Change creates demand for new products and services as well as opportunities to use resources in new ways. Understanding how different changes will affect your business and what to do about it is crucial to not only surviving but benefiting from that change.
Top experts from UQ Business School’s Research Hubs take a futuristic focus to identify how key AI trends and current research can help predict what the world might look like from 2030 to 2050.
UQ Bachelor of Commerce and Economics alumnus, Tara Osborne, is one of the six BOSS Young Executives named for 2021. Ever since she was a child, she has been good with numbers and money, and now she is the general manager of strategy and investor relations at Bingo.
UQ Bachelor of Commerce and Economics alumnus, Fahim Khondaker, is one of the six BOSS Young Executives named for 2021. It was his involvement and critical thinking to help the plight of elderly citizens during the Royal Commission into Aged Care and Safety that made him stand out.
Three decades ago, when Queensland launched an investment fund to build a global portfolio of assets, it hired UQ alumnus Matthew McLennan, a local graduate, to help direct vast sums of capital around the world.
Trust is an issue when it comes to artificial intelligence (AI) according to a University of Queensland study that found 72 per cent of people don’t trust it. But the research found trust can be built in AI technology.
In Australia, over 7,150 thousand plastic bags go to landfill every minute, and less than 4 per cent of plastic bags are recycled. Yet, when plastic bag bans are introduced, governments have been met with significant backlash from consumers and retailers.