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Comment fonctionne notre forum => Accueil => Discussion démarrée par: DennisereDal le Juin 21, 2026, 12:02:11 pm

Titre: gzim FTSE hit by poor services figures ndash; London Report
Posté par: DennisereDal le Juin 21, 2026, 12:02:11 pm
Zmpv Business split over Britain rsquo  future in the EU
 Sunday 26 October 2014 11:00 pm|Updated:Friday 07 June 2019 2:23 pmCommunicate, delegate and stay relevant: The Great Warrsquo  leadership lessonsBy: Gavin WheelerShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleMilitary history is fertile ground for lessons in leadership. Scores of chief executives surveyed by Forbes cited Sun Tzursquo  The Art of War as their favourite business book  with Oraclersquo  chairman Larry Ellison apparently applying the tomersquo  lessons in his companyrsquo  software standoff with SAP , while City folk taking Cass Business Schoolrsquo  executive Leadership course are shipped off to Sandhurst for weeks at a time. In the centenary year of World War One  WWI , here are some lessons for business leaders from generals in the Great War. STAY RELEVANTFor organisations wary of investing in digital, the key message from history is: ignore new technologies at your peril. WWI generals are often characterised as being out of date. But rarely in history have commanders had to adapt to a more radically different technological environment. At the time, military leaders had a serious lack of skills and knowledge when stanley mug (https://www.stanley-uk.uk)  it came to  innovations like aviation. Sir Douglas Haig famously favoured cavalry ov brumate tumbler (https://www.brumates.us) er modern warfare, and even went so far as to argue that the machine gun was an overrated we polene (https://www.polenes.com.es) apon. Serious misjudgment over the complexities of new machin Dapl Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht seeks new trial
 Wednesday 07 September 2011 8:29 pm|Updated:Friday 31 May 2019 12:16 amGuy Hands starts a fresh court salvo to regain EMIBy: KCS-contentShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleTERRA Firma chief Guy Hands has launched a second legal attempt to claw music group EMI back from the hands of its lender Citigroup, it emerged yesterday.Hands is understood to have filed a High Court suit against EMIrsquo  adviser PwC to make it produce the evidence it used to propose the pre-pack administration that handed EMI back to Citi.A preliminary hearing was held yesterday as PwC refused to hand the report over to Handsrsquo; private equity house Terra Firma, as it contains commercially sensitive information.PwC was charged with solving the situation at EMI for all stakeholders, it was a standard procedure, one source familiar with the situation told City A.M. Since then, Terra Firma has been trying to get hold of the information, particularly the valuation information for EMI.The move is Handsrsquo; latest salvo in an acrimonious battle with Citi over EMI,  stanley quencher (https://www.cups-stanley-cups.com.de) and his second attempt to use the courts to recoup damages from Terra Firmarsquo  disastrous inves stanley kubek (https://www.stanley-cups.pl) tment in the company. Hands bought EM stanley at (https://www.stanley-cup.at) I for pound;4.2bn in 2007 using pound;2.6bn of Citi debt, but took the bank to court last year claiming he was tricked into paying far over the odds for EMI. Share