All posts by Business Review Webinars

See how a cloud-based solution can deliver, from leading industry experts at IFS, Microsoft and Aberdeen Group

 

IFS Webinar

 

 

 

 

 

If you want to understand how the cloud is relevant to your business, and how choosing to run IFS Applications on Microsoft Azure can deliver, then don’t miss the free webinar on December 1 at 3pm London / 10am New York.

Leading the webinar is our panel of industry experts:

In just 45 minutes, they will guide you through the key factors driving cloud adoption, with market insights and a demonstration of real-life cloud problem-solving.

This webinar will help you:

  • Understand the drivers of the market’s adoption of cloud ERP, ESM and EAM
  • Understand the benefits a cloud-based solution can deliver for your business from leading industry experts at IFS, Microsoft and Aberdeen Group
  • See how the cloud can solve a variety of real-world customer challenges
  • Understand how IFS Applications on Azure is relevant for your business

More information at Business Review Webinars. Spaces are limited so sign up today!

 

James Cabrera, Head of Accounts, Regulated Options

James Cabrera

James started his career over 12 years ago in the banking sector as a Personal Financial Consultant for one of the biggest banks in the UK, now one of the biggest in Europe. There he consulted investors and provided numerous ways for investment providing the best possible outcome of ROI on their capital.


After some regulatory reform in 2004, James saw an opportunity to investigate other financial markets and decided to move into the Foreign Exchange market. As the market and his knowledge of it evolved, he decided to take what he had learnt in the banking industry and the Forex markets, and with training, education and a detailed REAL outlook on the economic market, he saw the lucrative potential of trading Binary Options. 

The achievements in James’ past and present roles, including predicting some of the major movements in Forex and Binary trades, has given him some unique and valuable experiences and has put him in the driving seat he finds himself in today.

  1.        Why did you decide to do a webinar with Business Review Webinars?

I decided to work with Business Review Webinars to reach a new class or clientele

  1.        What are you looking forward to explaining to the audience?

The real benefits to trading in the financial markets with Binary Options

  1.        What is the ideal outcome you would like from doing the webinar?

New investors, new relationships and new success stories

  1.        Where is your favorite place in the world and why?

London of course! Not just because it’s my home, but because it’s the most versatile place in the world.

  1.      What motivates you?

Success

You can register now for Regulated Options’ webinar ‘Understanding Binary Options Trading in the Financial Market’ taking place on the 13th November at 11am  London / 12PM Paris.

Bürkert and Business Review FREE Webinar Series Offers Specialized Content for Pharma/Healthcare/Packaging/ Food and Beverage Industry Professionals

It’s all about the road to the future –technology, tools and resources. Do you want to understand and leverage the right approach? Invest 1 hour to find out about the solutions.

 Join Bürkert industry experts and Business Review Webinars, on 25 November to learn more about valuable insights to help your business.

The first of a series of webinars presented by Bürkert’s industry experts, this webinar will discuss “A leap forward in flowmeter efficiency and utility”. This webinar will feature Greg Sutcliffe, Team Coach Segment Management, and John van Loon, Segment Manager Hygienic, who will share their insights on all flow metering systems. Hygienic design, regulations and compliances are increasing dramatically in the risk driven healthcare market. Consequently, the question raised is: what should a perfect flowmeter for liquids look like? Do not miss out on this opportunity to join Bürkert, as they share their knowledge.

Business Review Webinars is a thought portal leader for business professionals in the pharmaceutical, healthcare, energy, supply chain, packaging and food & beverage. Bürkert is one of the world’s largest and most comprehensive pharma companies. Together Bürkert and Business Review Webinars are working to promote a free series of Webinar’s in 2014 and 2015.

When: 25 November 2014
Time: 3pm London/10am New York
Cost: FREE. Registration required.

Key learning objectives:

– Learn about application requirements for flowmeters in risk driven markets like the healthcare sector
– Learn about the New flowmeter technology “Surface Acoustic Wave”
– Understand the future development of SAW
– Learn how to increase your flowmeter efficiency and utility in the healthcare market

To sign up for this FREE webinar, please visit

http://bit.ly/1sYWwiC

Business Review Webinars allows individuals throughout the world to learn and to communicate. Particularly in the past two years, webinars have rapidly gained prominence as an important component of many marketing strategies. No longer considered an afterthought, a well-crafted and successful webinar can greatly enhance a company’s reputation, sales and benefit the audience as a progressive learning tool. Business Review Webinars deliver high level thought leadership presentations on intriguing and current topics, which appeal to a live audience. Ultimately, the key to designing a good, relevant webinar is in understanding what an audience is looking for.

