Published:
04 May 2021 London South Bank University Group s chief people officer Marcelle Moncrieffe-Johnson gives her tips for a successful career in HR
Group chief people officer, London South Bank University Group
April 2020 – Present
I joined a friendly and ambitious team which focuses on leading transformation and driving an inclusive employee experience. Some 30,000 UK and global students are successful because our people are passionate about learning. I am especially proud of my team who have led new ways of working and focused on wellbeing during the pandemic.
July 2019 – March 2020
I was attracted by the purpose and ethos of the Group and had to hit the ground running in a fast-paced environment.
He is also the Chancellor of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), the Grand Patron of the Grand Lodge of Ghana and the Sword Bearer of the United Grand Lodge of England. Between 1981 and 1985, he was a senior consultant at the Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company in Toronto, Canada. He returned to London in 1985 and became the Personnel Officer at the HPCC Stonebridge Bus Garage Project, in the London Borough of Brent. He then founded his own mortgage finance firm, Primoda Financial Services Limited, located on Kilburn High Road, North West London. He returned to Ghana in 1989 to start a transport business, the Transpomech International (Ghana) Limited.
Osei Tutu II is the 16th Asantehene who was enstooled on 26 April 1999.
He is also the Chancellor of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), the Grand Patron of the Grand Lodge of Ghana and the Sword Bearer of the United Grand Lodge of England.
Between 1981 and 1985, he was a senior consultant at the Mutual of Omaha Insurance Company in Toronto, Canada.
He returned to London in 1985 and became the Personnel Officer at the HPCC Stonebridge Bus Garage Project, in the London Borough of Brent.
He then founded his own mortgage finance firm, Primoda Financial Services Limited, located on Kilburn High Road, North West London.
His support to the Armed Forces and to many charitable causes is something that all of us can admire. He will also be remembered for the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award which has helped countless young people – many in Brent. Since its creation in 1956 by the Duke of Edinburgh, the Award scheme has had a positive impact on the lives of millions of young people. On behalf of Brent Council and the London Borough of Brent, I would like to express my deep sorrow, but also gratitude to Prince Philip for all he did for our country.
May he rest in peace.”
FOR many, the most remarkable thing about the London Borough of Brent is that it’s the home of Wembley stadium and the Hindu temple in Neasden.
Even more remarkable is the borough’s great ethnic diversity, with its population drawn from all corners of the globe.
Notable among them are the large Afro-Caribbean and Irish communities who, since settling in the area, have made significant contributions to local manufacturing and health and social services as well as its cultural life.
This rich history of multiculturalism is captured in photographs of Afro-Caribbean and Irish people in the borough in the book Revival: London 1989-1993 by Roy Mehta.