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Danish lead in new space project

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

Deal will make company one of Europe’s leading space technology providers

The Danish firm Terma has won the contract to run a programme for the European Space Agency (ESA).

Terma - which develops and markets high-technology solutions, systems and products for civilian and military applications within defence and space technology - will head the European space project, which will conduct experiments and observations from the International Space Station (ISS).

Source: Copenhagen Post and Terma.dk



Top-seeded Dane breezes to Montreal WTA tournament win

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Tennis sensation Caroline Wozniacki earned her money on Monday, playing nearly two complete matches before hoisting the Rogers Cup trophy in Montreal.

After suffering a third round exit in her previous tournament, the second-ranked Dane seemed to rediscover her form in the Canadian WTA tournament’s quarter-finals, easily beating French Open champion Francesca Schiavone 6-3, 6-2.

In the semi-finals on Saturday, she was leading number 11th seed Svetlana Kuznetsova 2-0 when rain halted play for the rest of the day. The players had to wait until Monday to resume, and Wozniacki picked up where she left off, cruising to a 6-2, 6-3 victory.

Source: Copenhagen Post



Danish wind farms draw international attention

Monday, August 16th, 2010

The Guardian: Community buy-in and streamlined bureaucracy allow onshore and offshore windfarms to account for more than a fifth of electricity generated in Denmark.

Read full article.



Vestas’ CEO to address G20 summit on green jobs

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010
Vestas’ CEO, Ditlev Engel, will be among 100 specially invited business leaders taking part in a business summit to be held alongside the G20 summit in South Korea on November 11-12.

He will be addressing heads of state and finance ministers on the subject of “Creating Green Jobs”, one of 12 topics on the agenda during the two-day summit in Seoul.

Joining Vestas on the exclusive list of companies taking part will be leaders in a number of industries such as VISA, Nestlé and HSBC.

 



Financial Times sips cocktails in Copenhagen

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

The New York Times has recently been keen on writing about Copenhagen and the globe’s greatest dining experience, Danish restaurant Noma.

Now Financial Times has been discovering the cocktail bars of Copenhagen, which apparently are enjoying a golden age.



36 Hours in Copenhagen

Monday, July 19th, 2010

The New York Times’ guide to a quick tour of Copenhagen.



Forget visions and missions. Talk attitude

Monday, July 12th, 2010

By Jonathan Winch, Partner & Co-founder

The telecom provider Telia has spent a lot of time and money on such statements. But their customers rate them at the bottom of the customer satisfaction scale (Markedsføring magazine, 23.03.10).

I visited a Telia store recently and became highly irritated with their service. They refused to bend a harmless rule to help fix a problem they themselves had created for me. The difficulty was one of having the wrong attitude toward their customers.

Leaving that store, I decided to sneak into another Telia store to see if they might be more flexible and the girl behind the counter helped me immediately. Her attitude made all the difference.

When people ask me to create a vision/mission that consists of a bunch of statements (something they often do), I just can’t see the value. And I typically advise them not to do it. Unless they do it right, that is…

There are essentially two types of vision/mission projects: The first are highly creative efforts that result in something most people like and think was worth it. They are the results of big, expensive processes and get implemented in companies like Carlsberg, LEGO or Nike. I can recommend them if you have the cash and time.

The second is the text-by-the-meter model where you write a lot of stuff from the company’s “We” perspective. That always results in paragraphs that you yourself would never read and which you therefore can’t expect others to want to read, either.
Without the big process, the only thing you can do is to string a lot of clichés together in prose – i.e. the second type. And that’s what we can do for you if you want us to, of course. It would take about 4-5 hours. No input is required – we just pull the clichés out of a rather worn old hat. Of course, I believe that it would be against any good brand to do so.

But there may be other internal or external pressures that require it to be done this way. The reason I’m so tough on this is that times have moved far away from long paragraphs of blowing the company’s own trumpet. People don’t believe it like they (maybe) used to. It’s just another sign that the company is not a leader – because leaders are action-focused, have a simple but powerful attitude, show that they know the customer’s time is short. Employees don’t get behind this stuff, either. They get motivated by the excitement of working with a company, not by management statements and rules.

It’s not about looking like everyone else, but about looking different in an interesting, exciting way. So let’s cut to what is really important. Let’s drop those stiff corporate statements that waste management time and no one can remember anyway. And let’s focus on expressing and living an attitude instead. So the answer is? Create an attitude with edge and express it via text, images and interactions. That works much better!

If you want to see how, just ask us.



New York Times praises Danish chef

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

The New York Times portrays chef René Redzepi from Danish restaurant Noma.  The restaurant which only serves food made from ingredients from the Nordic region, was acclaimed the world’s best restaurant in April 2010.



Vestas receives 250 MW order for Colorado, USA

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Vestas has received an order from Renewable Energy Systems Americas Inc. (RES Americas) for 139 V90-1.8 MW turbines for the Cedar Point Wind project located primarily in Lincoln and Elbert Counties, Colorado, USA.



Big Pharma Goes Shopping in Denmark

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

In the ongoing quest to replenish their pipelines, some big drug companies have set their sights on Denmark.

Wall Street Journal Blogs





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