“We’re looking forward to working with Bürkert on this new webinar series and are pleased that we have been chosen to leverage promotional aspects of their webinars”– Aneta Manningtonova, Head of Marketing, Business Review Webinars.

For more information on our upcoming webinars, please visit the following link:

http://www.business-review-webinars.com/webinars?chan=pharma

Forward-Looking Utilities Invest in the Next Wave of Outage Management Technologies to Future-Proof the Grid

Author: Clinton Davis, Vice President of Distribution Industry Solutions and Smart Grid, Ventyx, an ABB company
Join Ventyx, an ABB company Webinar on the 2nd December where they discuss Achieving Reliability, Safety and Customer Satisfaction in Outage Life Cycle Management with IT/OT Integration.

The average summertime high temperature in Austin, Texas, these days is 97 degrees. By the end of this century, the average high could be 103, with 20 days a year hotter than 110 degrees, according to a study the city recently undertook. Other than increasing the frequency of “How hot was it?” jokes, what does this projection mean in real life? For one thing, Austin needs to plan carefully as it builds its future electric grid: “If you’re going to build a substation that’s going to cost tens of millions of dollars but it can’t operate over 110 degrees, it’s really important to be thinking about that now,” Zach Baumer, the city’s climate program manager, recently told The New York Times.

Forward-looking U.S. utilities are taking the same path as Austin – studying the future carefully, and creating strategies to meet that future fully prepared. There’s no need to look as far ahead as the turn of the next century: as the devastation of Hurricanes Sandy and Ike attest, American power grids are already being battered by storms of unprecedented strength and frequency. It makes sense, then, that the New York State Public Service Commission has created a “storm scorecard” to assess utilities’ behavior before, during and after major storms, and that one major component of the score is “advance preparation.” Many other state regulators are following New York’s lead, mandating high levels not only of preparedness, but also of effective customer communication to keep communities informed when power outages are expected, and when they’ll be over.

In partnership with regulators, innovative U.S. utilities – including United Illuminating in Connecticut; Memphis Light, Gas & Water (MLGW) in Tennessee; ComEd in Illinois; NationalGrid in the Northeast, and Connecticut Light & Power, among others – are moving to future-proof themselves by applying the latest strategic capabilities of information technology (IT) to their extensive arrays of operational or “industrial” technologies. This convergence of leading-edge IT and OT – the long-predicted Internet of connected things, people and services – will deliver a basket of outage management benefits to utilities and their customers when storms bear down on their service areas.

Storm damage projections made possible by the IT/OT convergence of the Internet of things, people and services will give utilities a head start in dealing with storms – protecting infrastructure, sending repair crews and materials where they’ll be needed and communicating accurately with customers about the likelihood and duration of power outages. The technology will be sufficiently accurate to predict which substations, transformers, power lines and other critical devices will be damaged by a hurricane or magnetic storm before it occurs. The specificity will drill down to such details as the types and health of trees surrounding power lines – cottonwoods, it turns out, are more susceptible than other trees to crashing down on lines.

The Internet of things, people and services combined with increasingly sophisticated use of social media outreach by utilities allows the utilities to deliver a crucial, and most-demanded, element of customer service: telling customers when power will be restored. This allows customers to decide how to cope with the outage – should they just go about their normal routine because power will return soon, find a friend’s house or café with electricity to spend the hours until restoration, or book a hotel or report to a shelter if power will be out a long time?

Forward-looking utilities are also investing in social media analytics not just to talk to customers, but also to listen to customers in ways that improves communications. IT/OT convergence plus smart algorithms applied to Twitter, Facebook and similar social media will alert utilities when outage-related keywords start popping up in news feeds and tweets. Utilities will crowdsource their own customers to find out immediately when and where problems occur, speeding their reaction, repair and restoration of power. This will further boost customer satisfaction by identifying issues before they become problems.

