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Welcome to the Use Case Podcast, episode 242. Today we'll be talking to Jeremy from TrainUp about the use case or business case for why his customers choose TrainUp.
Jeremy Tillman, the Founder and CEO of TrainUp.com, the web's largest training marketplaces offering career development and skills courses from the individual to the corporate level joins Enterprise Radio. The post Upskilling, Maintaining, and Modernizing the Workforce with TrainUp.com's Jeremy Tillman appeared first on Enterprise Podcast Network - EPN.
Session Title: The Effectiveness of DEI Training and what can be done to create positive, sustained culture change Speaker: Jeremy Tillman of TrainUp Theme: Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion (DEI) 0:00 - Introduction 1:40 - What needs to be done to accomplish sustained change in organizations? 4:05 - What are leaders doing to help organizations? 5:59 - What is inclusion? 8:03 - How can you practice change? 12:27 - 3 keys for effective DEI programs 17:59 - What are the responsibilities of leaders to achieve change? 23:05 - Are leaders aware of the cost of not investing in DEI? 25:36 - Conclusion Learn more about our digital events and the people data for good movement: www.pafow.net To ongoing learning, creativity, and compassion for the human experience!
Today, we continue our Lenten series on Job. Jeremy Tillman, a member of the board at LIDE talks about how Job's friends treat him and speak to him through his suffering. What did they get wrong, and what did they get right?
Did you know that every website has 15 seconds to keep the attention of its audience? As humans, our attention span is now less than that of goldfish at 8 seconds and your visitors will form an opinion about your site in 5 seconds. Finally, if your website fails to load within 3 seconds, users will leave and never return again? What’s even more eye-opening is how much seemingly minute increments of additional load time actually impact the outcome. A mere 100s of difference can cause conversion rate to drop by 2.4%. A page loading 1 second slower can see their conversion rates plummet 21.8%, and a page loading 2 seconds slower could find 36.5% of their conversions lost. If you want users to stay on your page, then statistics hurt even more – with a 2-second delay causing a 62.1% average increase in bounce rate. Meanwhile, many retailers are filling their websites with trackers that are increasing load times and creating negative experiences for their visitors. These are a few areas that I wanted to explore on this daily tech podcast. Today I have invited Jeremy Tillman back onto the podcast from Ad Tracker experts Ghostery who recently released their 2019 Retail Tracker Tax Report. Ghostery revealed insights to analyze the specific tracker stack of 12 retailers’ websites to expose the hidden cost of certain trackers. Ghostery found that many retail websites in this study suffered from frivolous trackers that were found to negatively impact customer experiences. Some of the worst-performing websites belonged to Everlane, Footlocker and Urban Outfitters, which all had the biggest discrepancies between default load time (load time with all trackers in place) and load time with trackers blocked – with a difference between load times of 6 seconds, 5 seconds and 5 seconds, respectively. Although these three retailers did not have relatively high numbers of trackers on their websites among those analyzed, the trackers they did have were attacking performance. Jeremy reveals other findings from the report and much more.
Every day, our data hits the market when we sign online. It’s for sale, and we’re left to wonder if tech companies will ever choose to protect our privacy rather than reap large profits with our information. But, is the choice — profit or privacy — a false dilemma? Meet the people who have built profitable tech businesses while also respecting your privacy. Fact check if Facebook and Google have really found religion in privacy. And, imagine a world where you could actually get paid to share your data.In this episode, Oli Frost recalls what happened when he auctioned his personal data on eBay. Jeremy Tillman from Ghostery reveals the scope of how much ad-tracking is really taking place online. Patrick Jackson at Disconnect.me breaks down Big Tech’s privacy pivot. DuckDuckGo’s Gabriel Weinberg explains why his private search engine has been profitable. And Dana Budzyn walks us through how her company, UBDI, hopes to give consumers the ability to sell their data for cash.IRL is an original podcast from Firefox. For more on the series, go to irlpodcast.org.Read about Patrick Jackson and Geoffrey Fowler's privacy experiment.Learn more about DuckDuckGo, an alternative to Google search, at duckduckgo.com.And, we're pleased to add a little more about Firefox's business here as well — one that puts user privacy first and is also profitable. Mozilla was founded as a community open source project in 1998, and currently consists of two organizations: the 501(c)3 Mozilla Foundation, which backs emerging leaders and mobilizes citizens to create a global movement for the health of the internet; and its wholly owned subsidiary, the Mozilla Corporation, which creates Firefox products, advances public policy in support of internet user rights and explores new technologies that give people more control and privacy in their lives online. Firefox products have never — and never will never — buy or sell user data. Because of its unique structure, Mozilla stands apart from its peers in the technology field as one of the most impactful and successful social enterprises in the world. Learn more about Mozilla and Firefox at mozilla.org.
In today’s podcast, we hear that Indonesia says it’s got its voting security under control, and a lot of the problems sound like good old familiar fraud and dirty campaigning. Trustwave warns of a watering hole on a Pakistani government site. Recorded Future goes RAT hunting. Proofpoint offers a look at “intelligent brute-forcing.” Kaspersky reports on two espionage APTs exploiting a just-patched Microsoft zero-day. Flashpoint describes an unusual point-of-sale attack, and Check Point find Trojanized Android apps. Germany’s BND warns against Huawei. Robert M. Lee from Dragos with thoughts on the Venezuelan power outages. Guest is Jeremy Tillman from Ghostery on the California Consumer Privacy Act. For links to all of today's stories check our our CyberWire daily news brief: https://thecyberwire.com/issues/issues2019/March/CyberWire_2019_03_14.html Support our show
2 - 22 - 18 | Jeremy Tillman by MS Baptists
Did you know that everytime you visit a website, there are hundreds of companies such as Google, Facebook that are tracking your online behavior and a building a profile about you? Even if you are not being served adverts, many retailers often track your web behavior so it knows what products to promote to you. Sometimes, this tracking oversteps the mark and enters a creepy territory. When I heard how Edward Snowden-endorsed a service called Ghostery, I felt compelled to find out more. Ghostery is the first browser extension that makes your web browsing experience faster, cleaner and safer by detecting and blocking thousands of third-party data-tracking technologies – putting control of their own data back into consumers’ hands. Launched in 2009, Ghostery has more than seven million monthly active users who access the tool via the free apps or browser extensions. With its intuitive user interface, Ghostery enables average internet users to protect their privacy by default, while expert users benefit from a broad set of features and settings. I invited Jeremy Tillman, director of product at Ghostery, onto the show to chat about online privacy. We also highlight how Ghostery makes it easy for the average user to protect themselves from being tracked online preemptively.