
Charlie Leadbeater
Europe's No.1 ideas
generator and PM Blair's
favourite mangement
thinker |
BACK |
|

MOTIVATIONAL SPEAKER: Charles Leadbeater
Charles Leadbeater is an ideas generator, independent writer and
adviser to leading European companies.
He is reportedly Tony Blair's favourite corporate thinker and is publishing
his next book in July 2002 entitled "Up The Down Escalator. Why
The Global Pessimists Are Wrong".
His previous book Living on Thin Air: The New Economy was published
in 1999. The book is published in Italian, Chinese, German and Korean
as well as in the US. Charles writes regularly for the Industry Standard
magazine as well as contributing to the New Statesman, the Financial
Times and The Guardian.
He spent ten years working on the Financial Times where he was Labour
Editor, Industrial Editor and Tokyo Bureau Chief before becoming the
papers Features Editor. He became Assistant Editor in charge
of Features at The Independent where, with Helen Fielding, he devised
Bridget Joness Diary.
Charles is an adviser to the Downing St Policy Unit and the British
governments Department of Trade and Industry on the Internet
and the knowledge driven economy. He drafted the British government
White Paper Our Competitive Future: Building the Knowledge
Driven Economy published in December 1998, the Science White Paper
published in July 2000 and helped to draft the Communications White
Paper published in December 2000 and the Competitiveness White Paper
published in January 2001.
He drew up the initial plan for the Department of Cultures project
Culture Online, to promote digital access to publicly funded museums,
galleries and arts. Charles advises the European Commission, working
as a special adviser on competitiveness and the New Economy. In the
run up to the EUs Lisbon summit in Spring 2000, he wrote the
draft report presented at the Lisbon summit: "The New Economy:
The European Model."
He also advises Channel Four television in the UK and works with several
Internet start-ups, including iMpower, which is offering new ways
to connect government to citizens using the Internet; Digit, the design
consultancy and Alltrue.com, the New York broadband company.
He has advised a wide range of leading companies including Atlas Venture,
Ericsson, Accenture, British Telecom, The Inland Revenue, the Royal
Shakespeare Company and the V&A Museum. Charles is a Senior Research
Associate with the independent think-tank Demos, and has written reports
on civic entrepreneurship, culture and knowledge entrepreneurs. He
is a regular speaker at major corporate conferences, recent engagements
include Ericsson, Swiss Re, BT, John Lewis, IBM and Merck.
Topics:
The forces driving modern competitiveness: innovation and the driven
economy knowledge. What it means for companies, regions and nations.
The nature of modern entrepreneurship, knowledge entrepreneurship
- entrepreneurship depends on teams and networks not just individuals
How large companies can foster an entrepreneurial culture
Leading and structuring knowledge driven companies to capitalise on
the knowledge and ideas of employees and partners
Managing companies that have to be large and yet innovative. Can it
be done?
Why executives say they love innovation, but secretly hate it because
it must challenge the status quo
Innovation within large companies: how large companies can become
as agile as small companies
Entrepreneurship, government and the E evolution: how government needs
to innovate
Why we love and hate technology at the same time: nostalgia and technological
progress
| European Speakers Bureau |
phone +33 (0)1 4277 0875
11 Rue Castex, 75004 Paris, France |
|