#405 – QUALITY AND RISK MANAGEMENT: ARE THEY DIFFERENT – NARESH RAO

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General Overview

Rao specializes in Management Systems. His experience in Audits & Trainings since 1986 when started carrier and in III Party Certifications since 1996. Experience in auditing and trainings in different standards and the integration of the same. Designed many training modules (standard and customized). Instrumental in establishing certification business in India like AQSR etc., from the scratch and growing (client wise and financially) with track record of value addition to client’s management system.

Mobile:   +91 9810067758

                +91 9810827758

naresh@ircbo.solutions

#405 – WORLD ECONOMIC FORUM RISK ASSESSMENT REPORT – JAMES KLINE PH.D.

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Every year for over twenty years, the World Economic Forum has conducted a Global Risks Perception Survey.  The 2023 survey was conducted between September 7 and October 5, 2022. The responses are from over 12,000 business leaders in 21 countries.

In the survey, Global Risk is defined as “the possibility of the occurrence of an event or conditions which, if it occurs, would negatively impact a significant portion of global GDP, population, or natural resources.” (1) Continue reading

#405 – WHEN IN CRISIS, MANUFACTURERS CAN LOOK TO KATA – SARAH BURLINGAME

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There is more to lean manufacturing than improving a few processes. Sustainable lean success requires a companywide culture of continuous daily improvement. Companies that develop their people to think scientifically, using facts and data to drive their decisions, are often the ones that most successfully achieve their goals. Continue reading

#405 – AI AND THE FUTURE OF WORK – LYNN PARKER ET. AL AUTHORS

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From steam power and electricity to computers and the internet, technological advancements have always disrupted labor markets, pushing out some jobs while creating others. Artificial intelligence remains something of a misnomer – the smartest computer systems still don’t actually know anything – but the technology has reached an inflection point where it’s poised to affect new classes of jobs: artists and knowledge workers. Continue reading