This next giant step in serving and protecting utility customers is just beyond today’s horizon. The Internet of things, people and services technology to make it happen is being developed and deployed right now. What’s needed for success is to make predictive models as accurate as possible. This can only be accomplished if utilities and related providers of environmental information team up to provide the information those models require. I visit many U.S. utilities, and at each stop I urge the utility to share its storm-related data. As they equip their assets – from massive machines to repair trucks and their crews – with Internet-connected sensors, utilities are currently overwhelmed with data they can’t use right now. But the day is swiftly coming when powerful data management and business intelligence/analytics – the convergence of IT and OT – will use that data to create strategies for keeping the grid healthy and reliable in the face of inevitable disasters.

Just as the city of Austin isn’t waiting for the future to surprise it with overheated catastrophe, the wisest U.S. utilities are investing in future-proofing grid infrastructure now rather than after the next superstorm. The technologies may be new, but the concept is as old as Benjamin Franklin’s dictum, “Those who fail to plan, plan to fail.”

Clinton DavisClinton Davis, VP, Utility Distribution Solutions, Ventyx, an ABB company

Clinton Davis is Ventyx’s Vice President of Distribution Industry Solutions and Smart Grid Strategy, based in Sacramento, California. Over the last six years with Ventyx, he has held roles in consulting, product marketing, and product management. Clinton focuses on solutions that free up precious time, enable better resource management, and make people’s lives more fulfilling.

Long leafy walks, pubs with fires & Halloween…

By Aneta Manningtonova

Greetings everyone,

The return of crisp days and cold evenings means that we’re on the verge of winter, but that’s no excuse to hibernate! There are plenty of things to do this Autumn.

October is all about long leafy walks, pubs with fires and fancy dress (for Halloween, of course). The arrival of Autumn is the time to visit food markets to satisfy our appetites for hearty seasonal dishes and become reacquainted with our coats.

However, we did have our Indian summer and experienced the UK’s driest September since records began. I was very pleased with the warm spells across all of the United Kingdom (thankfully still including Scotland).

Despite this good weather I could not resist a great deal and booked a last minute trip to Bruges. I travelled from London by Eurostar and the whole journey took no longer than 3 hours; what a great experience! Picturesque Bruges is the largest city in the Flemish Region of Belgium made up of canals, bridges, linked by cobbled lanes and features glorious examples of medieval Flemish architecture.

Once I arrived I thought I felt like I had stepped back in time to the Middle Ages. It’s the go to city for historical film locations and definitely for a reason, it’s absolutely stunning. Though it was September, like in the UK the weather that greeted me was very warm and sunny. As well as the architecture the atmosphere of the middle ages has been preserved in most of the tiny centre of Bruges. Like Venice canals circle and cross the city though the main element the cities have in common is of course the great painters such as Hans Memling and Jan van Eyck – although they are less familiar to most of us than Venice painters Titian and Tintoretto.

Bruges 1

 

 

 

 

 

Walking along various cobbled streets I stumbled across this small cafe. I discovered this cafe specialised in traditional Flemish pancakes and waffles. It’s run by a lovely old couple that make the delicious pancakes right in the front of your table using this huge tiled cooking stove. You can have sweet or savoury and of course nothing accompanies them better than the various types of famous Belgium Beer. Being Czech I can definitely say that Belgium beers can compete with those produced in the Czech Republic. The city is also known for its seafood and I could not resist and ordered a pot of their famous mussels with chips and lobster, a treat I was not disappointed with.

Aneta Bruges

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I learnt a lot from various museum tours, Bruges was in fact a jewel in the crown of the Duchy of Burgundy – the most powerful principality in the region – whose ruler, Charles the Bold, was a catch even for the British Princess Margaret of York. When Margaret arrived in Bruges in 1468 she found mead (an alcoholic beverage made from honey) pouring from the city fountain in the form of a golden pelican. The day after her arrival the famous tournament of the Golden Tree took place. What followed were nine solid days of feasts and entertainment, during which monkeys threw trinkets to the crowd and a court dwarf atop a golden lion competed for attention with a wild man riding a camel. It had been referred to as the wedding of the century.

Bruges has many things to offer and there is a place to find something for everyone. I would definitely recommend this city for any type of a short break, romantic or otherwise, and a great place to escape to.

