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How Hong Kong offers top talents their next big break

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Snooker

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach Newswire – 30 December 2024 – Snooker superstars Ronnie O’Sullivan and Judd Trump are among the latest high-profile talents to become Hong Kong residents under the city’s Quality Migrant Admission Scheme (QMAS), which facilitates top quality professionals from various fields to live and work in Hong Kong.
 
Seven-time world champion O’Sullivan and current world No.1 Trump, both frequent visitors to the city, are looking forward to spending more time in Hong Kong and embarking on a new phase of their careers.

“I am here because I enjoy the city; I love everything about Hong Kong – the food, the people, and the buildings. It is inspiring for me to be here,” said Trump, who announced his successful QMAS application last week (December 24). “For me, I really enjoy the energy in Hong Kong, so I love to be around people and I love to see people thriving and go about their business.”

O’Sullivan was delighted to announce his residency under the scheme on October 31. “Your food, your culture, it’s just a great place to live; a great place to be,” he said. “If you’re going to live your life and you want to have a good life, you should come to Hong Kong.”

O’Sullivan and Trump will compete in front of their new “home” crowd during the World Grand Prix at the soon-to-open Kai Tak Sports Park (KTSP) in March 2025.

It will be one of the first major sports events at KTSP, a state-of-the-art 28-hectare venue, which is set to transform Hong Kong’s sports and entertainment landscape.

Secretary for Labour and Welfare, Chris Sun, hailed the effectiveness of the QMAS.

“We hope to achieve more success, because we truly believe in the attraction of Hong Kong. Be it our tax system, our natural beauty, the convenience, the great food and all the great things here in Hong Kong,” Sun said.

Hong Kong Talent Engage is a one-stop platform to attract and assist top professionals and people with valuable skills and experience to live and work in Hong Kong and enhance the city’s economic competitiveness. QMAS is one of several talent attraction schemes to attract highly skilled or talented persons globally to Hong Kong.
 



 

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Rolls-Royce supply electricity for Africa’s first rice straw Medium-Density Fibreboard (MDF) production facility

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The plant avoids the usual practice of burning rice straw, which is a by-product of rice cultivation, and ensures its sustainable use by repurposing it into MDF

LONDON, United Kingdom, January 8, 2025/APO Group/ —

  • Egyptian Wood Technology Company (WOTECH) relies entirely on mtu island solution for energy supply
  • Factory is the second of its kind in the world and the first in Africa, and reduces air pollution and CO2 emissions

Working with INDE and EMC, we were able to deliver a power solution that met all the customer requirements

Rolls-Royce (www.Rolls-Royce.com) has commissioned ten mtu gas gensets in the Beheira province in northern Egypt to supply the Egyptian Wood Technology Company’s (WOTECH) production plant with electricity. Since there is no access to the public grid, WOTECH relies entirely on the 20-cylinder mtu gas gensets, which together have a total output of 25 megawatts.

The factory produces medium-density fibreboard (MDF) from rice straw, which is used for furniture and buildings. Supported by Egypt’s petroleum ministry, the plant avoids the usual practice of burning rice straw, which is a by-product of rice cultivation, and ensures its sustainable use by repurposing it into MDF. The factory is the second of its kind in the world and the first in Africa. It significantly reduces air pollution and CO2 emissions in Egypt. The rice straw replaces traditional wood as a raw material in medium-density fibreboard, which is used to make cabinets, doors, furniture and commercial and residential buildings.

Rolls-Royce worked with local partner Engineering for Industries Co. (INDE) and the Egyptian Maintenance Company (EMC), a provider of engineering support services in the region, to supply the mtu Series 4000 L64 FNER gensets, controls and accessories for the WOTECH project, which was established with full Egyptian capital from the oil sector.

Tobias Ostermaier, President Stationary Power Solutions at Rolls-Royce, said: “When supporting a project such as the WOTECH facility, where there is no access to the grid utility, the dependability of our mtu gas-powered gensets is paramount. Working with INDE and EMC, we were able to deliver a power solution that met all the customer requirements – being efficient, reliable and offering the combination of best-in-class power density with low emissions.”

Each of the 10 mtu gensets has a rated power of 2,500 kW and an operational lifetime of up to 84,000 hours before needing major overhaul (TBO).

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Rolls-Royce.

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New Year Message from Mr. Amadou Hott, candidate for the Presidency of the African Development Bank Group

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Today, our beloved Africa faces immense challenges, but let us seize the opportunities this new year brings and work towards a brighter future for our continent

DAKAR, Senegal, January 7, 2025/APO Group/ — 

New Year Message from Mr. Amadou Hott, candidate for the Presidency of the African Development Bank Group (www.AmadouHott.com):

Dear Friends and partners, 

As we welcome 2025, I want to take a moment to wish you all a happy new year and express my heartfelt gratitude for your support as I embark on a new journey with my candidacy for the Presidency of the African Development Bank Group. 

Today, our beloved Africa faces immense challenges, but let us seize the opportunities this new year brings and work towards a brighter future for our continent.  

I am fully prepared to leverage my extensive experience in both the private and public sectors to amplify the impact of the African Development Bank Group. My vision for driving a sustainable prosperity in our continent includes mobilizing resources, energizing the private sector, strengthening project execution, modernizing the Bank’s operations, and forging strategic partnerships. 

