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Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Sharp to review TV licensing deals to boost global presence

Technology


Japanese electronics maker Sharp Corp said Tuesday it will review its TV brand licensing deals overseas in an effort to boost its global presence under the aegis of Taiwan's Foxconn.
"We have decided to review our current brand licensing business in Europe and Americas, and are currently examining various possibilities," Sharp said in a statement.
The comment follows a report by the Yomiuri newspaper that Sharp will dispatch officials next month for negotiations to buy back its TV business in the United States and Europe.
Sharp effectively exited the money-losing TV business in those markets and licensed its brand to China's Hisense Group in the Americas and to Universal Media Corp Slovakia in Europe.
The withdrawal from the money-losing TV business abroad helped Sharp trim its losses in April-June.
But Sharp now believes that it can make profits out of the TV business by taking advantage of Foxconn's procurement power in the supply chain and its vast network of clients, the Yomiuri said.
Foxconn, known formally as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co, is the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer whose clients include Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL), Sony Corp (T:6758) and many other major international companies.
Source by Reuters

Monday, August 22, 2016

Chinese investors buy ad tech startup Media.net for $900 million

Technology


Advertising technology startup Media.net, founded by tech entrepreneur Divyank Turakhia, said on Monday it had been acquired for about $900 million by a group of Chinese investors.
The deal would represent the third-largest in the ad tech industry, after Alphabet Inc (GOOGL) unit Google's acquisition of DoubleClick and Microsoft Corp's (O:MSFT) deal for aQuantive.
"We got an incredible amount of interest just because ad tech is a large and growing space and, at the same time, the number of companies that have been successful in it have been limited," Turakhia said in an interview.
The company's products, which are licensed by various publishers and ad networks, auto-learn and display the most relevant ads to users.
Media.net, a Yahoo Inc (O:YHOO) ad partner, attracted seven bidders, including a publicly listed company based in the United States.
However, the bid fell through following a substantial decrease in the company's stock value, Turakhia said.
The deal gives Media.net access to the Chinese online advertising market, which is currently the second largest in the world, Turakhia said.
Digital ad spend in China is expected to reach $40.42 billion in 2016, a 30 percent jump from a year earlier, according to research firm eMarketer.
Media.net, which is based in Dubai and New York, gets 90 percent of its revenue from the United States.
The company posted revenue of $232 million in 2015, with more than half of that coming from mobile users.
The Chinese consortium will buy Media.net from Turakhia's Starbuster TMT Investments and has already made a payment of $426 million.
The group is led by Zhang Zhiyong, the chairman of telecom firm Beijing Miteno Communication Technology Co.
Miteno's shares have been halted since December.
Source by Reuters

