How to stop getting distracted and start your reuse programme!
This quick tutorial is about avoiding distractions at work so you can get stuff done!! We give you take home tips to implement straight away as well as a "not to do" . . .
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This quick tutorial is about avoiding distractions at work so you can get stuff done!! We give you take home tips to implement straight away as well as a "not to do" . . .
Innovation in waste management, sustainability, procurement or facilities management can sometimes be slow. Follow this guide to learn how to identify issues and . . .
Warp It's Daniel O'Connor met Vinci PLC's Richard Smith at RWM. After the first minute of chatting, Daniel knew he was going to hear some knowledge bombs, so he pulled . . .
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This quick tutorial is about avoiding distractions at work so you can get stuff done!! We give you take home tips to implement straight away as well as a "not to do" list.
This video and article is aimed at anyone who works on a project basis at work but especially sustainability , procurement and facilities management officers and managers.
Topics: Guidance for projects
Innovation in waste management, sustainability, procurement or facilities management can sometimes be slow. Follow this guide to learn how to identify issues and generate ideas to solve them. This blog post has two objectives.
Topics: Guidance for projects
"I learned some great stuff which I think might help others. So I wrote it up!"
In his career spanning over 10 years, Richard Smith has progressed from banging pegs into the ground, to biodiversity surveys and leading the cause of environmental sustainability across his company, VINCI PLC.
Back in 2002, fresh from backpacking in Australia, Richard went to the site office of a road infrastructure project that was being built near his parent’s house. He knocked on the site office door and said, "I really need a job, have you got anything?" They said "You start tomorrow as a chain lad". And so, that was that!
Of course, not everyone would simply walk up to an office and ask for a job. To this, Richard’s reply is simply, “Pure necessity. I think really the raw fact was that I needed money and I needed a job. I viewed it as a short-term thing.”
Richard started in a role where he had to bang pegs in the ground each day. Soon he realised that there were a lot of environmental factors that came into play as they were building the road. He found it interesting and wanted to get involved, “There were Great Crested Newts, badgers, bats and water sampling analysis to be done because it was over the site of an old landfill. I started volunteering for night time newt and badger surveys.”
While volunteering on this project, it hit Richard that he could make a career out of this activity. So he started looking for university courses on Environmental Management. Once again, going against the standard behavior of the majority, he sent a direct letter (not email!) to the MD of his company.
Before he knew it, he was sitting in the Director’s Mercedes on site, explaining to him that he wanted the company to sponsor his education and give him a job at the end of it. Clearly impressed with his vision, the Director agreed and Richard had the prospect of permanent employment at age 19! He then went on to do a three-year course in the University of Central Lancashire and graduated in 2005 with a BSc (Hons), Environmental Management.
Richard’s career trajectory has been anything but ordinary, and rather entrepreneurial. He says this comes to him naturally, “I'd run a little gardening business in the village where I grew up. I'd kept chickens, sold the eggs round the village. I'd always been kind of entrepreneurial and I always took control of the situation. I always thought, ‘I can do that, I don't need anyone else to do it for me’. ”
Richard clearly had a vision for success from a young age and was intent on making it happen. Defining your own vision of success is a great way of working towards your goals, and so we've created this free download to help you understand your targets.
Topics: Case study
I attended the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE) conference in North America for the first time. It was the best conference I have ever attended.
If you are in the Higher Education sustainability space you cannot afford to miss this conference. It is well-organized and very well attended. You will get to hear from some of the leading minds in the industry at all levels. You will also get the chance meet people just like you, trying to make a difference in their corner of the world.
Yes they have given furniture and equipment to the value of £1.9 million to charities and not for profits.
Topics: Charity
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