Grant Thornton’s Virtual office is an innovative platform that completely changes the existing model of delivering our services to your business. It integrates the crucial tools necessary for smooth running of such business processes, as communication, document exchange, task management, financial and operational reporting, with advanced analytics and easy-to-understand visualization in one space. We have designed the Virtual Office to make your collaboration with Grant Thornton’s team significantly efficient and more comfortable. The platform is intended for executives and managers of Grant Thornton's partner organizations and decision-makers.
Grant Thornton experts suggest ideas on what to consider regarding cost cutting in a difficult time for the business and what is important for implementing effective cost optimization.
In this publication Grant Thornton Armenia has summarized key aspects that will help leaders and communication professionals design a smooth response in critical situations or test their existing communication plan.
With this publication the advisors of Grant Thornton Armenia present to your attention the importance of business transformation, big data processing and analysis of various aspects of business operations in the modern world as one of the key success factors in defining business strategies and risk management policies.
Guests are less loyal and more demanding than ever before. They use online travel agents (OTAs) and aggregators to find the best hotels and deals – which helps operators fill their rooms, but at a cost.
Too many companies are failing to attract women to top positions, even though mixed-gender leadership teams deliver greater profits. How can we tackle this challenge?
The power of personalisation: Hotels’ roadmap to 2020
Companies that are comfortable with failure are more nimble, innovative and successful, says John Harmeling, chief marketing officer at Grant Thornton in the US
Being entrepreneurial and delivering mid-market sized turnover need not be mutually exclusive. Sweden’s Fontana Food has achieved the best of both worlds
Predicting the future need not be a stab in the dark. There are plenty of practical steps businesses can take to prepare for the challenges ahead.
Every business can benefit from the Internet of Things – just start small and choose wisely when deciding which operations you want to target.
As productivity rates fall, businesses and governments need to find new ways to make inputs work harder if living standards are to be maintained.
To succeed in the B2B sharing economy, businesses need to understand what drives customers who are willing to use crowdsourced and automated services LiquidSpace specialises in renting out spare office space in existing businesses by the hour, the month or longer. Users can hire space via the company’s app and be sitting in a business’s boardroom within minutes. They can add their own office space to the inventory too.
Low productivity growth is a concern for policymakers across the globe. Steve Perkins, global leader for technology, says boosting R&D is the way to compensate for ageing populations and slower employment growth.
Rising labour costs and the quest for productivity are driving businesses to automate. Finding new roles for redundant workers will be the next challenge.
Fifty years on from the world’s first personal computer going into mass production, the Grant Thornton International Business Report reveals the scale of technology’s influence on business with the majority of firms now planning to automate operations and practices, potentially resulting in job losses.
