emerald scored quite high for the linking they provide and also managed a good/plentiful rating for the other six criteria

Here is the comments from LJ regarding the two databases we still have (Business Source and Emerald):

  1. Visually attractive and easily searchable, this business resource offers everything a user would expect from a native EBSCO product. Searches can be limited to academic journals, trade publications, magazines, newspapers, books/monographs, company profiles, SWOT analysis, country reports, industry profiles, market research reports, and product reviews. With over 4000 titles (3000 full text), the product is well worth the price. If your library can afford only one business resource this year, give this one a try.
  2. Emerald has brilliantly combined its web site and online database into a single platform to provide 85,000 full-text articles from 175 peer-reviewed journals as well as web site content. Search results can be limited by clicking on articles, abstracts & reviews, Emerald site, or other content tabs. Current journal issues are easily located from the journal list, which are displayed with cover images, and links to RSS, latest issue, editorial team, and submission guidelines.

Web 2.0 comes to the White House


Hot of the press is the newly launched whitehouse.gov, the official White House website.
The new website includes interactive features such as a blog written by Macon Phillips, the Director of New Media for the White House, email alerts and a feedback form. The briefing room includes space for a weekly video address, slide shows, proclamations, executive orders and information on appointments and nominees.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Pocket Guide to USA Transportation 2009

The USA Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS), a part of the Research and Innovative Technology Administration (RITA), has published the Pocket Guide to Transportation 2009 – a 50-page quick reference guide to informative transportation data.

The 12th annual Pocket Guide covers data on the transportation system, transportation safety and security, mobility, transportation and the economy, and transportation and the environment.
This would a wonderful idea for our own Transport department to copy.

Marketing and Advertising trends for SA

The South African online marketing website bizcommunity.com released their Biz'09 Trend Report recently covering upcoming trends in SA.

Here are some of the predictions:

Special events to spur outdoor advertising in 2009
Changing shopper habits in 2009
How the digital landscape will shape marketing in 2009
Communication trends to be mindful of in 2009
The mobile media landscape in 2009 - a forecast
Sea change for SA Internet in 2009
eMarketing in 2009: exciting times, surprises predicted
A 2009 wishlist for African business objectives
Online consumer trends for 2009

Which would you choose - a hamburger or your friend?

Cherryflava reported on an innovative way Burger King used Facebook for a new burger campaign, the Whopper Sacrifice Campaign.

Burger King reckoned that Facebook friends are cheap, and by deleting 10 of them - you are rewarded with a health-problem causing Whopper...mmmm...meat.

Facebook, however, wasn't happy. It informed BK the application could not go against user expectations because Facebook explicitly says it will not inform users about friend removal.
For the application to continue, Facebook's tech team disabled the broadcasting feature.

After it learned of the restrictions, BK pulled the plug on Whopper Sacrifice. In just a week, the application boasted 82,000 users and more than 230,000 friends removed.

All eyes on Washington

The presidential inauguration is the official day that the President of the United States is sworn into office. The purpose of this inauguration is to honor the incoming president with formal ceremonies, including: a Presidential Swearing-in Ceremony, an Inaugural Address, and an Inaugural Parade.


The inauguration will take place tomorrow on January 20, 2009 in Washington D.C. on the steps of the United States Capitol and will be covered by all the big news channels on DSTV. The swearing-in ceremony starts at 19:00 (Africa time) with the Inaugural Parade starting at 21:30

President-elect Barack Obama will take the oath of office, which states the following:

"I do solemnly swear that I will faithfully execute the office of the President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States."


The theme for the inauguration is The Birth of a New Freedom and keeping with the Election 2.0 style the Obama Inauguration already has an impressive website running with blogs, videos, bios etc.

New African marketing journal call for editors

The AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING MANAGEMENT (AJMM) is a multidisciplinary peer-reviewed journal published that will be monthly by Academic Journals.
AJMM is dedicated to increasing the depth of the subject across disciplines with the ultimate aim of expanding knowledge of the subject.

Editors and reviewers
AJMM is seeking qualified researchers to join its editorial team as editors, subeditors or reviewers. Kindly send your resume to AJMM@acadjourn.org

Call for Papers
The journal welcomes the submission of manuscripts that meet the general criteria of significance and scientific excellence, and will publish:

· Original articles in basic and applied research
· Case studies
· Critical reviews, surveys, opinions, commentaries and essays

We invite you to submit your manuscript(s) to AJMM@acadjourn.org for publication in the Maiden Issue (April 2009).

Our objective is to inform authors of the decision on their manuscript(s) within four weeks of submission.

Following acceptance, a paper will normally be published in the next issue. Instruction for authors and other details are available on our website; http://www.academicjournals.org/AJMM/Instruction.htm


AJMM is an Open Access Journal

One key request of researchers across the world is unrestricted access to research publications. Open access gives a worldwide audience larger than that of any subscription-based journal and thus increases the visibility and impact of published works. It also enhances indexing, retrieval power and eliminates the need for permissions to reproduce and distribute content. AJMM is fully committed to the Open Access Initiative and will provide free access to all articles as soon as they are published.

For more information, please visit the journal site.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Call for papers on Green Management


Management Decision is calling for papers for their Special Issue on "Why green management matters" Edited by: Professor David Lamond & Dr Rocky Dwyer

Background
Following the 2007 special issue "Alleviating poverty through trade", and the 2008 "Questions we ask about ethics in a global marketplace", this is the third in an ongoing series of special issues of Management Decision devoted to matters of ethics, sustainability and corporate social responsibility and woven in with the organising theme of the Academy of Management. In 2009, the theme is Green Management Matters.

The special issue will be edited by Rocky Dwyer and David Lamond and will appear under the title of "Why green management matters". It is scheduled for Volume 47, Issue 7 and will appear in August 2009 in CD format, as well as its usual hard copy version, to coincide with the Academy of Management Conference in Chicago.

Whether dealing with waste management or investment management, today's decision makers are confronted with the "green" in those decisions - sustainability, carbon footprints, industrial ecosystems, greenhouse gasses, and energy efficiency are some of the elements which are increasingly the "stuff" of those decisions, the criteria by which decisions are judged to be more or less sound.

This issue seeks to make a contribution to the debate about the "green" consistent with its title "Why green management matters". Papers are welcomed that explore green management and the principles which underpin this approach.

Questions such as "Can I just get by through paying someone else to have a smaller carbon footprint?", "Should business be my brother's (green) keeper?", and "Isn't my responsibility to the shareholders?" needs answers. Conceptual papers, as well as qualitative and quantitative research papers, are welcomed, as they add to the knowledge base about corporate social responsibility and ethics in relation to green management matters.