Samsung plans refurbished smartphone program

Technology


Samsung Electronics (KS:005930) Co Ltd plans to launch a program to sell refurbished used versions of its premium smartphones as early as next year, a person with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
The South Korean technology firm is looking for ways to sustain earnings momentum after reviving its mobile profits by restructuring its product line-up. As growth in the global smartphone market hits a plateau, Samsung wants to maximize its cost efficiency and keep operating margins above 10 percent.
The world's top smartphone maker will refurbish high-end phones returned to the company by users who signed up for one-year upgrade programs in markets such as South Korea and the United States.
Samsung would then re-sell these phones at a lower price, the person said, declining to be identified as the plan was not yet public.
The person declined to say how big a discount the refurbished phones would be sold at, which markets the phones would be sold in or how many refurbished devices Samsung could sell.
A Samsung spokeswoman said the company does not comment on speculation.
It was not clear to what extent the phones would be altered, but refurbished phones typically are fitted with parts such as a new casing or battery.
Rival Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) Inc's iPhone has a re-sale value of around 69 percent of its original price after about one year from launch, while Samsung's flagship Galaxy sells for 51 percent of the original price in the U.S. market, according to BNP Paribas (PA:BNPP).
Refurbished phones could help vendors such as Samsung boost their presence in emerging markets such as India, where high-end devices costing $800 or so are beyond most buyers.
Apple sells refurbished iPhones in a number of markets including the United States, but does not disclose sales figures. It is trying to sell such iPhones in India, where the average smartphone sells for less than $90.
Selling used phones could help Samsung fend off lower-cost Chinese rivals that have been eating into its market share, and free up some capital to invest elsewhere or boost marketing expenditure.
Deloitte says the used smartphone market will be worth more than $17 billion this year, with 120 million devices sold or traded in to manufacturers or carriers - around 8 percent of total smartphone sales. Some market experts expect the used market to grow fast as there are fewer technology breakthroughs.
"Some consumers may prefer to buy refurbished, used premium models in lieu of new budget brands, possibly cannibalizing sales of new devices from those budget manufacturers," Deloitte said in a report.
CANNIBALIZATION RISK
Samsung's refurbishment program, details of which the person said could be finalised as early as 2017, could help the firm generate revenue from dated high-end smartphones returned by users upgrading to newer versions.
The company's latest premium phones, the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy Note 7, have received favorable reviews, suggesting cheaper, refurbished versions could be popular. At U.S. carrier Verizon Communications (NYSE:VZ), the Galaxy S7 edge with 32-gigabyte storage retails for $792 without subsidies, while the Note 7 costs $864.
The program could help Samsung defend market share in emerging countries by bolstering mid-tier sales. Refurbished phones could also appeal to enterprise clients who want certain security or software products pre-installed on phones to give to their employees, the source said.
The risk of offering refurbished devices is that they could potentially cannibalize sales of Samsung's other mid-tier devices.
Expectations for solid smartphone sales helped Samsung shares to a record 1.675 million won each on Friday, taking two-day gains to 7 percent and adding $15 billion in market value. The shares traded down 0.36 percent in Seoul on Monday.
Source by Reuters

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Cisco to lay off about 14,000 employees: CRN

Technology


Cisco Systems Inc is laying off about 14,000 employees, representing nearly 20 percent of the network equipment maker's global workforce, technology news site CRN reported, citing sources close to the company.
Cisco, which is due to report fourth-quarter results later on Wednesday, is expected to announce the cuts within the next few weeks, the report said.
"We think it's true," Jefferies analysts wrote in a client note, referring to the report.
"As we've met with investors in recent weeks, we've picked up on concerns that Cisco may be looking to reduce headcount in the not-too-distant future."
If confirmed, it would be the second big tech industry layoff of a similar scale announced this year. Intel Corp said in April that it would slash up to 12,000 jobs globally, or 11 percent of its workforce.
San Jose-based Cisco is facing sluggish spending by telecom carriers and enterprises on network switches and routers, its main business. In response, the company has been beefing up its wireless security and datacenter businesses.
Cisco, which had more than 70,000 employees as of April 30, declined to comment.
The company has already offered many early retirement packages to employees, the CRN report said.
Cisco's shares were down 2 percent at $30.50 in early trading on Wednesday on the Nasdaq.
Jefferies raised its price target on the stock to $35 from $30.72 and maintained its "buy" rating.
Up to Tuesday's close, Cisco's stock had risen about 15 percent this year, compared with a 10.5 percent increase in the Dow Jones U.S. Technology Hardware & Equipment index.
Source by Reuters