Let’s make 2025 a pivotal year for Africa

To turn this vision into reality, I commit to: 

  • Successfully implement the new Ten-Year Strategy recently approved by the Governors with a strong focus on food security and industrialization 
  • Facilitate the creation of an ecosystem of inclusive economic opportunities for youth and women 
  • Accelerate the continent’s digital transformation 
  • Strengthen climate resilience and address fragility 
  • And finally, promote regional integration and intra-African trade 

I wish you a year filled with health, happiness, successes, and impactful moments.  

Let us drive prosperity for Africa and showcase its immense talents and opportunities to the world. 

Let’s make 2025 a pivotal year for Africa! 

Thank you. 

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Amadou Hott, Candidate for the Presidency of the African Development Bank Group.

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Unlocking full human potential (By Catia Teixeira)

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A twice-yearly organisational talent review should identify where every employee is performing, and where they have potential for growth

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, January 7, 2025/APO Group/ — 

By Catia Teixeira, MultiChoice Africa Holdings Group Executive Head of Human Capital (www.MultiChoice.com).

An organisation is only as good as its people. Ensuring those people perform to their best is the role of human capital. Today, the field has a range of tools to ensure real-time engagement and agile interventions for optimal job satisfaction and performance, writes Catia Teixeira, MultiChoice Africa Holdings Group Executive Head of Human Capital.

Each of us, in our professional and personal lives, strives for growth and development. Opportunities to grow are rewarding on a deeper level, supporting the kind self-actualisation that makes life most worthwhile.

In the human-capital context, employee engagement is a measure of how actualised we are. The more engaged we are, the more likely we are to perform in our daily duties. Staff engagement is fundamental to workplace morale.

But ultimately, we engage when we feel enriched; and our relationship to our work helps us grow. Growth and development are a personal need for most individuals. But it can also be highly rewarding for a business to identify a talented individual for development programmes and to then see them bloom.

Identifying growth opportunities

Some employees make an impact from day one. Others are dedicated, but a bit shy. Talent management processes must work for both. A twice-yearly organisational talent review should identify where every employee is performing, and where they have potential for growth.

Interaction within an organisation is also important. It helps to identify cross-departmental opportunities for individuals, and to create relevant developmental plans for every staff member.

Those plans should be systematic. An in-house training academy is an invaluable platform for staff development. Our online MultiChoice Academy has more than 4000 courses available – in finance, HR, management, marketing, or whatever capabilities are relevant to our people’s roles.  

Face-to-face training remains relevant, but whichever form the training takes, it should be tailored and customised to meet employee needs identified in their periodic assessments. The idea is to create a development path for every team member – but one that aligns with the goals of the business.

This speaks to the design of training programmes. They must always balance a staff member’s need for self-actualisation, with the business need to sustainability serve its customers.

Induction can be a critical part of that, ensuring employees are aligned with the company purpose and vision from their first day on the job. 

This most rewarding aspect of the human capital journey is seeing it work as it was meant to; to see the success stories. In a sense, I am proof of that. But as a pan-African organisation, we have many staff who have moved between countries to new roles – in finance, in marketing, in sales, in customer value management. Every organisation will have unique characteristics that it can leverage to improve staff opportunities.

Face-to-face training remains relevant, but whichever form the training takes, it should be tailored and customised to meet employee needs identified in their periodic assessments

One area where the value of talent development becomes clear is when one compares growing talent from within, to hiring from outside. The years of intellectual and institutional capital invested in long-term employees make them a far more attractive proposition than hiring from outside. New staff will require years more training and experience before they reach similar levels of experience.

That training enhances the value of staff – as individuals, and as assets to the company. At MultiChoice Africa, we constantly train young leaders, woman leaders and heads of department, to ease their development to their next level of expertise.

What diversity means

Diversity and inclusion are important considerations in the modern workplace, as such policies help to ensure that every individual achieves their full potential and contributes to their fullest extent.

As a pan-African business with an overwhelmingly black staff complement across 50 continental markets, the MultiChoice approach to DEI is less about race, and more about equitable gender representation.

Across Africa, we have so far achieved 46% female representation, including 46% of leadership roles being held by women. We are currently on an intentional push to reach 50% through our promotions policy.

Achieving gender parity has a cultural component, with women in many societies confined to roles as homemakers and caregivers. However, the MultiChoice culture is one of absolute gender equity, and when we enter a market, we are at pains to apply that culture and to empower women to achieve and enter leadership positions.

Data drives change

There is more to achieving this social progress than just sentiment. It must be driven by data. To be an effective force for progress in a territory, an organisation must have measurable data, so as to be able to measure improvement towards goals.

Data is the raw material that drives performance management systems, for instance. One can review progress, generate bell curves at will and make informed strategic decisions.

Data can also be used to measure engagement, how an employee feels about their line manager, about their work environment; their work-life balance, etc. To generate such data insights, weekly surveys are conducted through our Office Vibe platform. The main metrics are around overall engagement, participation and staff net promoter scores.

At MultiChoice, we also conduct staff polls randomly, which provides fresh data to support quick, relevant interventions, and agile decision-making.

This data sets, along with regular focus groups, help us to understand what our people require to be engaged with their work, to feel adequately supported and remunerated. With those elements in place, staff are equipped to achieve their personal goals, and those of the business.

Ultimately, workers want to feel that they are part of a purpose bigger than themselves. HR processes can be geared to helping all workers achieve that purpose together. There may be targets along the way, but the ultimate goal should be achievement for people, by people.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of MultiChoice Group.

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