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AI continues to evolve. Peter Mares rejoins the podcast today to talk about how using AI can impact your business. Pete talks about the experience curve which plays such an important part into bring AI into your business. Peter J. Mares is a former partner at a “Big Four” accounting firm who brings an innovative and entrepreneurial background to the mid-market. He has a unique blend of consulting and corporate experience across a broad spectrum of industries. Peter is currently co-founder and Managing Member of G76.AI, a technology and advisory company that helps mid-market businesses grow sales and profits within their existing customer base by leveraging AI and applied analytics. Contact Information Peter Mares: https://g76.ai/about-us/#leadership or peterm@g76.ai Benny Carreon- Velocity Technology Group- benny@velocitytechnology.group Dennis Jackson-WorX Solution- dennisj@worxsolution.com www.wfhwith2guys.com
AI continues to evolve. Peter Mares rejoins the podcast today to talk about how using AI can impact your business. Pete talks about the experience curve which plays such an important part into bring AI into your business. Peter J. Mares is a former partner at a “Big Four” accounting firm who brings an innovative and entrepreneurial background to the mid-market. He has a unique blend of consulting and corporate experience across a broad spectrum of industries. Peter is currently co-founder and Managing Member of G76.AI, a technology and advisory company that helps mid-market businesses grow sales and profits within their existing customer base by leveraging AI and applied analytics. Contact Information Peter Mares: https://g76.ai/about-us/#leadership or peterm@g76.ai Benny Carreon- Velocity Technology Group- benny@velocitytechnology.group Dennis Jackson-WorX Solution- dennisj@worxsolution.com www.wfhwith2guys.com
AI can be like jumping into a swimming pool , but not knowing how to swim. Peter Mares shares with us an approach that applies to technology/AI.So like any person that wants to swim - you take lessons, and start with the basics and then work your way up to swimming laps. This applies to Technology and AI. There are basic things you have to learn and do well before you move to the next level. The 4 key steps in Technology is 1. Descriptive - (the What) 2. Diagnostics - (the Why) 3. Predictive - (What is likely to happen) 4. Prescriptive - (What should I do now) Steps 1 and 2 are the basics. You have to be able to do this well before you jump in for 3 and 4. Peter J. Mares is a former partner at a “Big Four” accounting firm who brings an innovative and entrepreneurial background to the mid-market. He has a unique blend of consulting and corporate experience across a broad spectrum of industries. Peter is currently co-founder and Managing Member of G76.AI, a technology and advisory company that helps mid-market businesses grow sales and profits within their existing customer base by leveraging AI and applied analytics. Contact Information Peter Mares: https://g76.ai/about-us/#leadership or peterm@g76.ai Benny Carreon- Velocity Technology Group- benny@velocitytechnology.group Dennis Jackson-WorX Solution- dennisj@worxsolution.com www.wfhwith2guys.com
AI can be like jumping into a swimming pool , but not knowing how to swim. Peter Mares shares with us an approach that applies to technology/AI.So like any person that wants to swim - you take lessons, and start with the basics and then work your way up to swimming laps. This applies to Technology and AI. There are basic things you have to learn and do well before you move to the next level. The 4 key steps in Technology is 1. Descriptive - (the What) 2. Diagnostics - (the Why) 3. Predictive - (What is likely to happen) 4. Prescriptive - (What should I do now) Steps 1 and 2 are the basics. You have to be able to do this well before you jump in for 3 and 4. Peter J. Mares is a former partner at a “Big Four” accounting firm who brings an innovative and entrepreneurial background to the mid-market. He has a unique blend of consulting and corporate experience across a broad spectrum of industries. Peter is currently co-founder and Managing Member of G76.AI, a technology and advisory company that helps mid-market businesses grow sales and profits within their existing customer base by leveraging AI and applied analytics. Contact Information Peter Mares: https://g76.ai/about-us/#leadership or peterm@g76.ai Benny Carreon- Velocity Technology Group- benny@velocitytechnology.group Dennis Jackson-WorX Solution- dennisj@worxsolution.com www.wfhwith2guys.com
In today's episode, Legacy's CEO, Jan Graybill sits down with Peter Mares, the founding partner of Growth 1776, renowned for his expertise in finding hidden profits. Peter shares his passion for helping mid-market companies achieve exceptional financial performance by harnessing the power of artificial intelligence and human intelligence. He believes that business owners should capture the value of their businesses rather than selling them to outside sources. Through their unique analytics, Growth 1776 aims to help business owners discover profit pockets within their own companies and capitalize on them. Join us Jan and Peter dive deep into topics such as predictive customer churn, analyzing product sales, and leveraging technology to find exceptional performance. They'll also discuss how Growth 1776 works closely with business owners and heads of sales to identify profit improvement opportunities and help clients mitigate risks and seize opportunities. Get ready for an episode filled with valuable insights, inspiring stories, and practical strategies. Let's uncover the path to exceptional performance together! For more information on Peter Mares and his services, you can visit him growth1776.com. ____________________________ Legacy Planning- 3440 Hamilton Blvd Allentown, PA 18103 and 228 W Gay Street West Chester, PA 19380 610-719-8600 www.legacy-online.com Securities and advisory services offered through Commonwealth Financial Network, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser.
