Mike Cronin and Mark Duncan’s new book Revolutionary Times looks at the revolutionary period in Ireland. In this podcast he talks to Dion Fanning about the stories we tell ourselves, the problem with reunification and why Irish history remains such a hot topic to debate.
Ireland will become the first country in the world to mandate health labels on alcoholic drinks. In this podcast, chief executive of Alcohol Action Ireland speaks to Rosanna Cooney about the long slog of advocacy to make this happen and Ireland's future crackdown on alcohol advertising.
Is the era of globalisation coming to an end? And if it is, what does mean for Ireland, a country whose economic model is built on acting as a conduit between continents? These are just some of the question that Sinead O’Sullivan discuses with Michael O’Sullivan in the latest instalment of The Context, our new podcast/book club series. Michael O’Sullivan, a Cork-born economist and former chief investment officer for wealth management at Credit Suisse, discusses the thesis behind his book, The Levelling: What’s Next After Globalisation, zeroing in in on Ireland’s place, in a de-globalizing world.
Our Tandem co-founder and chief customer officer of Beqom, a Swiss-headquartered compensation management business, Aisling Teillard is helping companies to rebuild their relationships with staff after a rocky period of layoffs and disenfranchisement. In this podcast, she talks to Rosanna Cooney about her start-up Our Tandem being acquired, moving to Geneva and developing a new-age of company culture 3.0
In 1876, two Swiss spies came to America and conducted some of the most covert and consequential industrial espionage in history. It changed the course of the global watch industry forever. Aaron Stark, a former Apache pilot and economics professor, chronicles the story his new book, Disrupting Time: Industrial combat, espionage, and the downfall of a great American company. In this podcast with Sinead O’Sullivan, Stark talks about the story, the history of watches, and what it says about the nature of innovation.
Simon Johnson is the former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund and is currently Professor of Entrepreneurship at the MIT Sloan School of Management, where he is head of the Global Economics and Management group. He has just co-authored a book with US economist Daron Acemoglu, entitled 'Power and Progress: Our Thousand-Year Struggle Over Technology and Prosperity', proposing ways in which digital technology can be repurposed for societal benefit as well as private profit. In this podcast with Stephen Kinsella, he talks about the thesis of the book, the nature of the global political economy, and the outlook for Ireland.
The essential act of eating food isn't an area many would think ripe for disruption, but powdered food replacements have been lurking in the productivity-obsessed techie realms for more than a decade. Now Ireland is getting its own powdered iteration from Darren O'Reilly a former professional rugby player. He tells Rosanna Cooney about Whole Supp, his start-up that is trying to take on the big guys.
A financial advisory partner with the accountancy firm Deloitte, David Van Dessel has been tracking company failures for more than a decade, producing quarterly reports on how many companies are going out of business and what sectors of the economy are struggling most. Earlier this week, Van Dessel published the data for the first quarter of the year showing that corporate insolvencies in the Republic rose by 22 per cent in the first three months of the year compared with the same period last year. In this podcast, he talks to Ian Kehoe about whether the long-anticipated wave of liquidations is finally set to happen.
Newly minted President of the Dublin Chamber of Commerce Stephen O'Leary began his career as a journalist before founding social media analytics company, Olytico, which landed a Fortune 500 company as a client through hustle and luck. He talks to Rosanna Cooney about the vast applications of social listening and his plans for the presidency.
A new survey of veterinary practices by the accountancy firm HLB Ireland shows that up to one third of vets are planning to sell their business in the coming year, yet only 2 per cent of their employees are interested in owning their practice. The firm's managing director Mark Butler and vet Pete Wedderburn join Thomas Hubert to discuss an industry where work culture, business organisation and customers are changing fast, and hundreds of Irish businesses are increasingly looking towards a corporate ownership model.
As tensions rise between performance culture and employee self-care, David Barrett, a psychometrics specialist, sorts what works from what doesn't. He talks to Rosanna Cooney about what constitutes a good investment in employee wellness. The Talent Matters podcast series is in association with Talent Summit and sponsored by Employee Financial Wellness.