Bruges 3

 

 

 

 

 

There are also plenty of events happening in London this October! One that I am looking forward to is the Silent Disco that is taking place at the Shard. Being Europe’s tallest building the view from the Shard is spectacular, especially at night, so being able to enjoy a silent disco at over 1,000 feet is certainly appealing!

Another event I am particularly excited about is this year’s London Oktoberfest. The second weekend of the festival is just about to get under way, held near Canary Wharf. There’s no better way to prepare for Halloween than with live music, a Lederhosen and a giant beer!

Speaking of which, the end of October also signifies Halloween, which in many parts of the world is known as the spookiest night of the year. All sorts of traditions take place, some of these include children trick or treating, costume parties, pumpkin making, eating candy/toffee apples and dressing the houses with scary decorations. Below there is a picture of a pumpkin that our production executive Rachel carved last year. I look forward to hearing what everyone got up to on this eerie night.

pumpkin

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m happy to announce that today commemorates our 1 year anniversary for this newsletter, I am really glad that so many of you have subscribed and have stayed faithful to our readership. We are looking forward to providing you with more exciting webinars and thoughts in the future.

Aneta ManningtonovaHead of Marketing Business Review Webinars

Phone: +44(0)20 7936 6890
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.business-review-webinars.com

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Check out our upcoming webinars:
Pharma | Energy | Food | Supply Chain/Packaging | Healthcare

October Quiz Questions:

 

Supply Chain Quiz Question

The QR code system was invented in 1994 by Denso Wave Incorporated, but what was it used for?

Energy Quiz Question

Many NFL teams tackle cold weather by warming their fields using tubes heated with what?

Life Science Quiz Question

Which drug was the first antibiotic used to fight T.B?

 

Submit your answer to any of the above questions in the comments below for your chance to win a prize worth £25!

The entry period is from 8th October 2014 to 8th November 2014. All entries must be received by midnight on 8th November 2014.

If you haven’t done so already, please register for our newsletter by clicking here

The answer to quizzes last month are:

Supply:
True or False. Before the invention of the rubber eraser, people used breadcrumbs or crusts of bread?

Answer is True. The inventor of the eraser accidentally picked up a piece of rubber instead of the bread and discovered that it could easily remove pencil markings.

Energy:
Every time you open the refrigerator door, up to what percentage of the cold air can escape?
A. 10%
B. 30% – Winner
C. 50%
D. 70%

Pharma:
True or False. During World War II, Britain feared that the Germans would get access to their penicillin, if there was an invasion. To prevent this, researchers smeared pocket linings with the penicillin mould to transport to the United States?

Answer is True.

Click here for terms & conditions.

Stephen Tindal, Director, Formulation and Site R&D Lead, Catalent

Stephen TindalStephen holds a bachelors degree in Chemistry and Analytical Science from Loughborough University, UK. He has worked in softgel R&D for 27 years and has broad expertise in the technology. Stephen specializes in root cause investigation, technology innovation, gelatin innovation, customer liason and supporting business development. Stephen is part of Catalent’s R&D Team at the Company Headquarters in Somerset, New Jersey.

1. Why did you decide to do a webinar with us?

Catalent is a big company with a wide range of capabilities.  It may be difficult for people to truly understand our capabilities based on published information.  It’s important when describing enabling technologies to get into more detail.  This is the only way to match a technology to a specific need.

2. How do you prepare yourself when presenting to a live audience?

I like to make sure I fully understand the message I’m trying to deliver.  I feel more relaxed if I know the subject really well.

3. What are some of the best moments of your career?

The best moment was when I found what I was good at and realized I wanted to do it forever.

4. If you could have a super power, what would it be and why?

Flying.  Just for the thrill.

5. What is your favourite flavour of ice-cream?

Vanilla

You can register now for Catalent’s webinar ‘ Optimize Your Oral Drug Development Pathway – Faster to Market’ taking place on the 30th October at 11am  New York/3pm London.

 

We’ve done it this way. Why change?

By Kevin Kolmetz, Moog, Product Manager, LinkedIn, and Richard Kim, Moog, Engineering Manager, LinkedIn

In the some parts of the oil and gas industry, you may hear people say, “We’ve done things a certain way. It works. Why change what works?” While an organization might have always used, for example, a hydraulic solution for a topside drilling application, we would like to challenge them to look at improving on what works, perhaps by using an electro-mechanical solution for their application. Our solution approach is to “connect” with you or your director of technology and talk about what’s best for your motion control situation.

