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© The Z/Yen Group of Companies 2008
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Volume Five, Number Six
"Zest for Enlightenment"
The Irregular Newsletter of Z/Yen Limited
October 2007 |
Index – What Index?
Or should that be which index? Following the success of the
Global Financial Centres Index 1 (GFCI)
,
launched in March at Cannes, we now have
GFCI 2
.
London extended its lead to 19 points over New York with Hong Kong,
Singapore and Zurich following. The GFCI has generated press in August
journals from the Economist, to The Times of Malta and the Caymanian Compass.
Financial centres from Bahrain to the Bahamas, and Tokyo to Tallinn want to know
how to enhance their competitiveness as financial centres. Not content
with an index of financial centres, Z/Yen is now working on an intellectual
property index for a leading law firm and other indices, such as ‘Arts and
Culture’ and insurance, are being considered. Now & Z/Yen readers are
asked to participate in
GFCI 3 -
http://www.zyen.com/Activities/On-line%20surveys/GFCI.htm
Charityshare Expands and Wins Top Award
Z/Yen is immensely proud that it helped to establish Charityshare, the IT
services joint venture, originally between NSPCC and The Children’s Society, and
is now prouder still. The Alzheimer’s Society has recently joined the
venture. Several hundred Alzheimer’s staff in major offices already enjoy
the Charityshare service, while Charityshare is rolling out the service to
Alzheimer’s Society branches as well, for some 1,200 additional Charityshare
users. Ian Harris and Mary O’Callaghan have a continuing role with
Charityshare helping with strategic direction and project management of the
Alzheimer’s Society transition respectively.
Z/Yen
bathes in reflected glory as Charityshare won the Best Charity Partnership Award
at the 2007 Third Sector Excellence Awards last month. Ian Harris took
great pleasure in joining the Charityshare team on the night; especially as Ian
had written the award nomination. John Stoker, one of the judges,
described Charityshare as “a really good, sensible collaboration offering
high-quality IT services at good value for money”. (Why couldn’t Ian have summed
it up that succinctly?) As the venture is saving about £1,000,000 per annum
compared with the cost of its constituent parts, doesn’t Mr Stoker make a very
good point? Many congratulations to CharityShare!
Z/Yen Guides Tourist Centres
The
City of London replaces its main Visitor Information Centre, adjacent to St
Paul’s Cathedral, with a striking new building opening in November 2007. The new
centre uses the latest information display and delivery technology: 10 large
screens display information to visitors, alongside smaller screens for City
staff to show individual tourists internet and network based information. Mike
Prymaka coordinated the design and procurement of the IT and AV systems, and is
project-managing the build, co-ordinating City of London in-house resource and
external suppliers. Mike muses; “I worked for Mercury in the early 90’s when the
City was seeing major installations of fibre networks. We always thought high
speed data links would reach everywhere. But little did I imagine that 15 years
later I’d be working round the corner from Red Lion Square, planning COLT’s
connection to the City’s Visitor Centre at 100 megabits/second as a standard
service, and displaying video on 10 flat monitor screens.”
No Dirty Knapp-y Jokes
We’re
pleased to welcome
Alexander Knapp to the Z/Yen tribe. We found him
wandering through Afghanistan, Iraq, Kosovo and Angola, and once he proved
incapable of explaining what he was actually doing out there for the past
fifteen years (that is, in a hundred words or less) we knew that he really must
be a long-lost distant cousin who needed to (re-)join the family here in London.
Since then, we gather that he’s been causing trouble in international
development, risk management, and emerging markets, but apparently also
photography, lecturing at university, and going to Italian cooking school –
Michael’s now not the only one here to be chronically distracted by bright,
shiny objects. Welcome, Alexander!
Yes Now I’m A Judge (and a Good Judge Too)
Z/Yen’s
involvement with Payroll Giving continues apace, with Z/Yen organising the first
ever National Payroll Giving Awards for the Institute of Fundraising and HM
Government. The seminal event took place earlier this month at HM
Treasury. The ceremony was hosted by TV money saving guru Martin Lewis,
who managed to make the ceremony both entertaining and informative (a rare
gift). The awards were handed out by the Right Honourable Jane Kennedy MP,
Financial Secretary to the Treasury.
Linda Cook and Sonya Raymond did the real hard work organising the event.
Z/Yen folk were sworn to secrecy about the winners, of course, but our own Ian
Harris was greatly honoured to Chair the Judging Panel, so he knew the winners
before anyone else. Secrets are difficult to keep when there is a one hour
reception before the awards ceremony, with several of the short-listed
organisations trying to pump the Z/Yen team for inside information.
Indeed, even the normally “scrutable” Ian Harris (if you have a game of poker
against Ian, go for cash, his face normally tells all) was surprisingly
inscrutable on this occasion. He never, never budged, as they say. A
superb evening was had by all. You can find out more about the awards from
the
Payroll Giving Centre website:
www.payrollgivingcentre.org.uk.
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