Tag: Automation Articles
13 Results
And Now the Reset: 9 ways COVID has changed consumers, and business, for the decade ahead
March 15, 2021 A look at 9 major trends shaping the decade ahead, and the possibilities that exist for savvy businesses and innovators.Davos 2020: The race for global scale
January 27, 2020 The 50th World Economic Forum presented the concept of trust as a definitive principle in uniting an increasingly divided world.Navigating the 2020s: How Canada can thrive in a decade of change
January 3, 2020 What will the 2020s bring for the Canadian economy? Our latest report, Navigating the 2020s, explores 4 trends shaping the decade ahead.Paging Dr. Data: How the coming skills revolution can transform healthcare
November 13, 2019 Automation won't replace the human aspects of healthcare. It will enable practitioners to do their work better than before.Farmer 4.0: How the Coming Skills Revolution Can Transform Agriculture
September 3, 2019 As Canadian farmers leave traditional tasks to smart machines, and focus on strategy and systems, they’ll be better positioned than ever to feed a fast-growing global population. But to do that, they’ll need a wide range of new skills, as well as enhanced old skills, that Canada isn’t developing anywhere near fast enough. [Download the […]Bridging the Gap: What Canadians Told Us About the Skills Revolution
May 1, 2019 We heard some compelling ideas – big and small – from Canadians about how we can prepare for the future.Bridging the Gap: What Liberal Arts Grads Need to Know About Their Future
April 30, 2019 In a new RBC report, Bridging the Gap, we followed up on our landmark research into the future of work, Humans Wanted.Why Women Are Ready for Work in the Automated Future
March 5, 2019 A new RBC report, Advantage women: how an automated future could play to women's strengths, finds women have the skills for tomorrow's jobs.The Robots May be Coming to Healthcare — But so are the Jobs
November 30, 2018 As healthcare increasingly relies on technology, we are going to need more humans, not fewer, to provide the care people need. In fact, technology may end up making healthcare more human. Here are some more findings from RBC's Humans Wanted research on the future of skills.1 of 2