Cordiant Digital Infrastructure Limited (the Company ) is pleased to announce its intention to launch an initial public offering and to admit its shares on the Specialist Fund Segment of the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange. The Company will seek to generate attractive total returns over the longer term, comprising capital growth and a progressive dividend, through investment in the core infrastructure of the digital economy (the plumbing of the internet ): data centres, fibreoptic networks and mobile towers in the UK, Europe and North America. The Company is targeting an issue of 300 million Ordinary Shares at an Issue Price of 100 pence per Ordinary Share to raise £300 million pursuant to the Initial Issue comprising the Initial Placing and the Offer for Subscription. Subscription Shares will be issued for nil value to IPO investors subscribing for Ordinary Shares on the basis of one Subscription Share for every eight Ordinary S
Last modified on Sun 17 Jan 2021 11.11 EST
In 2018-19 Manchester City FC had revenues of £535.2m. Manchester United had £627m. The University of Manchester made more than £1bn – not far short, in other words, of the combined income of the city’s two global sporting brands. This is in many ways a cause for celebration, a sign of the economic power of higher education, of British success in attracting foreign students and the high fees that they pay, of the contribution that universities can make to the prosperity of their host cities.
But, for a billion-pound business, you might have expected better than their handling of the pandemic. Last summer, as students tried to decide whether to stay at home or go to the campus for the first term of the academic year, they were told they would receive “blended learning”, a combination of online and in-person teaching. They were offered the “hope” as one student says, “that everything would be as normal as possible”. They d
People vs technology: managing technological change hrmagazine.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from hrmagazine.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Benedict College names new dean of Business School WLTX
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Dr. Tracy H. Dunn has become the first woman to be named dean of the Benedict College Tyrone Adam Burroughs School of Business and Entrepreneurship in Columbia, South Carolina. She is the fourth dean to head the College’s business school and has been the interim dean of the school for the past three years.
Dunn joined the faculty at Benedict College a Historically Black College and University (HBCU) in 2002 and has significantly expanded the breadth and depth of the school’s co-curricular programming with the opening of the Student Innovation Hub, according to College administration. And is credited with increased student participation in local, regional, and national competitions as well as the development of well-designed service-learning projects with options for consulting projects, and outlets for student enterprise.
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Alliance Manchester Business School (AMBS) is partnering with online education provider Emeritus to create a series of online executive education courses, aiming to provide those in management and c-suite positions with essential new skills and knowledge to thrive in an increasingly digital workplace.
The first three courses will cover data science, digital transformation in healthcare and fintech, and will build on Manchester s reputation for driving the region s position as a burgeoning tech hub, with finance, healthcare and data science sectors having a key part to play in propelling businesses in the region forwards.
Professor Fiona Devine, Head of Alliance Manchester Business School, said: This new partnership supports our shift to further establish AMBS in the online learning sphere, leveraging the use of technology and an AI driven commercial strategy to help deliver our courses to new global audiences. In a constantly evolving economic and business landscape, the co