Papers
Submission of the full paper is required by 1 February 2009 for consideration for the special issue. Papers submitted will be subject to a minimum double-blind peer review process to ensure that this special issue maintains the excellent reputation and record of Management Decision.

For style guidelines please visit the Management Decision web site.

Submissions to Management Decision are made using ScholarOne's Manuscript Central http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/md.

Full instructions are on the author guidelines site. As a guide, articles should be between 3,000 and 6,000 words in length.

A title of not more than 12 words should be provided.

Please e-mail any queries to:
Professor David Lamond PhD E-mail: david.lamond@ntu.ac.uk
Dr Rocky Dwyer PhDE-mail: Dwyer.RJ@forces.gc.ca

ScienceDirect's Hottest articles July - September 2008


Every 3 months ScienceDirect distributes a list of the Top 25 Hottest articles published with in a specific subject area.

Here is the newest list available for Business, Management & Accounting for the time period: July - September 2008:
1. Market efficiency, long-term returns, and behavioral finance • ArticleJournal of Financial Economics, Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 283-306Fama, E.F.Cited by Scopus (405)

2. Issues in Supply Chain Management - Don't Automate, Obliterate • ArticleIndustrial Marketing Management, Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 65-83Lambert, D.M.; Cooper, M.C.Cited by Scopus (210)

3. Innovation behavior in the hotel industry • ArticleOmega, Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 380-394Orfila-Sintes, F.; Mattsson, J.

4. Investor protection and corporate governance • ArticleJournal of Financial Economics, Volume 58, Issue 1-2, Pages 3-27La Porta, R.; Lopez-de-Silanes, F.; Shleifer, A.; Vishny, R.Cited by Scopus (334)

5. Information asymmetry, corporate disclosure, and the capital markets: A review of the empirical disclosure literature • ArticleJournal of Accounting and Economics, Volume 31, Issue 1-3, Pages 405-440Healy, P.M.; Palepu, K.G.Cited by Scopus (195)

6. Corporate governance and firm performance • ArticleJournal of Corporate Finance, Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 257-273Bhagat, S.; Bolton, B.Cited by Scopus (1)

7. Information distortion in a supply chain and its mitigation using soft computing approach • ArticleOmega, Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 282-299Balan, S.; Vrat, P.; Kumar, P.

8. The evolving theory of quality management: The role of Six Sigma • ArticleJournal of Operations Management, Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 630-650Zu, X.; Fredendall, L.D.; Douglas, T.J.

9. A grounded theory research approach to building and testing TQM theory in operations management • ArticleOmega, Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 825-837McAdam, R.; Leonard, D.; Henderson, J.; Hazlett, S.A.

10. Terrorism and its impact on economic growth and technological innovation • ArticleTechnological Forecasting and Social Change, Volume 74, Issue 2, Pages 129-138Koh, W.T.H.

11. Earnings management and earnings quality • ArticleJournal of Accounting and Economics, Volume 45, Issue 2-3, Pages 350-357Lo, K.

12. Project management: cost, time and quality, two best guesses and a phenomenon, its time to accept other success criteria • ArticleInternational Journal of Project Management, Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 337-342Atkinson, R.Cited by Scopus (73)

13. The theory and practice of corporate finance: evidence from the field • ArticleJournal of Financial Economics, Volume 60, Issue 2-3, Pages 187-243Graham, J.R.; Harvey, C.R.Cited by Scopus (229)

14. The impact of employee satisfaction on quality and profitability in high-contact service industries • ArticleJournal of Operations Management, Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 651-668Yee, R.W.Y.; Yeung, A.C.L.; Cheng, T.C.E.

15. Back to the Future: The Broadening Accounting Trajectory • ArticleBritish Accounting Review, The, Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 421-453Parker, L.D.Cited by Scopus (8)

16. Moving or doing? Knowledge flow, problem solving, and change in industrial networks • ArticleJournal of Business Research, Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 32-40Andersson, U.; Holm, D.B.; Johanson, M.Cited by Scopus (3)

17. Six Sigma: Definition and underlying theory • ArticleJournal of Operations Management, Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 536-554Schroeder, R.G.; Linderman, K.; Liedtke, C.; Choo, A.S.Cited by Scopus (2)

18. The application of menu engineering and design in Asian restaurants • ArticleInternational Journal of Hospitality Management, Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 91-106Kwong, L.Y.L.Cited by Scopus (1)

19. The business case for corporate social responsibility: A company-level measurement approach for CSR • ArticleEuropean Management Journal, Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 247-261Weber, M.

21. Progress in information technology and tourism management: 20 years on and 10 years after the Internet-The state of eTourism research • ArticleTourism Management, Volume 29, Issue 4, Pages 609-623Buhalis, D.; Law, R.

22. Who makes acquisitions? CEO overconfidence and the market's reaction • ArticleJournal of Financial Economics, Volume 89, Issue 1, Pages 20-43Malmendier, U.; Tate, G.Cited by Scopus (2)

23. Partners in coffeeshops, canals and commerce: Marketing the city of Amsterdam • ArticleCities, Volume 24, Issue 1, Pages 16-25Kavaratzis, M.; Ashworth, G.J.Cited by Scopus (2)
24. Creating brand identity: a study of evaluation of new brand names • ArticleJournal of Business Research, Volume 58, Issue 11, Pages 1506-1515Kohli, C.S.; Harich, K.R.; Leuthesser, L.Cited by Scopus (3)

25. Executive information systems development in an emerging economy • ArticleDecision Support Systems, Volume 42, Issue 4, Pages 2078-2084Arnott, D.; Jirachiefpattana, W.; O\'Donnell, P.Cited by Scopus (1)

University news from Africa









SOUTH AFRICA: The politics of higher education
Karen MacGregor
Power changed hands within South Africa's ruling African National Congress a year ago, and national elections are looming. What the new ruling elite will mean for higher education is unsure, but the hot political issues this year look set to include teacher education and student fees, says Dr Cheryl de la Rey, chief executive officer of the statutory advisory Council on Higher Education.





ZIMBABWE: Brain drain project suffers brain drain
Clemence Manyukwe
A Unesco-sponsored initiative to stem the academic brain drain in five African countries faces collapse in Zimbabwe - as a result of the flight of lecturers. An end of year report by the vice-chancellor's office at Chinhoyi University of Technology said academic staff trained in grid computing as part of the initiative had left the institution for safer - pastures.






ZAMBIA: Government audits two universities
Clemence Manyukwe
Audits are underway at two of Zambia's largest higher education institutions, on the orders of the government, Higher Education Minister Professor Geoffrey Lungangwa told parliament late last year. This followed an attack on the government from parliamentarians over examination paper leakages and political interference at institutions of higher learning.







