|
'Catch
Me if you Dare' - In the Media
Australian Financial Review
Coping in a Culture of Perpetual Crisis
An Australian company is helping
businesses in Asia learn how to deal with a crisis. As Bill Pheasant
discovers, it’s now being put to the test.
(Feature article for AFR by Bill Pheasant 1/2004)
http://afr.com/premium/articles/2004/01/28/1075088086297.html
Asia Times Online
Crisis on, chicken off the menu
Gary La Moshi from AsiaTimes Online interviews Andrew Grant, MD of
Tirian and designer of Catch Me if you Dare, to look at how organisations can prepare themselves to avoid costly mistakes. “As
usual, the costs of government failure to deal with looming crises
until it is too late will be eaten by ordinary people, who will also
be force-fed a diet of doubletalk. Indonesia is not alone in failing
to learn the lessons of SARS, or to see the warning signs, but its
reaction to the bird flu outbreak is tragic nonetheless…”. (Gary La Moshi
1/2004)
click for more
HR Monthly Australia:
Are you Secure? (Cover Story)
"Tirian:
Surviving Bali: For organisational development
company Tirian, the Bali bombings were just one more crisis ..." (Fiona
Sexton 5/2003)
The Bulletin / Newsweek
“The Damage Done: Who’s to Blame for the Corby Fiasco and
how it’s hurting Australia”
Andrew and Gaia Grant, directors
of Tirian, were interviewed recently by journalist Eric Ellis for the
Bulletin Magazine on international relations. As an Australian business
couple living in Indonesia Eric was interested to hear their & others’
perspective on the Shappelle Corby drug trafficking case, and how
reactions to it reflected the ongoing sensitivities between the two
countries
(06/05)
ABC Radio
Bali's economy struggling
For
most of the past 10 years Gaia Grant's home has been beachfront Jimbaran,
just 20 metres from the where bombs ripped through a seafood restaurant
two weeks ago.
(more details
www.catchmeifyoudare.com )
|