
Peter de Jager
Bsc
ON, CANADA
Peter de Jager is a keynote speaker/writer/consultant on the issue of managing change of all types within our organizations. He has published hundreds of articles on topics ranging from Problem Solving, Creativity and Change to the impact of technology on areas such as privacy, security and business. His articles have appeared in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Futurist and Scientific American.
He is best known to IT audiences for his efforts to create responsible awareness of the Y2K issue - For which he received several awards from IT associations and Govt. Agencies. These awards include the prestigious Lifeboat Foundation's Guardian Award for 2009.
In addition to presentations and seminars on the topics above, he's written several regular columns. These include; Association Trends, CIPS across Canada, Enterprise, Globe & Mail online and Municipal World.
He's spoken in 37 countries and is recognized worldwide as an exciting, humorous, provocative and engaging speaker. His audiences have included the University of LImerick, the University of Toronto, the World Economic Forum, The World Bank and The Bank for International Settlements.
His presentations and workshops are highly interactive, fun, irreverent to mistaken ideas and most distinctively - provocative. He forces the audience, by demonstrating conflicts between their stated beliefs and behaviours, to think differently about what they thought they knew.
Peter de Jager is a keynote speaker/writer/consultant on the issue of managing change of all types within our organizations. He has published hundreds of articles on topics ranging from Problem Solving, Creativity and Change to the impact of technology on areas such as privacy, security and business. His articles have appeared in The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Futurist and Scientific American.
He is best known to IT audiences for his efforts to create responsible awareness of the Y2K issue - For which he received several awards from IT associations and Govt. Agencies. These awards include the prestigious Lifeboat Foundation's Guardian Award for 2009.
In addition to presentations and seminars on the topics above, he's written several regular columns. These include; Association Trends, CIPS across Canada, Enterprise, Globe & Mail online and Municipal World.
He's spoken in 37 countries and is recognized worldwide as an exciting, humorous, provocative and engaging speaker. His audiences have included the University of LImerick, the University of Toronto, the World Economic Forum, The World Bank and The Bank for International Settlements.
His presentations and workshops are highly interactive, fun, irreverent to mistaken ideas and most distinctively - provocative. He forces the audience, by demonstrating conflicts between their stated beliefs and behaviours, to think differently about what they thought they knew.