A new report examining the backlog of more than 137,000 parent visa applications has described the system as "dysfunctional". Commissioned by the Scanlon Foundation, the report found the waiting period of between 30 and 50 years means the probability of successful migration is "virtually non-existent for many applicants". Report author Peter Mares tells SBS's Angelica Waite that the current system is in urgent need of reform.
On this episode of the Small Business Founders Podcast our guest Peter Mares, founder of Growth 1776 discusses how his company helps businesses increase their profit margins and reduce costs.
On this episode of The Grapevine, Kulja and Dylan get on the line with Executive Director of Grata Fund, Isabelle Reinecke, to discuss the Coalition Government unlawfully blocking FOI requests and its impact on democracy in Australia.Then, contributing editor of Inside Story, Peter Mares, discusses his piece ‘A Line in the water', reflecting on the anniversary of the Tampa incident in 2001. Mares talks about the Australian Government's treatment of asylum seekers, how the 9/11 attacks influenced immigration detention policy and the Afghanistan war.And Adam Grubb, permaculture editor and author of the ‘The Weed Forager's Handbook', calls in to talk about his new book ‘Let's Eat Weeds!' a kids guide to foraging.
For months, economists and banks have warned about a significant fall in house prices. After years of boom, it looked as though Australia's housing bubble would burst. But low interest rates and government incentives mean it has become the housing crash that didn't happen.
In the final episode Peter Mares is in Brisbane to see if the not-for-profit community housing model offers some solutions to the crisis in affordable housing.
In the final episode Peter Mares is in Brisbane to see if the not-for-profit community housing model offers some solutions to the crisis in affordable housing.
Peter Mares travels to Adelaide, home to the South Australian Housing Trust, which once set the gold standard for state housing authorities worldwide, but now struggles to house even the most vulnerable and needy citizens. With the public sector failing to meet the need, Peter goes onsite with an enterprising developer who claims he can build and sell houses at price that even pensioners can afford.
Peter Mares travels to Adelaide, home to the South Australian Housing Trust, which once set the gold standard for state housing authorities worldwide, but now struggles to house even the most vulnerable and needy citizens. With the public sector failing to meet the need, Peter goes onsite with an enterprising developer who claims he can build and sell houses at price that even pensioners can afford.
The COVID-19 virus has exposed the failings of Australia’s housing system like never before: rough sleeping and homelessness, the insecurity of renting, and a real estate boom-bust cycle. Our housing mess can be measured in lost productivity, poor health, high debt and growing inequality. Peter Mares visits four capital cities, to investigate what’s gone wrong with housing in Australia, and what we might do about it, beginning in his home town of Melbourne
The COVID-19 virus has exposed the failings of Australia’s housing system like never before: rough sleeping and homelessness, the insecurity of renting, and a real estate boom-bust cycle. Our housing mess can be measured in lost productivity, poor health, high debt and growing inequality. Peter Mares visits four capital cities, to investigate what’s gone wrong with housing in Australia, and what we might do about it, beginning in his home town of Melbourne
This week on The Grapevine, writer, researcher, and author, Peter Mares, gets on the line with Kulja and Dylan to explain Labor's rhetoric shift on migration he explored in his article ‘Labor's mixed migration message' for Inside Story.And Kate Robinson, Feminist in Residence at Queen Victoria Women's Centre gives an insight into her practice as a community lawyer, supporting women through the court system.Then, what is a Social Credit System? Head of Research and Emerging Practice for Science Gallery Melbourne and Research Fellow in the interaction Design Lab at Melbourne University, Dr Niels Wouters explains.
Welcome to the first episode of Season 2! Today's guest is Peter Mares - lead moderator at the Cranlana Centre for Ethical Leadership, and journalist of over 25 years. Peter and I talk ethics in the time of Covid-19 and what an ethical framework looks like in the midst of an unprecedented global pandemic. What Peter is reading: Solved, by Andrew Wear Links to interesting articles mentioned in this episode: https://insidestory.org.au/doing-what-we-do-every-day-as-well-as-we-can/ https://insidestory.org.au/ethics-in-a-time-of-scarcity/ And here are some links to the Centre for Policy Development's work on forced migration and climate risk: https://cpd.org.au/intergenerational-wellbeing/asia-dialogue-on-forced-migration/ https://cpd.org.au/sustainable-economy-media-links-and-resources/directors-duties-climate-risks/
Homelessness is entrenched and many Australians face overwhelming housing costs, yet housing policy has slipped off the political agenda. In this discussion with Peter Clarke, housing specialists Wendy Stone and Peter Mares trace the rise and fall of housing policy in Australia, and how the right to adequate, affordable housing can be brought back to the centre of policymaking. Podcast originally appeared on the Inside Story website, 30 April 2019.