EQYPT: Law tightens government control
Ashraf Khaled
A new civil universities law approved late last year by the Shura Council, the Egyptian parliament's upper house, is set to tighten the government's grip on higher education. The law provides for the creation of 17 new non-profit universities and makes the Ministry of Higher Education responsible for appointing half the institutions' boards of directors. The other half will be left up to the universities' founders and investors to select.





NIGERIA: Renovations suspended at teaching hospitals
Tunde Fatunde
Crucial renovations at 12 academic hospitals in Nigeria by two Austrian medical engineering firms, under contracts worth US$291 million, have ground to a halt following an alleged plan by "over-zealous" officials in the Ministry of Health to re-award the contracts to other firms. The companies have gone to court claiming breach of contract. Lecturers and students at medical colleges affiliated with the hospitals are concerned and President Musa Yar 'Adua has been called on to intervene.

TUNISIA: Arab world adult education conference
A three-day conference on adult education and building a knowledge society in the Arab world opened on Monday in Gammarth, Tunisia. Titled "Investing in adult learning: Building knowledge and learning societies in the Arab region", it is one of five preparatory regional conferences for Unesco's Sixth International Conference on Adult Education, Confintea VI, which will take place in May in Belém, Brazil.

University News from the West




Helena Flusfeder
Universities in Israel and Gaza have been caught up in the savage conflict now raging in the Palestinian territory. All five universities in Gaza have been shut down while two were closed in southern Israel. "The academic situation in Gaza is collapsing. People's main preoccupation is to get food and stay alive. They feel that everywhere in Gaza is not safe," said one Palestinian professor.
Jane Marshall
Nearly a quarter of France's 80-plus universities assumed new powers of autonomy on 1 January under the government's Universities' Freedoms and Responsibilities law. The legislation gives the universities control over their budgets, staff recruitment and salaries, and other areas that were previously the responsibility of the state. All universities must adopt the reform by 2012, though academics and students continue to express their opposition.
Nick Holdsworth
The rector of Moscow's Higher School of Economics - one of Russia's top universities - has called for a massive shake up in the country's system of higher education. Yaroslav Kuzminov, (shown here at a conference on the right of Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin), says unrestricted growth of university-level institutions in recent years has left Russia's higher education system a mess with wide disparities in standards of teaching and qualifications.
Geoff Maslen
A plan to reshape Australia's higher education system, deregulate universities, vastly increase their enrolments, provide students with vouchers to study at the university of their choice and extend government funding to a bigger group of providers are among 46 wide-ranging recommendations being considered by the federal government.
Diane Spencer
Cambridge University came top of the league again in the latest research assessment exercise carried out by England's higher education funding council, Hefce. The 2008 results, published just before Christmas, will be the last of their kind as the next process will be undertaken with a different method. After reviewing research conducted by 52,400 staff submitted by 159 universities and colleges, Hefce concluded that 54 % of UK research activity came into the top two grades of "world leading" or "internationally excellent".
The first joint institution for research and research training in areas of mutual importance to India and Australia has been established between the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, or IITB, and Monash University in Melbourne. The new institution was officially opened at the end of November and is a centre of research excellence in clean energy, water, biotechnology, mineral exploration and computer simulation.







A lack of quantitative analysis and a tendency to avoid policy-based research has left the study of higher education in the UK in the doldrums
The 'Melbourne model' has prompted universities worldwide to consider broadening undergraduate degrees. But the template does not win over everyone

Academics fear PhD quality is slipping
Staff say that pressures to get more students through quickly are harming standards

'Editor of new collection of essays discusses the role of professors in welcoming and educating students of all types.
New study projects a 35 percent drop in minority enrollments at the most competitive four-year colleges and universities -- but little gain for white students


For-Profit University Begins A Large Media Campaign steven bellAn online educator is presenting itself to potential students as “a different kind of university.” The school is Kaplan University. A campaign for Kaplan University, which began last week, carries the theme “A different school of thought” and suggests that learning online is a way to develop talent that could otherwise go to waste. The campaign is the first national, multimedia effort for Kaplan University. The campaign arrives as the popularity of distance learning for adults, through online universities and colleges, continues to grow. Read more

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Webinar: Thinking About the Future

Thinking About the Future: Planning for Uncertain Times
Brought to you by SCIP, Hosted by The Iowa Chapter

Wednesday, March 4, 2009 1:00PM (EDT) - 12:00 PM (CST)
Program Description
We're living in a time of immense disruptive change -- rapidly sinking housing markets, credit crises, massive layoffs, bankruptcies and dramatic changes in business models. How can your organization have the strategic foresight to weather uncertain times? What forecasting techniques and futures thinking capabilities will help get you through the tough times? What is your organization's preferred future? Do you have the tools to get there?

Dr. Peter Bishop, professor in futures studies at the University of Houston and founding member of the Association of Professional Futurists, will provide an overview of strategic foresight in organizations and describe the tools that professional futurists use to prepare for the future. Learn the difference between traditional forecasting and studies of the future.

"Learning faster than your competitors is the only sustainable competitive advantage in an environment of rapid innovation and change,” said Arie de Geus, former Director of Corporate Planning for Royal Dutch Shell Group. Peter Bishop will introduce you to future thinking techniques that will help you prepare for this environment of rapid change.

Register now!

Registration Fees
SCIP Iowa Region Member: $50.00
SCIP Member: $95.00
Non-Member: $195.00
Student: $25.00 (Non-SCIP Students please contact Dionedra Dorsey (ddorsey@scip.org) for details.

You, or members of your organization, can attend from anywhere in the world. All you need is a personal computer (PC) with a standard internet connection and a telephone. Each registration is for one PC link only and is not transferable to other individuals.

Time zone confusion? Access the world clock for your time zone here to the webinar descriptions that do not include it.

*A site is one computer used to view the Webinar Registration payments for the webinar must be received no later than 12 PM EDT or 11:00 AM CST the day of the event in order to receive log-in information.

Webinar login instructions will be emailed to you prior to the event.

Please note: Registration cutoff will be at 12PM Eastern, 11:00AM CST Wednesday, March 4, 2009.

Contact Information
Belinda Nelson, Iowa Chapter Chair, email: BelindaSNelson@mchsi.com, or (515) 266-3919 or
Robyn Reals, SCIP Education Manager, email, rreals@scip.org 703.739.0696 x107

Major exporters pledge ongoing credit support for developing country imports

Image: woodsy


Thirty-six exporting countries, including 29 OECD countries plus Brazil, Estonia, India, Israel, Romania, Russia and Slovenia, issued a statement pledging continued export-credit support for international trade deals in line with a call by G20 leaders for emerging and developing economies to retain access to financing for imports in the present financial crisis.
The countries are:
Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, European Community, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, India, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Korea, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, the Russian Federation, Slovenia, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom and United States.

