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Ahead in The Clouds highlights

Highlights from Ahead in the Clouds, hosted by Anthony Rushton, co-founder of Telemetry, ranked in the Top 10 fastest growing technology companies in the UK by the Sunday Times Tech Track 100.

Headline speaker was James Caan, former BBC Dragons' Den star and private equity investor.

Caan was joined by Anne Boden, one of the world's most respected leaders in global banking. As a banker and a technologist, Ms Boden is at the forefront of the debate on the future of the financial services industry, in the light of regulatory and technological change.

Richard Alvin is Group Managing Director of Capital Business Media, publishers of Business Matters Magazine and an expert on The Cloud and Eric Van Der Kleij, CEO, of the UK Government's Tech City Investment Organisation.

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The UK’s most innovative firms share their business secrets

Every day across the British business landscape new companies are starting up and fresh ideas are being generated. 2011 has seen a plethora of bolder and better business ideas.  These gems can be new products and service ideas or equally new ways to improve existing offerings. The most important thing for any entrepreneur or start up is how do you take an innovative idea and turn it into a success, delivering bottom line growth. 

If the UK is to regain its role as a world leader of innovation, British companies must be at the forefront of research and development. Innovation is key for Orange and this is why it has teamed up with some of the UK’s most exciting business innovators and leaders to create a new guide for business. It will help you master the art of innovation, featuring the likes of LinkedIn and The British Library through to small nimble firms like Naked Wines, all contributing their secret tip to this guide.
 
Professor Dominic Swords from Henley Business School, who contributed to the guide, said: “Innovation does not just sit at the top. To innovate successfully the whole business, from product development, to sales and marketing, must be fully engaged and energised behind that goal. Companies that are always improving and investing stand a much better chance of offering their markets what they want.”
 
These tips include:
A full bodied business model can never disappoint. For startups to succeed against established companies, it's vital to offer customers and suppliers something better than the status quo - the basis for which needs a sound business model. Rowan Gormley, CEO, Naked Wines
 
Quickly find out if your idea is unique or not. You’ve come up with a brilliant idea, which could make you millions. Before you spend a lot of time and money on developing your ground-breaking new product, it is vital to find out whether it is unique and innovative and can be protected. Steve van Dulken, information expert, British Library Business & IP Centre
 
Let your customers drive your innovation Innovation is central to all business growth. Always try and build new ideas around your customers and any problems they have. Anthony Keyworth, B2B Strategy, planning & products director, Everything Everywhere
 
Put time aside for creativity Dedicate two hours every Friday afternoon to free thinking. Everyone downs tools on their normal work and takes time to think about new ideas or concepts. They can then spend this time to develop them. Jim Shaikh, founder and CEO, yoomi


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How to save time and get the most out of your employees

Most businesses like to think that they operate in an open and supportive fashion, where ideas are exchanged freely and everyone knows where they fit into the business.

But a recent study shows that bosses and companies could be fooling themselves when it comes to how communicative they really are, with workers saying they don't feel comfortable sharing good ideas with their bosses, don't feel their superiors are interested in what they have to say and don't feel appreciated for good work that they do.

Furthermore, it's not just bosses that employees feel they are not communicating properly with, with many employees saying they often replicate other people's work because they simply don't know what other people in the business are actually doing. And despite feeling unclear, we're actually swamped with internal meetings and emails, which is estimated to cost the UK economy up to £255 million a day.

The study highlights the lack of communication that exists in many businesses in the UK. So how much untapped talent and how many potentially break through ideas are businesses missing out of because of this? And how much work is being replicated and time being wasted because the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing?

Communication between individuals, teams and departments can change the way businesses collaborate and share data, and can help to reduce emails and eliminate meetings, and ultimately improve efficiency and results. So how can you improve communication in your business?

Here Richard Alvin gives his top tips for opening up the lines of communication to make sure you business is getting the most out of your employees. Also on the couch is Edward Saatchi of the famous Saatchi advertising family, who set up the website 'NationalField' which has become known as the Facebook of the business world, helping employees and managers to communicate easily at the click of a button. Sitting alongside him will be Andrew managing director of Ocean Sky Aircraft Management who has firsthand experience of using NationalField.

'NationalField' has even been credited with being a key factor in the election of President Barack Obama in 2008, with his team using the website to track what was happening in real-time within the organisation.

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StartUp Britain: the first three months

StartUp Britain, the national campaign to encourage more people to start a business and support existing businesses to grow, has released a short video clip chartings its first 3 months.

You can also discover who won the Marketing4StartUp Britain prize of a marketing agency for a full 12 months!

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Greg Dyke: My Vintage Year

The Penfolds Vintage Years Speaker Events are a series of live speaker events for budding entrepreneurs to learn about the vintage years in the careers of iconic businessmen as well as the vintage years in Penfolds wine. The speaker at the last Penfolds Vintage Years event was successful broadcasting figurehead Greg Dyke. He shared the secrets of his success and revealed his own personal vintage year, 1991.

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