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Inaugural Crisis Management Leadership Summit

  • Written by: Eloise Hurley Wellington



The Inaugural Crisis Management Leadership Summit is being held on the 8th October at Duxton House. The Summit focuses on current topics concerning today’s crisis realities and how businesses and governments are coping. It offers delegates a unique opportunity to look at crisis management from different viewpoints and to learn cross-industry lessons and best practice.

 

With contributions from the Crisis Director Malaysia Airlines, Curtin University, Computer Emergency Response Team, Former Queensland Premier, GoCrisis, Air China and many more, our speakers will share their personal experiences, discuss the latest research and trends on the risks that businesses face, the impact that social media and the real-time news cycle have on crisis and emergency management, leadership in crisis and what we can learn from recent world events and how to apply these lessons to corporate crisis response. We will look at global organisations in crisis and learn from their failures and successes.

Find out more:

Property Times

Property Paralysis: Buyers Hesitate As Australia’s Housing Market Sends Mixed Signals

Australia’s property market may still be active, but beneath the auctions, listings and glossy real estate campaigns, a growing sense of uncertainty is spreading through the market. Buyers are hesitating.Sellers are confused.Banks are cautious but...

The Noise Around the 2026 Federal Budget Does Not Match the Reality for Most Property Investors

Every time the government changes the rules around property investment, the same thing happens. Phones ring, inboxes fill, and investors who have been quietly building wealth for years suddenly wonder if the ground has shifted beneath them. After t...

Budget Shockwaves: What the Federal Budget Means for Australia’s Property Market

Australia’s property market does not operate in isolation. Every federal budget sends signals to buyers, sellers, investors, developers, banks and renters about the direction of the economy, taxation, confidence and household spending. This year’s ...

Real Estate and the Federal Budget: Early Signs Emerging Across Australia’s Property Market

Australia’s federal budget has landed, and while economists, investors and political strategists continue dissecting its long-term implications, the property industry is already searching for early signs of where the market may be heading next. Re...

Food & Dining

Smart Supermarket Shopping: The Money-Saving Hacks Australians Are Rediscovering

Australians are becoming smarter supermarket shoppers. Rising grocery prices, higher mortgage repayments, expensive electricity bills and cost-of-living pressure have changed the way many households approach the weekly food shop. But contrary to p...

People Are Going Out Less — And Businesses Know It

Restaurants are full on some nights. Concerts still sell tickets. Sporting events attract crowds. Yet beneath the surface, many Australian businesses are quietly noticing a major social shift: people are going out less often. The reasons are obvi...

Lasagne Takes Centre Stage at Chiswick Woollahra This Winter

  This winter, Chiswick is launching a Lasagne Series, bringing together chefs from across the Solotel group, alongside acclaimed chef and restaurateur Matt Moran, for a nostalgic celebration of the much-loved baked pasta. Running every Sunday eveni...

Coral Trout Worth Travelling For: Lunch at The Rusty Pelican in 1770 Delivers Perfection

There are fish and chips, and then there are meals that remind Australians why fresh local seafood remains one of the country’s greatest culinary pleasures. A lunch stop today at The Rusty Pelican Cafe near the famous 1770 camping grounds in Centr...

Business Times

“People Are Spending Less”: Small Businesses Feel Australia’s Eco…

Sometimes the real state of the economy is not found in Treasury papers, Reserve Bank statements or political speeches. So...

Small Business Owners Say Confidence Is Falling Across Australia

Australia’s small business sector has long been described as the backbone of the national economy. From cafes and retailers...

Why Same-Day Flower Delivery in Melbourne Is Changing the Way Peo…

People are busier than ever today compared to three decades ago. Many children once remembered birthdays of their parents, ...

The Times Features

QLD Day

On Saturday 6 June, parkrun events across the state will be a sea of maroon, with communities  str...

NAGNATA: ‘FUTURE = FIBRE’ — Movement 21 at AFW 2026 …

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Flu Season in Australia: Why Health Authorities Are Tak…

As winter settles across Australia, so too does the annual flu season — a recurring health challen...

Smart Supermarket Shopping: The Money-Saving Hacks Aust…

Australians are becoming smarter supermarket shoppers. Rising grocery prices, higher mortgage rep...

Kmart’s Homewares Revolution: How a Discount Retailer B…

There was a time when many Australians viewed Kmart as the place to buy low-cost basics, school su...

“People Are Spending Less”: Small Businesses Feel Austr…

Sometimes the real state of the economy is not found in Treasury papers, Reserve Bank statements o...

The Arrival of Winter: More Than Just a Date on the Cal…

Winter arrives quietly in Australia. There is no dramatic wall of snow sweeping across the nation ...

The Blood Test That Could Change Colon Cancer Screening…

A simple blood test that may one day reduce the need for colonoscopies is generating enormous inte...

Recovering at Home After Surgery: The Role of Mobile Re…

Recovering from surgery can be both physically and emotionally challenging. Whether it is a joint ...