Impact of the economic crisis on employment in the OECD countries

The OECD area economy has entered recession and labour market conditions are rapidly deteriorating in many countries, according to the latest issue of the OECD Economic Outlook (No. 84, November 2008).

OECD projections indicate that the average unemployment rate in the OECD area may reach 6.3% in the last quarter of 2008, from 5.5% a year earlier. The unemployment rate is projected to increase further in the next 18 months and peak at 7.3% in the second quarter of 2010.

Overall, these projections suggest an increase in the number of unemployed persons in the OECD area from 34 million in 2008 to 42.1 million in 2010 – the most rapid rise in OECD unemployment since the early 1990s.
Employment and Labour Force growth in OECD countries
(click on the images to enlarge)

Unemployment in OECD countries

Consumer Trends to watch out for in 2009




With the new year, comes all the analysts' predictions as well - TrendWatching.com (an independent and opinionated consumer trends firm) recently released their list of Consumer Trends to keep an eye on:


The report is divided into 6 sections:

  • Nichetributes - are attributes / features / additions to existing products, making them more practical for specific user groups, while at the same time signaling to those users that the brand 'gets it’, that it cares, and in some cases even pays tribute to their lifestyle
  • Luxyoury - In 2009 YOU define what is luxury. So in the next 12 months, instead of worrying about missing out on the next big thing in luxury, focus on defining it. Declare that the end is nigh for anything that’s getting a little too affordable, too accessible, or just too well-known. Then introduce something very different (if not the opposite), appealing to the in-crowds ready to jump ship anyway.
  • Feedback 3.0 - FEEDBACK 3.0 (which is building as we speak) will be all about companies joining the conversation, if only to get their side of the story in front of the mass audience that now scans reviews. Expect smart companies to be increasingly able (and to increasingly demand) to post their apologies and solutions, preferably directly alongside reviews from unhappy customers. Expect the same for candid rebuttals by companies who feel (and can prove) that a particular review is unfair or inaccurate, and want to share their side of the story.
  • Econcierges - are firms and services dedicated to helping households go green in any possible way. And while any advice that reduces a household's (harmful) consumption is beneficial enough, the fact that such advice leads to savings makes this a very 2009 development. In the coming 12 months, count on cash-strapped consumers to embrace sustainability with a vengeance, but first and foremost for monetary reasons. Next? How about helping consumers to make money by being green, by for example letting them generate and sell excess power to the 'grid'?
  • MapMania - As the Googles, Nokias (who expect half of their handsets to be GPS enabled by 2010-2012), MapQuests, Navteqs, Openstreetmap.orgs, Apples and TomToms of this world continue to build the necessary infrastructure, devices and apps, any consumer-focused brand would be stupid not to be partnering or experimenting with map-based services. Why? Geography is about everything that is (literally) close to consumers, and it's a universally familiar method of organizing, finding and tracking relevant information on objects, events and people. And now that superior geographical information is accessible on-the-go, from in-car navigation to iPhones, the sky is the limit.
  • Happy Ending - 2009 is an excellent year for those businesses keen on showing consumers that they really care. At the same time, this is a great moment to innovate: shrinking budgets and diminishing revenues from existing offerings normally bring out the best and most creative in business professionals.
    But the most important side effect of more austere times is probably that consumers start questioning what truly makes them happy, which more often than not steers them towards the realization that happiness ain’t (just) about traditional consumption.

Download the report here.

Back to Basics

I’d like to say welcome back, but since most of you started before me, I’ll just say that I hope you had a wonderful rest during the festive season and that 2009 will bring less stress!



Image: danzo08

With the classes almost upon us, I’d like to give you some information on the training sessions I provide as well as a refresher on the Library services on offer:

Training
I provide training to all postgraduate students, both on individually and in groups.
· Individual training is done by appointment only – please give my details to all your postgraduate students
· Training is usually for an hour and a half and please send your new student assistants for training – it will improve their service to you tremendously

A few pointers to keep in mind when scheduling a group/class library session:
· I am more than happy to give a presentation/demo or hands-on training during class time. The library has a training venue with 14 computers that can accommodate about 28 students. If your class is bigger, I am happy to do training in the Labs as well.

If the class is an evening class the follow will come into play:
o I do only one evening training session per week
o Please let me know a week in advance so that I can book our training room and prepare the manuals
o The library training/session must be in the first hour (i.e. starting at 17:30 or 18:00 at the latest) and will be for an hour

Keep in mind that I am responsible for the training of 8 departments’ postgraduate students as well as 1st year training during January - March – so please let me know well in advance if you want me to train your class.

Library Services
In a nutshell I offer:
Training – for yourself, your student assistants and your postgraduate students
Alerting – be the first to know if a specific journal or article on your research topic has been published, or keep up to date with the publications of a specific author
Access to other universities – gain free access to all resources of other South African universities
Publishing – I can assist you in finding an accredited publication for your article, or a co-author or conference you can present at
Money - Want to know how much money you have left to buy books or databases with? Need help in weeding out old material? Just ask
Referencing – The university subscribes to RefWorks, a software package that automates the referencing and citation functions, please ask if you’d like me to show you how it works
Current Awareness – remember to check this blog regularly for updates on library services as well as relevant information for your subject area

My office is located on the 1st floor of the Library (by the Reference section) and you are more than welcome to come by for help or assistance.

Thursday, November 20, 2008




Monday, November 17, 2008

Measuring entrepreneurship: a digest of indicators



Over the past ten years, the OECD has addressed entrepreneurship issues in various analyses and reports. While these studies compiled relevant data to support specific research or policy tasks, no effort was made to establish an ongoing database of entrepreneurship across OECD countries. In 2004, the 2nd OECD Ministerial Conference on SMEs in Istanbul, “Promoting Entrepreneurship and Innovative SMEs in a Global Economy”, concluded that the statistical base for entrepreneurship research was weak and urged the OECD to develop “a robust and comparable statistical base on which SME policy can be developed”.

In 2005, the Kauffman Foundation provided the OECD the financial support for a feasibility study to explore what could be done to improve entrepreneurship data.

Encouraged by the feasibility study, the OECD launched the Entrepreneurship Indicators Programme (EIP) in 2006 in order to build internationally comparable statistics on entrepreneurship and its determinants. In 2007, Eurostat joined forces with the OECD to create a joint OECD-Eurostat EIP, and work began with the development of standard definitions and concepts as a basis for the collection of empirical data.

This report presents the results of the first round of empirical data collected under the EIP.

