Ireland s reserve of honeybees could be greatest in world irishtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from irishtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Business movers: People starting new jobs in Ireland
New appointees with Expleo, Datascan, Esri Ireland, Digital Futures Manufacturing Centre, Ocean Energy Europe, Bord Bia
New roles: (top row, left to right) Cathal Murphy, Orla Cafferty, Dr Andrew Bell; (bottom row) Mary Kearney, Simon De Pietro, Karen Connaughton.
Fri, 07 May, 2021 - 09:20
Joe Dermody
Here is a selection of people starting new roles with Expleo, Datascan, Esri Ireland, Digital Futures Manufacturing Centre, Ocean Energy Europe and Bord Bia.
Cathal Murphy has been appointed as client director for technology company Expleo s life sciences, healthcare and manufacturing division. He will direct the digital transformation strategies of Expleo’s clients through end-to-end integrated engineering, quality services and management consulting. He brings six year s experience working with leaders in the pharma, medtech, healthcare and manufacturing sectors across Ireland, the UK and Europe. He worked as client partner
Ireland’s ‘best places to work’ in 2021 revealed
11 Mar 20211.65k Views
Cisco has nabbed first place in Great Place to Work’s large companies category, followed by Workhuman and Abbvie.
The results of this year’s Great Place to Work in Ireland rankings have been announced. In the large companies category, Cisco moved to first place after topping the list for medium organisations in 2020.
The rest of the top five were Workhuman, Abbvie, Kuehne + Nagel and Salesforce. All four were also in last year’s top five, when Abbvie came out on top. While Salesforce remained in fifth place, Workhuman jumped from fourth to second. The Irish-US tech company was commended as one of the best workplaces for women.
43% of Irish people do not want to return to the office post-pandemic
Written by Robert McHugh, on 10th Feb 2021. Posted in Ireland
Forty three percent of Irish adults said they would not like to return to the office at all once the pandemic is over, while 51% of those surveyed said they would like to be able to work from home at least part-time. This is according to the survey of more than 1,000 adults living in Ireland which was conducted by Censuswide on behalf of Esri Ireland.
When choosing a location to live, the survey uncovered a wide variety of factors that feed into homeowners and renters decision making process. More than three-quarters of respondents say the cost of renting or buying a property is a key consideration, making it the number one factor. Other top considerations include proximity to work, chosen by 59%, and distance to shops, cited by half of adults.