This week's conversation takes place in Geraldine's living room. Eliza is back from Beirut with her family to help her mother-in-law Anne recover from a hip replacement. The podcast begins with a discussion about Jonathan Holmes' new essay "On Aunty" https://www.mup.com.au/books/on-aunty-paperback-softback It then shifts to a broader chat about politics and Geraldine's ongoing obsession with finding the 'sensible centre' of the community. Eliza is becoming increasingly evangelical about Australia the longer she lives overseas. The women discuss this article from the New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/08/opinion/australians-have-more-fun.html and muse about the problems facing Australia. Some of the problems being the cost of living and housing, as discussed in this new book by Peter Mares https://www.textpublishing.com.au/books/no-place-like-home-repairing-australia-s-housing-crisis Who's going to win the next election? The polls suggest it's a done deal for Labor, but the women aren't so sure. And their opinions of Scott Morrison have changed over time, too. Geraldine saw this TV show and loved it https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2019/jan/06/brexit-uncivil-war-reviews-andrew-rawnsley-gina-miller-gloria-de-piero-shahmir-sanni And she recommends this new show on Netflix https://www.netflix.com/au/title/81076756 Eliza saw two movies on the plane which she'd recommend https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildlife_(film) & https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Front_Runner_(film) She's looking forward to seeing this drama on SBS On Demand https://www.sbs.com.au/ondemand/program/the-bureau And she's reading this book about the famous murdered war correspondent Marie Colvin https://www.amazon.com/Extremis-Death-Correspondent-Marie-Colvin/dp/0374175594 Please leave us a review on Apple iTunes or wherever you listen to your podcasts. Get in touch via the Facebook page "Long Distance Callers" or contact us via ldcpodcast1@gmail.com Thanks for listening!
In PX 44, Jess Noonan and Peter Jewell interview long term journalist and author Peter Mares about his new book 'No Place Like Home: Repairing Australia's Housing Crisis'. An interesting discussion on contemporary housing and planning policy in Australia.
In PX44 Jess Noonan and Peter Jewell interview long term journalist and author Peter Mares on his new book 'No Place Like Home: Repairing Australia's Housing Crisis'. Peter discusses many aspects of housing and points to historical expectations and the new reality. The discussion identifies those disadvantaged by the new housing paradigm and offers a variety of solutions. Much debate followed Bernard Slat's 'smashed avo' article. 'No Place Like Home' provides a follow up and is a refreshing discussion on contemporary housing issues. Podcast released 10 January 2019. Technical production by Zak Willsallen of Complete Podcast Services. For more information visit www.planningxchange.org.
In PX 44, Jess Noonan and Peter Jewell interview long term journalist and author Peter Mares about his new book 'No Place Like Home: Repairing Australia's Housing Crisis'. An interesting discussion on contemporary housing and planning policy in Australia.
Event podcast: Marion Terrill from the Grattan Institute, Peter Mares, a journalist and migration expert who’s just published a book on housing policy, and Miriam Slattery, who heads Strategy and Partnerships at the City of Melbourne and is a transport enthusiast, explored the state of Melbourne and where to from here at this Policy Pitch event.
As a part of the ANU / Canberra Times 'Meet the Author' series, I joined Peter Mares to shine some light on Australia's housing affordabilty blindspots. Peter's new book is called No Place Like Home: Repairing Australia's Housing Crisis. More than a million lower-income households in Australia pay above the affordability benchmark for their housing costs. More than 100,000 people are homeless. Seventy per cent of us are concerned we'll never own property. Yet owning a home is still seen by most Australians as an essential part of our way of life. Peter's expertly informed and eminently readable, No Place Like Home cuts through the noise around housing affordability and asks the common-sense questions about why we do housing the way we do, and what the alternatives might be. You can learn more about No Place Like Home here.
This week Kulja and Dylan speak with Bernard Keane from Crikey about the hearing involving the the leak of information that revealed the Australian government bugging a Timor-Leste government office.Finally, Peter Mares comes on the show to talk about his new book No Place Like Home: Repairing Australia's Housing Crisis.