Regulations up for comment

There are two regulations up for comments during early December:


1. the National Road Traffic Regulations

The Department of Transport has published the National Road Traffic Regulations for comments. This is in accordance with section 75 (6) of the National Road Traffic Act, 1996· (Act No. 93 of 1996)

Comments can be emailed to John Motsatsing at
motsatsj@dot.gov.za or Phillip Magagane at magaganp@dot.gov.za by 1 December 2008. The document is also available here: www.pmg.org.za/gazettes

2. the Civil Aviations Regulations

Under regulation 11.03.2(1 )(a) of the Civil Aviation Regulations, the Chairperson of the Civil Aviation Regulations Committee (CARCOM) hereby publishes for comment the proposed amendments to the Civil Aviation Regulations, 1997.

Comments can be emailed to Mr Jabulane Mashinini at mashininij@caa.co.za or Mr Herman Wildenboer at wildenboerh@caa.co.za by 8 December 2008.

The document is also available here: http://www.pmg.org.za/gazettes

University news from Africa

WEST AFRICA: Universities agree on regional strategy
The University of Bamako, Ouagadougou University and University Cheikh Anta Diop of Dakar, together with the French Conference of University Presidents, have agreed on a coordinated strategy for higher education and research, to promote a regional partnership between African and French universities and contribute to development of West African scientific communities.

MEDITERRANEAN: Unimed elects Tunisia to presidency
The Mediterranean Universities Union (Unimed) has elected Abderraouf Mahbouli, head of the University of Tunis, as its President, reports La Presse of Tunis. It is the first time a country south of the Mediterranean has headed the union, which has 84 member establishments in 20 countries mostly in the Mediterranean basin.

GLOBAL: Nigerian students scoop award in 'world cup'
Clemence Manyukwe
Nigeria's Obafemi Awolowo University clinched second place in an international higher education competition aimed, among other things, at sharpening student skills by testing their understanding of market economics. More than 1,500 students, academics and business people from 41 countries converged in Singapore last month for the Students in Free Enterprise 'world Cup'.




ZIMBABWE: Student 'bonding' to stem brain drain
Clemence Manyukwe
The Zimbabwean government has introduced a student 'bonding' system in a desperate attempt to stem the brain drain as people flee the ruinous policies of President Robert Mugabe. Under the cadetship scheme, students will not receive a qualification on graduating but only after working for the state for a stipulated period.



EGYPT: Disqualifications, apathy mar student elections
Ashraf Khaled
Hassan Abbas, an arts student at Cairo University, did not know there were student union elections until he saw Islamist students staging a protest against their disqualification from candidate lists. In recent weeks the country's 18 public universities have held student polls marked by widespread apathy as well as fiery protests by ineligible students, particularly from the Muslim Brotherhood - said to be the largest opposition group on Egypt's campuses. Political or religious student groups have been banned from student leadership.


NIGERIA: UK seeks partnerships with local universities
Tunde Fatunde
The National Universities Commission recently ordered the immediate closure of the offshore campuses of foreign universities on Nigerian soil, as they are prohibited under law. The move left hundreds of students stranded, and unable to move to 'legal' institutions that are full - and indeed only able to accommodate 30% of qualified school-leavers. Now the British Council is seeking partnerships between UK and Nigerian universities, with a view to creating wider opportunities for youngsters desperately seeking higher education.



CAMEROON: Crowded start for new year
Jane Marshall
The academic year has started with record numbers of new students in Cameroon but several universities have experienced problems including overcrowding, lack of teachers and even cancellation of a new faculty of medicine just before it was due to open. Newspapers reported that some universities were coping better than others.

Thursday, November 13, 2008






To all the lecturers who took the time to write an email to Dr Anette van Vuren with comments (good or bad) regarding the Library's service:

Thank you very much!

It was extremely humbling to read the kind words and I highly appreciate it. All the comments from the various librarians will be compiled into an evidence report and submitted to Prof Habib on Monday.

University news from the West


As Economy Wavers, Online Enrollments Climb
Annual study finds double-digit gains in online education, in part due to fuel costs, surprising some who predicted the rate would eventually flatten.
Professors increasingly bemoan student "incivility" in the classroom. But provosts discuss the steps colleges should take to deal with faculty members who mistreat students.

Encouraging Interdisciplinarity
Consortium of research universities considers steps to support cross-departmental research by making changes at faculty and administrative levels.

Making Higher Ed Research Matter
Association of scholars who study academe contemplate ways to make their work more relevant to those who shape policy.

The world’s top 1,000 business schools: See our exclusive supplement for a report on the top business schools around the globe. Click here for more.
With a "Yes we can" attitude and a five point platform for higher education, President-elect Obama represents a changing face for higher education and Americans are hopeful. Obama's platform targets loan programmes, access to higher education, community colleges, science and technology, and affirmative action.

CANADA: Benefiting from Bologna Philip Fine
The Bologna process, the initiative that tries to smooth the jagged edges off Europe's differing degree and credit structure, has caught the world's attention in a big way. From the Caribbean to Canada, from China to Australia, the plan designed to solve a European problem and that then brought in bordering countries now has nations far beyond those borders looking at some academic retooling.
The international community should explicitly recognise crimes against educators as crimes against humanity or war crimes, a conference of 150 Iraqi ministers, MPs, university presidents and international experts was told last week. Hosted in Paris by Unesco, in collaboration with the Qatari Foundation, the conference heard that more than 250 academics had been killed in a "campaign of terror" since the fall of Saddam Hussein, in targeted attacks.
Academics in Saudi Arabia are the best paid on earth while scholars in China are the worst off, according to a pioneering just-published global study of salaries conducted by the Boston College Center for International Higher Education in the US. The average academic salary across 15 countries surveyed is US$4,050 a month in purchasing power parity dollars - and lecturers can expect to earn triple their country's per capita estimate - International Comparison of Academic Salaries: An exploratory study.
The New Zealand government has settled the last of the claims made against it by Maori tertiary institutions for capital funding that will put them on an equal footing with other public tertiary institutions. At $50.6 million (US$29.8 million), the figure agreed with Te Wananga o Raukawa last month adds to nearly $10 million already paid to the institution and brings the total value of settlements for the three public wananga to $169 million.
The International Finance Corporation has established an online discussion on what it calls "the evolving regulatory context for private education in emerging economies". Dr Svava Bjarnason, a senior education specialist with the IFC, says the purpose is to provide a forum for stakeholders to discuss key questions relating to the evolving nature of regulation of private education.
A noticeable rise in targeted attacks on education staff, students and institutions in a number of countries constitutes a highly damaging assault on the provision of and access to education in the places worst affected. The dramatic increase in deliberate attacks in recent years and the subsequent loss of life are the result of an abhorrent tactic of sacrificing the lives of innocent young people and those trying to help them develop their potential for the sake of political or ideological aims.
Makki Marseilles A controversial decision by the European Court of Justice is likely to have far-reaching effects on higher education in Greece. The court's decision, based on the 89/48 EC directive, held that the Greek rules on recognition of diplomas are contrary to community legislation. Moreover, the court ruled that only member states where a diploma was awarded may verify its basis, thereby denying any form of control, academic or administrative, to the host member states.