Let me take an additional example from the automotive test industry. We have developed a tire-coupled simulation system with actuators that move following a prescribed drive file that replicates the motion from a real world road test.  We’re moving each of the car’s wheels at an almost frenetic frequency. Typically a lot of people believe electric actuation is always faster than hydraulic actuation in that situation. But in hydraulics, you actually have more stored energy. With electric actuation, you have a motor that has to spool up – that takes time. In this case then hydraulics can actually be faster.

Moog became involved in this webinar because designing reliability and performance into your motion control applications matters. Speed, force, reliability and even profits hinge on motion control. You want to select the correct technology. We know that a lot is, literally, riding on your choice.

Here’s a three-step process we use to help people make their design choices.

First, we look at the architecture underpinning your application. When you think about older components as part of an architecture they tend to be run off a centralized control scheme. Newer, smart components have smart controls. For instance, you could have a master controller in a control room on an oil platform going out to every component which also each have a feedback device. And that smart component will tell you that you need to check something related to, say, one of the components on a pipe racking system. So, architecturally speaking, we dig into whether someone is working with a centralized control system or distributed control system. Knowing this will result in the best motion control solution.

Second, we examine device-level form factor. Simply put, that means we look at what a specific component does and its working environment. We look at the physical conditions and needs of what’s going on with your application. Your topside application need may be right over the wellhead which can give you a lot of room for a solution that requires a really rapid response time. Device-level form factor can also examine energy density. For example, you may need to move a valve that needs 30,000 pounds of force for a cutter assembly that’s part of a blow-out preventer. All these situations need to be considered for the best motion control solution.

And, third, we study device-level dynamics. In other words, how rapidly does your application move? Is it moving 18 times every tenth of a second? Alternatively, some devices move very slowly and some are needed for secondary and tertiary processes. Regardless of how quickly or slowly it moves, we design devices that control things at the component level that then fit into the entire motion solution.

Every application has some unique aspects to it. We’ve seen almost everything.  We have even come up against some customers who takes their “white space” and make a design more complicated than it needs to be. For instance one customer was trying to design a huge, precision winch to control a block and tackle for moving a drill pipe up and down requiring 3,000 hp. The customer designed a complex array of cables and pulleys as that kind of hardware was what they knew. We certainly listened. But ultimately gave them a solution with a much lower potential for problems.

We’ll discuss this in more detail in the webinar on the 16th October. In the meantime, what’s your design process? What works for you? What might be worth changing?

See you at the webinar! – ‘Hydralic or Electric? Engineering the Best Control Solution’

Kevin Kolmetz, Product Manager, Topside Oil & Gas, Moog

 

Kevin Kolmetz started at Moog in 2011. Kevin has spent 11 years supporting electro-hydraulic and pneumatic actuation needs of customers in the aerospace, defence and industrial markets. He has completed degrees in Mechanical Engineering and New Product Development from Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY USA

 

What will the audience learn from attending the webinar?

As a company, we balance our technology solutions between hydraulic and electric. The audience will hear from an unbiased source about the pros and cons of both types of technologies across multiple applications. You never know what will ultimately meet the customer’s challenge. For example, we helped to engineer the roof over Wimbledon’s center court. Originally that was to be a hydraulic solution. Hydraulic fluid dripping on grass is a bad thing; we ultimately developed an electric solution because we had the know-how to do so.

How did you get into the industry and what do you most enjoy about your role?

I had a background in fluid power for the aerospace and industrial markets. I started working with small companies making valves for the aerospace and defense industries. I know how engineering works, but I’m also able to talk easily with customers. I enjoy interacting with and relating to people. I like figuring out who on our engineering team to line up with each customer. And I have a passion for fact-finding and understanding a customer’s business case.

What would someone be surprised to know about you?

I’m the stereotypical engineer, so there’s not much if anything to surprise anyone. When I’m not at work, I enjoy hunting or fishing.

Who or what is your inspiration?

I’m inspired by intelligent people much older than me. As a youngster, I worked for a gentlemen who had emigrated from Europe. He was a highly educated man, and he employed me to work construction learning various trades.

You can register now for Moog’s webinar ‘Hydraulic or Electric? Engineering the Best Control Solution’ taking place on the 16th October at 10am New York/3pm London.