Bill speaks to author and film critic Adrian Martin about how a childhood interest in science fiction fanzines lead him towards a rich and varied life in film culture, from teaching film at age 19 and working as a freelance film/arts critic to writing books, co-editing online journals like Rouge and collaborating with fellow critic Cristina Álvarez López on audiovisual essays. Topics include: writing techniques and outfoxing subeditors, progressive rock, specializing in certain films/filmmakers, audio commentaries, Bill Krohn, discussing troublesome directors, early 1980s Melbourne film culture, Josef Von Sternberg and experiencing premonitions in dreams concerning PLANET OF THE APES. Visit Adrian Martin’s official site, Film Critic: Adrian Martin: Film Critic: Adrian Martin Support Adrian Martin’s site via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/adrianmartin Watch an interview with Cristina Álvarez López and Adrian Martin on their audio-visual essays: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYVywxnfMwI Watch a discussion led by Peter Mares, critics Adrian Martin, Mel Campbell and Fenella Kernebone and filmmaker Gillian Armstrong about the place of the film critic in our cultural landscape. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-ZurWD9cMk Watch THEN HE KISSED ME, a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on TWIN PEAKS - THE RETURN: https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/video-essay-twin-peaks-the-return-then-he-kissed-me Watch STRANGULATION BLUES, a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on BAD TIMING: https://filmschoolrejects.com/great-sounds-bad-timing/ Watch WOMAN IN A LANDSCAPE, , a Cristina Álvarez López/Adrian Martin audiovisual essay on Barbara Loden’s WANDA https://vimeo.com/161556412 Visit Adrian Martin’s Mubi author page: https://mubi.com/notebook/posts/author/254 Read Adrian Martin on PURPLE RAIN: http://www.filmcritic.com.au/reviews/p/purple_rain.html Visit Senses Of Cinema: http://sensesofcinema.com/ Visit Rouge: http://www.rouge.com.au/ Visit Lola Journal: http://www.lolajournal.com/ Visit Screening The Past: http://www.screeningthepast.com/ Read essays by Bill Krohn: http://sensesofcinema.com/author/bill-krohn/
This week Kulja and Dylan speak with Dr. Suelette Dreyfus about the governments decision to make their My Health Record online system opt out.Then, journalist Stephen Mayne comes on the show to talk about the consolidation of big media companies in Australia.Finally, immigration expert, Peter Mares comes on the show to talk about the restrictions that are being discussed for immigration.
Political scientist and author John Keane on the recent proliferation of corrupt political regimes that employ democratic rhetoric, staged elections, social media and economic growth to cultivate public loyalty and give the appearance of legitimacy. Presented by Peter Mares. Download mp3 (39.7 MB) Listen now Read transcript read more
This week on Uncommon Sense we have four excellent interviews, conducted by our host Amy Mullins:Sally Whytedeputy editor of Crikeyon the latest in federal politicsInside Story contributing editor Peter Mares discusses his essay 'Surfing With Singer' on the concept of effective altruism and the ways we evaluate charitable giving.Filmmaker Jolyon Hoff and photographer Muzafar Ali joined Amy in the studio to talk about The Staging Post, their documentary that follows Ali and fellow refugees awaiting UNHCR processing at Cisarua, Indonesia. The film showcases the strength and agency of the refugee community who created the Cisarua Refugee Learning Centre.Freelance writer Sophie Cunningham spoke about her essay Biyala Stories, which won the 2017 Nature Writing Prize.
Are refugees fleeing persecution today generally seen as people who need help, or problems to be pushed away? Migration and refugee researcher Prof. Uma Kothari discusses how media representations of asylum seekers influence us in how we attend and respond to the plight of individuals and groups fleeing their countries in search of safety. Presented by Peter Mares. Download mp3 (31.3 MB) Listen now Read transcript read more
Philosopher and social theorist Prof Sally Haslanger outlines the persistence of ideologies like racism or sexism that entrench injustice or privilege, and how we might best combat deeply embedded misconceptions that endure in our societies in defiance of evidence or reasoned argument. Presented by Peter Mares. Download mp3 (26.7 MB) Listen now Read transcript read more
Is extreme poverty merely evidence of failed economic policy or should it also be seen as a breach of human rights? Legal scholar and UN Special Rapporteur Philip Alston argues that the conversation around human rights has yet to take seriously how the world's very poor are excluded from a life of dignity -- underpinned by access to education, basic health care and housing -- while extreme inequality is itself in part sustained by the blocking of civil and political rights by elites. Presented by Peter Mares. Download mp3 (37.8 MB) Listen now Read transcript read more
Bill Shorten discusses Labor factions, parliamentary career paths, and winners and losers in this interview with Peter Mares recorded in 2006. Interview originally appeared on the Inside Story website, 14 October 2013.