HE RESEARCH AND COMMENTARY
"As we progress into the 21st century, the international dimension of higher education is becoming increasingly important and at the same time, more and more complex. There are new actors, new rationales, new programmes, new regulations, and the new context of globalisation," writes respected internationalisation scholar Professor Jane Knight in the latest edition of the Canadian journal Academic Matters, titled The Global University.
Globalisation has embraced the university, as it has other sectors. Many academics appreciate the benefits that cross-cultural exchange allows as the ivory tower turns global. Knowledge now belongs to a worldwide arena in which we are all connected, writes Dr Fengying Xu in the latest edition of the Canadian journal Academic Matters. But "there are enormous challenges for teaching, studying and research inside this globally-interdependent context".

From campus to Capitol and back againIn America, it is common for academics to play a prominent political role. Jon Marcus reports

Still no call from No 10?
In the UK, the gulf between the political and the academic worlds seems all but unbreachable while Americans flit easily between lecture halls and halls of power. Matthew Reisz examines why Whitehall seems so inhospitable to scholars, while Jon Marcus looks at why Washington is so accommodating...
Vocational university envisaged as a way to meet expansion targets
Teaching ‘unsuited’ to the third millennium Personal relationships are lost in modern university ‘maelstrom’, v-c warns
Commons committee chair calls for evidence on ‘dumbing down’ as inquiry starts work
Etiquette guide for staff covers personal grooming, dress and fine dining
Many years ago, Frank Burnet fought for modularisation and credit transfer. The war was won, but the victory was pyrrhic
Moving house is the perfect way to begin a new chapter of your life, says Mary Warnock, even if those around you think you’re mad
Devil’s advocate Milton expert Stanley Fish refuses to demonise the administrator and warns against influencing the moral character of students
Japan and South Korea want their universities to attract overseas academic talent, but doubts persist about their readiness for the global market. Michael Fitzpatrick reports
For three decades, Laurie Taylor's fictitious university and its characters have mocked the absurdities of campus life, writes Matthew Reisz
A lesson in animal behaviour helped Bob Blaisdell improve classroom comforts and student learning


Online Courses Offer Physical And Financial Access To Higher Education steven bell
A convenient way for busy students to squeeze education into their packed schedules, online courses are offering the added benefit of spending less on transportation, making education a little more affordable in a time of record high gas prices. This fall, area colleges are reporting rapid growth in enrollment of online courses, and administrators say whether the institutes are offering computer-based lessons or setting up new learning sites in communities away from Springfield, it's all about making education more accessible -- physically and financially -- to students.

DPRU conference: papers now available



The Development Research Policy Unit hosted a very successful conference during October of this year with the theme:
The Regulatory Environment and its Impact on the Nature and Level of Economic Growth and Development in South Africa

The regulatory environment is often identified as one of the key challenges to economic growth and development in the developing world. South Africa is no different in this regard, with regulation and the regulatory environment often cited as a constraint to achieving the country’s macroeconomic and poverty reduction objectives.
We hope that, through the papers presented at this conference, we have developed a more nuanced and considered view of this area of economic policy. We invited papers, predominantly, but not exclusively, in the area of economic regulation with the aim of stimulating debate and contributing to our understanding of the growth process in South Africa.
The conference brought together researchers, policy makers, civil society and other social partners to critically analyse the work of peers and to dialogue on the findings and value from a policy perspective.
The key sub-themes, within which discussion took place, included the following:
• Financial regulation
• Local Government and Municipal Regulation
• Sectoral Regulation
• Tax and Tax-related Regulation
• Competition and Industrial Policy
• Labour Markets and Welfare
• Schooling, Higher Education and Industry Training
• Energy, Water and other Utilities
• Telecommunications
• Transport
Research papers focused on the relevant legislation and the key institutions responsible for implementing the regulations in each area.
In addition, the impact of these on economic growth and development was evaluated. A focus was on SMMEs and how the regulations specifically impact on their development as well as the creation of employment. A number of papers were not focused on the economics of regulation, but was more relevant to South Africa’s poverty and labour market challenges.
Here is the list of papers presented.

Monday, November 10, 2008

The McKinsey Quarterly newsletter available


The McKinsey Quarterly newsletter is now available.
In a compelling video interview, Google CEO Eric Schmidt reflects on the coming transformation of strategy, competition, business models, and management. This piece is just one example of the wide range of new content we are now posting on the reengineered mckinseyquarterly.com, including video, audio, and interactive exhibits, as well as more contributions from outside McKinsey, including letters from readers. Our redesigned site also makes it easier than ever to find content, particularly on specific regions and big ideas.

Also new this month STRATEGY
Helping ‘green’ products grow
When customers reach the cash register, they often forget their eco-friendly attitudes. Businesses can do a lot more to help would-be green consumers walk their walk.

CORPORATE FINANCE
How climate change could affect corporate valuations
Efforts to reduce carbon emissions could profoundly affect the valuations of many companies, but executives don’t seem to be paying attention.

MARKETING
What’s new with the Chinese consumer
Ten million new ones enter the market eachyear, and the hundreds of millions already there are evolving rapidly. Ongoing McKinsey research examines these trends.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
How IT can cut carbon emissions
Information and communications technologies are becomingmajor emitters of greenhouse gases. But technology canalso help reduce emissions across many industries.

FINANCIAL SERVICES
The missed opportunity for US health insurers
Most health care payers now convert less than 10 percentof the customers who move to a new product class—for example, when they become eligible for Medicare. That’s not good enough.

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
A fresh wind for offshoring infrastructure management
While other offshoring services have grown rapidly, the management and maintenance of core infrastructure from afar has been slow to gain traction. It may be about to take off.

Civil Aviation Bill

The Department of Transport briefed the Committee on the proposed amendments that were made for the Civil Aviation Bill, following requests by the Committee in the previous week.


Documents handed out:
Department of Transport Proposed Amendments to Draft Bill
Department of Transport Proposed Section 15: Procedure & Requirements in appointing members of Aviation Safety Investigation Board
Discussion Document on Chapter 6
Civil Aviation Bill [B73 - 2008]

International Journal of Emerging Markets- Call for papers


The International Journal of Emerging Markets has a Special Issue on Changing Patterns of Global Growth .