Daimler's top electric motors executive moving to Bosch: sources

Technology


Daimler's top electric motors development executive, Harald Kroeger, is joining auto supplier Robert Bosch [ROBG.UL], two people familiar with the matter told Reuters, as a battle to hire leading talents in the sector heats up.
German carmakers are investing heavily in electric cars, a segment once neglected by the industry as customers shunned their limited operating range and high cost.
But a growing political backlash against diesel fumes and recent advances in battery technology to increase the reach of an electric car by up to 50 percent have spurred major investments by Volkswagen VOWG_p., Daimler and suppliers such as Bosch and Continental.
Daimler and Bosch declined to comment on Kroeger's move.
The departure of the Stanford-educated executive, Daimler's head of Development for Electrics, Electronics, and E-Drive, comes as Daimler's luxury brand Mercedes-Benz prepares to launch a range of electric models.
Hiring Kroeger is a major coup for Bosch. The German executive has held various senior roles, including the position of Head of Quality at Mercedes-Benz, and two years on the board of directors at electric car company Tesla Motors.
Kroeger helped oversee development of motors for Mercedes-Benz pure battery powered cars as well as plug-in hybrids.
He was also responsible for development of all electronics for Mercedes-Benz passenger cars and for battery development, including stationary battery storage systems and the building of a factory to manufacture battery packs for electric cars.
The development of Mercedes-Benz electric passenger cars remains in the hands of Juergen Schenk, the engineer who has overseen development of vehicles including the electric Mercedes-Benz B-Class. Kroeger was Schenk's boss.
NEW CAR PLANS
Daimler remains on track to unveil a new electric car at the Paris motor show next month, a company spokesman said. In July, the German carmaker said it had accelerated development of premium electric cars, a segment currently dominated by United States-based rival Tesla.
Stuttgart-based auto supplier Bosch has in recent years built up its expertise in electric and autonomous car technology, helping a wider group of companies to gain a foothold in the auto industry.
Bosch built the electric powertrain and steering for Google's prototype autonomous vehicle and is a supplier of driver assistance systems to Tesla.
Bosch expects sales of driver assistance systems, which include radar and video sensors used for emergency braking and sophisticated cruise control functions, to reach 1 billion euros ($1.13 billion) by 2016.
In 2025, Bosch expects 125 million cars to be produced, of which 8 million will be electric cars, 8.3 million plug-in hybrids and more than 5 million hybrid vehicles.
(Reporting by Edward Taylor; Editing by Keith Weir)
Source by Reuters

Monday, August 15, 2016

EU to propose minimum spectrum license duration of 25 years

Technology


The European Commission is to propose that telecom spectrum licenses are granted for a minimum of 25 years to increase investment certainty for operators, under a reform of the bloc's telecoms rules, according to an EU document seen by Reuters.
The European Union executive will publish its proposal next month and expects it to be endorsed in 2018. However, as it will need to be approved by member states and the European Parliament before becoming law, it may yet be revised as EU states could resist the plan.
The European Commission has sought for years to coordinate how national governments allocate blocks of airwaves to mobile operators such as Vodafone (LON:VOD), Deutsche Telekom (DE:DTEGn) and EE in a bid to create a single European telecoms market. Telecoms operators have also long called for more EU coordination of spectrum policy.
But national authorities are loath to relinquish control over how they auction wireless spectrum, which they consider a national resource, and license durations vary across Europe, making it harder for companies to operate on a larger scale. Spectrum auctions can fetch billions of euros.
Under the Commission's plan, licenses would last at least 25 years and the Commission would have the power to adopt binding guidance on some conditions of the assignment process, such as the deadlines for spectrum allocation and spectrum sharing.
Member states would also be able to jointly organize spectrum auctions to award multi-country or pan-EU licenses, although this would be voluntary.
"Long-term license durations of at least 25 years proposed in this option will increase stability and certainty of investments as well as innovation requirements," the document says.
Telecoms operators see a coordinated EU policy as a way to put Europe at the forefront of the drive to roll out the next generation of mobile broadband, 5G, which will underpin innovative services such as driverless cars, remote healthcare and connecting billions of everyday objects to the Internet.
"Longer spectrum licenses and harmonization send a pro-investment signal to boardrooms and investors across Europe," a telecoms industry source said.
The Commission also wants to establish a peer review mechanism to review national regulators' draft measures on spectrum allocation.
"This mechanism would foster common interpretation and implementation across the EU of those elements of spectrum assignment which most impact business decisions and network deployment," the document says.
The EU executive has made a priority of fostering the early development of 5G mobile technology in Europe, and estimates that 5G will bring 146.5 billion euros ($164 bln) per year in benefits.
Source by Reuters

