Black tie overload

Time was when, if you were involved in the e-learning world, your dinner jacket would hardly see the light of day. These days, it seems, the e-learning world is one glittering round of black tie dinners.

No sooner have you had your dinner suit cleaned after attending the E-Learning Awards in London on 6th November but you’re off to the World of Learning Awards dinner in Birmingham on 19th November.

Moreover, the events are even attracting some ‘C’ list celebrities this year to present the awards – which is a step up from previous years. In Birmingham, the stand-up comic, writer, presenter, actor, as well as a regular on BBC 4′s ‘The Late Edition’ and Radio 4, Marcus Brigstocke, does the honours. The London event is being hosted by Angela Lamont, presenter of BBC1′s ‘It’ll Never Work’, and also features the National Lottery’s ‘Voice of the Balls’, Alan Dedicoat.

Comment: Both BizMedia (organisers of the E-Learning Awards) and Venture Marketing Group (organisers of the World of Learning Awards) should be congratulated for all their efforts in helping to bring some glamour to what is, almost by definition, a ‘behind the scenes’ industry. People in the corporate learning world are highly dedicated to their profession and deserve the odd riotous night or two of celebrating their skills.

Of course, as everyone knows in their ‘heart of hearts’, any comparison of disparate learning solutions – however objectively intentioned – is going to have more than an element of subjectivity about it. The same is true for every type of awards – from the Oscars and the BBC Sports Personality of the Year to prizes for cakes and vegetables at the village fete. Long may these learning awards last – so long as everyone enjoys wearing their ‘posh clothes’, has a good time and doesn’t put any store whatsoever on who wins.

Your secrets are not safe with your IT department

If you are making people redundant – in these credit crunch influenced, potentially recessionary times – you should exercise extreme caution when it comes to dismissing your IT staff.

 

Identity management specialist firm Cyber-Ark has surveyed 300 IT security professionals and found that 88 per cent of IT administrators, if laid off tomorrow, would steal valuable and sensitive company information. The target information includes the CEOs’ passwords, the customer database, R & D plans, financial reports, M & A plans and the company’s list of privileged passwords which provide the keys to unlock access to every piece of information that’s on the network.

 

“Most company directors are unaware of the passwords to which their IT guys have access and which allows them to see everything that is going on within the company,” said Cyber-Ark’s Udi Mokady. “These privileged identities rarely get changed as it’s often considered too much hassle. When people leave the organisation, they can still access the network using these passwords to acquire an organisation’s most sensitive information.”

 

Comment: So that techie’s redundancy package might just be more generous than you think.