The credit crunch, increases in food prices and the oil crisis have all led to great uncertainty in the global economy. However, some countries have achieved higher growth whereas standards of living have been predicted to plummet in other economies.
A special issue of International Journal of Emerging Markets sets out to analyse the following themes:
  • The role of India, China and other emerging markets in insulating world economic growth from US financial crisis
  • How the US financial crisis is affecting emerging markets
  • Strategies for companies from emerging markets on how to cope with the current crisis
  • Is there a role for China and India and other emerging economies in insulating the global economy?
  • Should policies be domestic or global?
  • How should emerging markets cope with the global financial crisis?
Types of paper
Both empirical as well as theory building papers will be considered. As the topic lies at the intersection of several scholarly domains, papers can draw from several different fields such as organisation theory, strategy, international business, technology and invasion management and business law. Aspects can also encompass other areas including entrepreneurship, operations research and organisational behaviour.

Submission guidelines and timeline
All manuscripts should be prepared according to the author guidelines located at: http://www.emeraldinsight.com/ijoem.htm. All papers will be double blind reviewed following the journal’s normal review procedure. (This journal is not accredited)
Submissions to International Journal of Emerging Markets must be made using the ScholarOne Manuscript Central system: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/ijoem
Deadline for submissions: 31 January 2009
The guest editors for the special issue are John McManus and David Floyd. Please direct any enquiries to Dr McManus at jmcmanus@lincoln.ac.uk

SAMRA announces rates for 2009 Conference



SAMRA, the Southern African Marketing Research Association, has announced the rates for delegates for the 2009 30th SAMRA Conference, which will be held on the 28th and 29th May 2009 at the Spier Wine Estate Stellenbosch in the heart of South Africa's Cape Winelands.

The 2009 Conference aims to bring together researchers, research users and marketers from all over Africa with the goal of growing and improving marketing research in the region.As an added bonus at the 2009 SAMRA conference, the rates have stayed the same as the 2008 rates. The rates for the 2009 conference can be found on their website.

Bookings for the 2009 30th SAMRA Conference open on 10 November 2008 and early-bird rates apply until the 31st January 2009. For more information or to make a booking for the 2009 SAMRA Conference contact Lebo Maphosa on (011) 704 7770 or e-mail lebo@thelime.co.za or visit www.samra.co.za.

Please note that this is a draft programme for the 2009 30th SAMRA Conference and therefore is subject to change and will be updated:

The 23 paper synopses selected are:
  • Making sense of nonsense, a re-examination of brand attribute association matrices - Amien Ahmed - TNS Research Surveys
  • Death of the analyst - the case for data calibration and advanced weighting - Joe Boniaszczuk - Research International
  • A World Without Surveys? - Joanne Campbell, Nicky Liddle, and Taryn Smart - TNS Research Surveys
  • What Consumers Really Talk About: Understanding the true power of word-of-mouth - Gillian Drewett - Synovate Brand Lab
  • The Fundamentals of Market Structure - Kyle Findlay - TNS Customer Equity Company
  • The sanitation of real human beings - Jean Green - Jean Green and Associates
  • A quasi experimental investigation into the effect of interviewing methodology on the findings and applications of socio-political studies - Mari Harris and Wayne Viljoen - Ipsos-Markinor
  • The Only Universal Law in Marketing? - Jan Hofmeyr and Martin Bongers - Synovate and Synovate Brand Lab
  • The Research Club of Kenya - Research Demystified! - Maggie Ireri and Nanzala Mwaura - The Steadman Group
  • Beyond the 'What' in Social Polling - Measuring the strength of the Zuma brand in South Africa - Nomsa Khanyile - The Nielsen Company
  • Global Speak? Or is Local Lekker? - Monique Leech - Millward Brown
  • Using Online Qualitative Methodologies To Catch The Big Fish - Justin Levitt - Synovate
  • The development of a Tastetometer for bridging the gap between scientific evaluation and consumer experience in the beer category - A heuristic approach to understanding the experience of taste in Sub Saharan Africa - Andrea Marais - Consumer Lab
  • Why innovate? Is change genuinely necessary within the field of market research based on the changing attitudes of consumers, clients and market researchers? - Stephanie Matterson, Matthew Glogauer, Tanja Naidoo, Claire Speirs and Adam Rosenberg - Kauffman Levin and Associates
  • Get Back to Modelling Basics - Caution from an End User - Walter Moldenhauer - Telkom SA Ltd.
  • Research 2.5: Ceding control to consumers as co-researchers - Henk Pretorius - Columinate (Pty) Ltd
  • Tangled Webs and Other Grey Areas - Where are we headed, and can we come back from the brink? South Africans' shifting attitudes to crime, ethics and morality - Kathryn Ann Robinson - TNS Research Surveys
  • The difference between online and non-online consumers: How much bias is there really? - Adam Rosenberg, Candice Watt, Matthew Glogauer, and Sally Timcke - Kauffman Levin and Associates
  • Marketed Research: Personal promotion and network effects within our industry - Enrico Tronchin - TNS Customer Equity Company
  • Come join the joy ride... 30 thrilling years of wild and wonderful research - Carel van Aardt and Mari Harris - Bureau of Market Research (UNISA) and Ipsos-Markinor
  • Consumers are much richer than we think: Reweighing AMPS income data using analytical hierarchical process modelling techniques - Carel van Aardt and Sean Louw - Bureau of Market Research (UNISA) and Synovate
  • The influence of online social networks on long-term consumer behaviour - Lesley van der Walt and Lorcan McHarry - TNS Customer Equity Company
  • Optimising the Retail Landscape: Utilising shopper research to enhance the in-store experience and optimise the retail space - Peter Wilson - TNS Research Surveys

In addition to the above papers, we are delighted to include in the programme two Q&A sessions with experts:

  1. Carol Affleck, who runs her own consultancy and qualitative research agency, Youth Focus, will introduce and answers questions about Effective methods for Researching the Youth Market through an Understanding of Developmental Levels.
  2. Gary Nelson, Chief Executive Officer of Primedia Face 2 Face, will introduce and answers questions about Targeting the Bottom of the Pyramid Market.

Keynote addresses include the following:

  • Discovery Health (Johan van Rooyen, COO; Francois Theron, Head of Service; Andrew Webb, Head of the Service Laboratory) will present The Discovery Health Science of Service approach, which includes service metrics throughout the client journey, the Discovery Health quality, people management, independent measurement, client segmentation, and infrastructure systems, the result of this science and becoming the best service organisation in the world.
  • Graham Page, Executive Vice President of global solutions at Millward Brown, leads a team that develops new solutions and approaches to help marketers drive their brands and services forward. Graham's research areas include neuroscience and neuromarketing, the role of emotion in advertising and how to measure it, and brand elasticity.
  • Dawie de Villiers, CEO of Sanlam Structured Solutions, oversees the Derivative Structuring business in the Investment Cluster and the Smooth Bonus and Annuities businesses for Sanlam Employee Benefits (SEB). Dawie will illustrate how successful research leads organisational strategy and can be used to achieve a thought leadership status by means of the Sanlam's Annual Retirement Fund Survey example. He has been instrumental in the design, analysis and presentation of the latest Sanlam Retirement Fund Survey.
  • Ged Parton, CEO Global Brand Practice and Qualitative at Synovate Global, London, is responsible for Brand and Communications Practice, Qualitative Practice and The Synovate Marketing Sciences group. Ged will share his view on Confronting Industry Challenges.