EU plans to extend some telecom rules to web-based providers

Technology


The European Union is planning to extend telecom rules covering security and confidentiality of communications to web services such as Microsoft's Skype and Facebook's WhatsApp which could restrict how they use encryption.
The rules currently only apply to telecoms providers such as Vodafone (LON:VOD) and Orange.
According to an internal European Commission document seen by Reuters, the EU executive wants to extend some of the rules to web companies offering calls and messages over the Internet.
Telecoms companies have long complained that web groups such as Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Inc's Google, Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) are more lightly regulated despite offering similar services and have called for the EU's telecoms-specific rules to be repealed.
They have also said that companies such as Google and Facebook can make money from the use of customer data.
"Unlike telcos, OTT (web-based) are global players
that are allowed to commercially exploit the traffic data and the location data they collect," telecoms group Orange said in a response to the EU's public consultation on the reform proposals.
Under the existing "ePrivacy Directive", telecoms operators have to protect users' communications and ensure the security of their networks and may not keep customers' location and traffic data.
The EU rules also allow national governments to restrict the right to confidentiality for national security and law enforcement purposes.
Many tech companies such as Facebook and Google already offer end-to-end encryption on their messaging and email services.
They argue there is no need to extend the telecoms rules to web services and that the EU should not dictate how they protect their users' communications.
Facebook, which uses full-scale encryption on WhatsApp, said in its response to the Commission's public consultation that extending the rules to online messaging services would mean they could in effect "no longer be able to guarantee the security and confidentiality of the communication through encryption" because governments would have the option of restricting the confidentiality right for national security purposes.
"Therefore, any expansion of the current ePD (ePrivacy Directive) should not have the undesired consequence of undermining the very privacy it is seeking to protect," the company said.
Tech companies have been at loggerheads with national governments and police agencies over the use of encryption. Advocates of strong encryption argue the technology is vital for protecting the privacy of consumers and businesses.
The EU document said that the exact confidentiality obligations for web firms would still have to be defined.
The Commission could also force the companies to allow their users to take a copy of their content, for example emails, with them when they switch providers, according to the document.
The EU executive will propose a reform of the ePrivacy rules later this year, while a broader overhaul of the EU's telecoms rules will come in September.
The Commission was not immediately available to comment.
Source by Reuters

Xylem nears deal to buy smart meter company Sensus-sources

Business

 Technology


U.S. water technology company Xylem Inc (NYSE:XYL) is nearing a deal to acquire Sensus USA Inc, a provider of advanced metering technologies to utilities, for around $1.7 billion, including debt, according to people familiar with the matter.
The acquisition would make Xylem a major player in the market for smart meters, at a time when regulatory requirements and a drive for savings are pushing both companies and consumers to control their water and energy consumption more tightly.
The deal between Xylem and private equity-owned Sensus could be announced as early as Monday, the people said, cautioning that the negotiations could still falter at the last minute.
The sources asked not to be identified because the deal has not yet been finalized. Xylem declined to comment, while Sensus did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Headquartered in Raleigh, North Carolina, Sensus is a supplier of smart metering and related communications systems to the global water, gas, heat and electric utility sectors. It had revenue in 2015 of $850 million, according to credit ratings agency Moody's Investors Service Inc.
Sensus is one of the longest held investments in the history of private equity. Buyout firm Jordan Company, in partnership with Goldman Sachs Group (NYSE:GS) Inc's private equity arm, acquired the company for $650 million in 2003. Goldman's private equity business still owns 34 percent of Sensus, with Jordan Company owning the remainder.
The private equity owners were holding on to the company because they were waiting for its financial performance to improve, so it can fetch a high valuation in a sale, according to the sources.
Sensus' financial metrics have steadily improved since bottoming three years ago, driven by stronger end-market demand and comprehensive cost-cutting initiatives, Moody's said earlier this year.
New product launches, combined with the company's restructuring efforts, should benefit operating results over the medium term, Moody's added.
Based in Rye Brook, New York, Xylem designs and manufactures equipment used in water and wastewater applications. It had revenue of $3.7 billion last year.
In an investor presentation published on its website this month, Xylem said it could deploy as much as $3.5 billion on mergers and acquisitions in the next five years, with any unspent cash returned to shareholders in the form of share buybacks.
Source by Reuters

Can Singapore's labor crunch spark a robot revolution?