Library closing early on Friday 12th December

Image: salssa

Please note: All UJ Libraries will close at 13h00 on Friday 12 December 2008

Thursday, November 6, 2008

New books



The new titles in the library this week are:
(as usual if you want me to keep any of the titles for you, please let me know)
For Business Management

1) Institutions and development / Mary M. Shirley. c2008.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EEB SHIR

2) Global innovation management : a strategic approach / J. Christopher Westland. 2008
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EBM WEST (2 copies)

3. Rediscovering Schumpeter : creative destruction evolving into "Mode 3" / edited by Elias G. Carayannis and Christopher Ziemnowicz. 2007
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EEK SCHU CARA (2 copies)

4. Sustained innovation management : assimilating radical and incremental innovation management / Gaston Trauffler and Hugo P. Tschirky. 2007.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EBM TRAU (2 copies)

5. Leveraging knowledge-based assets : the new value equation to create competitive advantage / Marius Ungerer, Johan Herholdt, Koos Uys. 2006.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EBM UNGE

6. Innovation management : strategy and implementation using the pentathlon framework / Keith Goffin and Rick Mitchell. 2005.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EBM GOFF (2 copies)

Information & Knowledge Management

1. Interactive information retrieval in digital environments / Iris Xie. c2008.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 3 DBF XIE

2. Semantic-based visual information retrieval / Yu-Jin Zhang. c2007.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 2 TEN ZHAN

For Sport Management

1. Give and go : basketball as a cultural practice / Thomas Mc Laughlin. c2008.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 KOG SOKK MCLA

2. Physiology of exercise and healthy aging / Albert W. Taylor, Michel J. Johnson. c2008.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 KOP TAYL

3. Sport fans : the psychology and social impact of spectators / Daniel L. Wann ... [et al.]. 2001.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 KOR WANN

For Transport Management

1. The future of automated freight transport : concepts, design, and implementation / edited by Rob Konings, Hugo Priemus, Peter Nijkamp. c2005.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EVR KONI

2. Policy analysis of transport networks / edited by Marina van Geenhuizen, Aura Reggiani and Piet Rietveld.c2007.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EVC GEEN

3. Transport investment and economic development / David Banister and Joseph Berechman. 2003.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EVA BANI

4. Competition in the railway industry : an international comparative analysis / edited by José A. Gómez-Ibáñez, Ginés de Rus. c2006.
KINGSWAY BOOKS LEVEL 1 EVJ GOME

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Using technology to reduce rush-hour traffic

Image: drouu
Computer Worls has an article on a MIT project to use technology to cut rush-hour commute times.



Frustrated commuters armed with giant cups of coffee and at least three books on tape can take heart that researchers at MIT are trying to figure out how to get them home faster.
Dozens of cars in the Boston area have been equipped with technology that's feeding information into a mobile-sensor network designed to analyze traffic and then predict when and where tie-ups will occur.

The program was unveiled about a year after Nissan Motor Co. showed off its own attempt at making drivers' commutes a bit less stressful. The car maker's Robot Agent, which sits in the dashboard of the company's Pivo 2 concept car, uses built-in cameras to read the driver's facial queues and pick up on whether he's getting tired or stressed out. The robot, speaking in English or Japanese, will nod, shake its head and even blink while it talks the driver out of a bad mood or suggests that he pull over and take a break.

As part of the CarTel project, MIT professors have placed an onboard computer about the size of a cell phone in 50 cars -- including 40 taxicabs -- in the Boston area to monitor vehicle speeds during trips. The systems use QuickWiFi connections to speed on-the-road data flow.


SoccerEx 2008



SOCCEREX 2008 will take place from 23 - 26 November in Gauteng, South Africa.
The 4 day event will provide the global football community with a unique platform to learn, network and do business, under one roof, in the province that will host the FIFA 2010 World Cup final.
With over 4000 delegates and 300 exhibitors, from over 95 countries expected to attend Soccerex 2008, this year's event is sure to be our biggest and best yet. For more information on Soccerex 2008, including this year's conference programme and exhibitor list, please click here.

In addition to the Soccerex 2008 convention, Soccerex serves the global football community through its networking and conference forums and other supplementary products like Soccerex Business Magazine and our new online networking facility, SoccerExchange.

New brand for Gauteng



Gauteng has a brand new logo!

The new logo is a spiral shape made up of multi-coloured dots of increasing size. The central dot represents the ignition, the beginning, and the promise of all the possibilities that the province offers.

"This province is a leader across a variety of fields - in business, industry, tourism, and arts and culture - Gauteng is at the heart of all activity. We believe that the new brand, and tagline 'It Starts Here' is especially fitting, and a great visual interpretation of the power and vigour of this incredible province," said Premier Mashatile.

The province, which has a population of approximately eight million people, is acknowledged as the nation's economic engine.

It is the heart of industry and commerce in South Africa, and the base of African operation of numerous multi-national companies.

The province generates 33 percent of South Africa's GDP, and 10 percent of Africa's gross domestic product, making it the fourth largest economy in Africa.Gauteng, which is home to more than 70 international banks, stockbrokers and insurance giants, also has an impressive employment rate.

It accounts for 47.7 percent of employee's remuneration in the country

New Releases from StatsSA




The total number of foreign travellers who visited South Africa from Africa, overseas and unspecified countries, arriving through all ports of entry during August 2008 was 752 942.

The August 2008 figure represents an decline of 4,5% as compared with the August 2007 figure of 788 117. During August 2008, 326 075 arrivals were recorded for South African residents while the total number of those departing was 340 057.



The total number of liquidations recorded for September 2008 decreased by 35,3% (from 507 to 328) when compared with September 2007, mainly due to the public-service strike in June 2007 which created a backlog resulting in more liquidations being processed during September 2007.

The total number of liquidations recorded for the nine months ended September 2008 decreased by 4,1% (from 2 465 to 2 365) when compared with the same period last year.The total number of insolvencies recorded for August 2008 increased by 17,7% (from 198 to 233) when compared with August 2007.

The total number of insolvencies recorded for the eight months ended August 2008 increased by 47,8% (from 1 276 to 1 886) compared with the eight months ended August 2007.

StatsOnline: Latest Key Findings

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