Technology


Sherine Toh says her best days at work are when none of the 600-or-so staff at Singapore's Tung Lok Restaurants (SI:TGLK) quits, though such days are rare.
The Chinese restaurant group is one of the thousands of businesses struggling with a labor crunch caused by foreign worker curbs, that threaten the city-state's already feeble growth rates.
"It has gotten much more tougher compared to the old days, five years back," said Toh, who has at least 20 vacancies to fill at any one time as head of human resources. The group closed some outlets because of the shortage.
The city's restaurants, hotels and retailers have become the biggest casualties of the labor crunch since Singapore accelerated restrictions on foreign workers in 2011 as political disquiet about immigration grew. But its highly-educated locals largely shun the late hours and unglamorous work.
To address the constraints, Singapore is pushing businesses to look to non-human solutions for their human resource challenges, including greater use of automation and robotics.
At Chilli Padi Nonya Cafe near a leafy university enclave, a tray-wielding robot roams the eatery, offering to collect plates from patrons in a childlike voice. Navigating its way through customers, it delivers the dirty dishes to the kitchen.
While tech powerhouses such as Japan, the U.S. and Germany invest billions in robotics to compete commercially in the emerging sector, Singapore's robots push is driven by a much more urgent need: the survival of some labor-strapped small and medium sized businesses may depend on them.
In the food and beverage industry, 90 percent of the businesses face the shortage and about a third are "really struggling," according to its lobby group.
"There is an increasing number of businesses that are up for sale," said Lim Rui Shan, executive director at the Restaurant Association of Singapore, which represents 2,200 outlets. "Some of them just shut down."
To encourage adoption, Singapore this year announced plans to spend S$450 million ($333 million) over three years to fund robot development and deployment.
Andrew Khaw, Infocomm Development Authority's senior director of productivity growth through information and communications technology, admits the take-up of robots is slower than he would like.
But he says the lack of manpower is a new operating reality businesses now need to accept.
"It's a bit of 'let's see who blinks first'. As far as the government is concerned, we can't go back on this policy," Khaw said.
Service robots can be found in Singapore - in hospitals and restaurants, as waiters or cleaners - but are less ubiquitous than might be expected for the aggressively tech-oriented economy.
James Xia, director at Unitech Mechatronics, which built the busboy robot Chilli Padi uses, sees export potential in his product but says development outlays mean commercialization is slow.
Xia thinks more upfront government grants, rather than the current post-project reimbursements, could accelerate development.
Another firm, Aitech Robotics and Automation, has developed a tea-lady robot that delivers food and drinks throughout a seven-storey building to workers in their offices.
But the company's business development manager, Eric Lee, says orders are slow and doesn't expect to make any money on the showcase robot.
Weak capital expenditure amid the global economic slowdown has made it difficult for a virtuous robot development cycle to rev up in Singapore.
"In a hypothetical situation where there were no foreign manpower curbs, then (domestic) growth may have been a little bit higher," said Selena Ling, head of treasury research for OCBC.
For now, manpower is just one of many economic challenges: Singapore cut its 2016 growth forecast this month after revising down its second-quarter growth as the service sector contracted.
Source by Reuters

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Business software company Sage hit by data breach

Technology


Sage Group (LON:SGE), a provider of accounting, payroll and payments software for businesses, said an internal login had been used to gain unauthorized access to the data of some of its British customers.
The personal details of the employees of about 280 British companies were potentially exposed in the breach, a company source said. It was working to ascertain whether any data had been stolen, the source added.
"We are investigating unauthorized access to customer information using an internal login," the company said in a statement.
"We cannot comment further whilst we work with the authorities to investigate but our customers remain our first priority and we are speaking directly with those affected," it added.
Sage, one of Britain's largest technology companies, says it has more than 6 million small and medium-sized businesses using its software worldwide.
It said last month it was confident its revenue would increase by at least 6 percent in the current year ending next month, continuing a pace set in the six months to end-March, when revenue rose 6.2 percent to 747 million pounds ($966 million).
In the same period its operating profit rose by 1.9 percent on a like-for-like basis to 189 million pounds.
Source by Reuters

Pokemon craze challenges Rio Games for popularity

Technology


Forget beach volleyball, soccer or tennis, not to mention the steeplechase or discus. Pokemon Go is challenging the Olympics for most popular game among some young Brazilians.
Hundreds of them turned out in a Rio de Janeiro park on Saturday holding their mobile phones to hunt for virtual creatures in the hyper-reality game app that has become a craze in Brazil since its release two days before the Games.
"I went to a football game to see Brazil play Sweden, but after Pokemon Go started I lost interest," said student Lourdes Drummond at the Quinta da Boa Vista park, once the gardens of the Brazilian royal family.
The blockbuster game developed by Niantic, in which Japan's Nintendo Co (T:7974) has a large stake, uses augmented reality and GPS mapping to make animated characters appear in the real world. Players see creatures overlaid on the nearby landscape that they see through a mobile phone camera.
Brazil's third largest mobile phone company Claro estimates that close to 2 million of its users have downloaded the game just in the Rio area since it was released on Aug. 3. An executive of the company owned by Carlos Slim's America Movil said more than half of those users had been inside or near Olympic venues hunting for Pokemon.
Even athletes have been addicted to the game. Japanese gymnast Kohei Uchimura downloaded the app when he got to Brazil for pre-Games training before Pokemon Go was launched in the country. He ran up almost $5,000 in international phone charges.
That did not stop him winning two gold medals and becoming the first man to claim back-to-back all around titles in over 40 years, and only the fourth in history.
As Rio residents rode paddle boats on the lake of the Boa Vista park, youths explored the grounds seeking Dragonite and other prized Pokemon to add to their collection. They huddled in the shade of the 19th Century royal palace to swap tips.
"There is no interest in the Olympics here, just how to get to the next stop where there are the most Pokemon," said sociologist Joao Carlos Barssani, 31, himself joining the hunt.
When a boy shouted "I found one!" dozens sprinted after him in pursuit.
It may not be a physical sport, but the novelty of Pokemon Go is the mobility involved compared to traditional video games. You have to get up and go outside to search your city cellphone in hand to accumulate as many Pokemon as you can.
"Before I never left home. Now every time my mother wants me to do any shopping, I'm out the door," said Rafael Moura Barros, an IT student who believes the game will help reduce obesity in Brazil.
Barssani said the game was changing the way Brazilian were using their urban space in cities long plagued with high crime rates. People are frequenting parks and squares that had been abandoned for fear of getting mugged, he said.
"It's good to have lots of people around you, so your phone doesn't get robbed," said student Leonardo Perreira.
Source by Reuters

Friday, August 12, 2016

Europe's biggest software maker SAP ditches annual reviews

Technology


Germany's SAP (DE:SAPG), maker of software used to grade the performance of millions of employees worldwide, is ditching its own annual performance reviews as too expensive, time-consuming and often demotivating.
Once championed by business leaders as the key to better productivity, annual appraisals are falling out of fashion with companies including IBM (N:IBM), Gap (N:GPS) and evenGeneral Electric (N:GE), whose long-time Chief Executive Jack Welch is credited with popularising the system.
SAP, which for the last two years has had an American CEO and employs almost a third of its staff in the United States, is one of the first major European companies to join the trend that began across the Atlantic.
The ritual of the annual performance review is widely disliked by employees.
SAP's human resources head for Germany, Wolfgang Fassnacht, said Europe's biggest software maker had found the annual review process, with its focus on separating over- from under-performers, was often counter-productive to the goal of constructive dialogue.
"Grading workers did not work. People are open to feedback, also to harsh criticism, until the moment you start giving scores. Then the shutters go down," he told Reuters.
SAP is testing a new process, which includes more regular check-in talks, on about 8,000 of its workers and aims to implement it for all of its almost 80,000 workforce next year.
"The old system is too static," said Fassnacht. "It no longer reflects the dynamic circumstances we are operating in."
HOT TOPIC
SAP is a world leader in human-resources (HR) software and made a big bet on performance-management tools with the $3.4 billion acquisition of U.S. cloud-computing company successfactors.com in 2012.
It gets a lot of feedback from its customers, Fassnacht said, a factor that may have influenced its decision to ditch the dreaded annual review.
"I meet many HR managers at other companies. The topic is on everyone's mind at the moment," he said. "This is actually one of the hottest topics discussed in the HR area."
SAP is not putting itself out of business, however. It will continue to sell its performance assessment software and it announced in February it would also introduce software for continuous performance management of employees.
Although many companies are re-assessing the annual review, Sydney-based management consultancy Strategic Factors, a specialist in strategic planning and performance measurement, warned against ditching employee reviews wholesale.
"Regular check-ins are great, this ongoing conversation and coaching model, but we also need performance measurements. We need to be careful to not chuck out the baby with the bath water," said managing director Graham Kenny.
Audit and advisory firm PwC concluded in a report last year there was a general trend among companies of reforming performance reviews but that removing ratings was still perceived as a "more radical" change.
Source by Reuters