Showing posts with label Mixael de Kock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mixael de Kock. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

The Riddle of the Missing Tooth Faerie

The South African Dental Association (SADA) today warned that during the last number of years, once thriving dental practices have been going bankrupt while emigration continues to void the profession.



Maretha Smit, Chief Executive of SADA said in a statement that payouts to dentistry from medical aid schemes have been reduced from 8.4% in the late nineties to 2.2% last year. “It is time that members of Medical Schemes start asking serious questions and demand that benefits in this area of basic medical care are re-structured. If not, there will be very few dentists left in a country that can hardly afford the further loss of any of its medical services, let alone dentists.”



Maretha further pointed out that in the context of the current economy and the pressure brought about by medical schemes which are not providing adequate cover for essential dental procedures, the man in the street is placing dentistry low on the list of essential needs.



“Dentists in South Africa are by no means smiling. The high outlay for basic equipment, and the staggering costs of materials, most of which are imported from abroad, leaves very little room for a fair profit. And, very few patients understand that their Medical Aid Schemes are responsible for this failure for basic dentistry to be made accessible and that the scheme rates offered to dentists, in the majority of cases, fall way below the actual costs of good average treatment and service.”



Maretha Smit also expressed SADA’s dismay at the way in which reality television shows are distorting the perceptions that the public holds of dentists and dentistry and how, in a developing country such as South Africa, these shows are diverting the attention from the real need for good general dentistry and dental services to our communities.



“We are gravely concerned about media reports that South African dentists are smiling because of the profits they are making. These reports are distorted out of context and the impression is created that dental practices are making huge profits. This is simply not true of a profession which is known be struggling to keep its doors open to the public.



The reality of the matter is that true profits on cosmetic dentistry - the more profitable of the dental services – run between 10 – 20% only!”

Maretha continues: “Most serious businessmen will smirk at such low profit margins which, in themselves, again are much higher than the profit margins for most dental specializations in South Africa and, significantly higher than that for general dentistry! If the profit margins in elective dentistry is this minute then one can very well understand why so many dentists are leaving the country. Dentists must be allowed an opportunity at earning a decent professional income – very few people can be expected to be dedicated to a vocation without any reward whatsoever.”



It is time that the public is made aware that dentistry in South Africa is a profession under threat and that it is a threat that extends to every household and every family of this country. Unless, the crisis in dentistry in South Africa is addressed soon there will be no smiles from anyone around and the question will be as to whatever had happened to the tooth fairy.


Johannesburg, Friday 6th January 2012

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

TEETH CHATTERING TWITTER TATTLING TALE

In a chat at a gathering of Western Cape dentists well-known Joburg-based media man Mixael de Kock said that the time has come to make peace with the fact that social media is here to stay. The professions can only benefit from participation and engagement on social sites, provided it is done in an appropriate and planned manner.

This past weekend, Mixael spoke at the Summer “Chattering” of the South African Dental Association (SADA) Western Cape Branch, hosted at a Cape Town City Bowl hotel which was themed the “Star Wars of Dentistry”. Despite this upbeat take on social media, he remains of the opinion that the mainstream media will retain the edge in leading public opinion for many years to come.

“Specifically in Africa, traditional newspapers, television and radio will continue to show positive growth until such time as mobility connects the majority of Africans to the web”, said Mixael. “Also, until bloggers’ posts are perceived to be as credible and responsible as that put forward by qualified journalists, the mainstream media will retain its pre-eminence in the shaping of worldviews.”

“While conventional advertising is being displaced by social media, it will never replace informed and educated opinion which, for now, largely remains the preserve of the time-honoured traditional media.”

Mixael made reference to his colleague Anton J van Rensburg’s views expressed in the December issue of the marketing industry’s mouthpiece, Advantage and said: “I fully concur that the social media mix is an extremely important and a relatively low-cost option that can have a direct impact on public perception but at the same time, I must stress that it is not the silver bullet that many makes it out to be.”

Mixael is of the opinion that there is a tendency to over-value opinion expressed in social media. “In the good ol’days, organisations did not rush to public lavatories every morning to refute the previous night’s graffiti. Cyberspace today fulfils the role of the toilet walls of yesteryear and a lot of reaction to these social media scribbling boils down to overreaction by over-zealous public relations and marketing practitioners.”

But he also stressed that there are many pitfalls awaiting the unwary and stated that one should never underestimate the downside of the social media. Mixael used as a case-study, the huge public fall-out that followed the recent Duren debacle when a junior ad agency employee twitter-tattled on God’s intention with male private parts.

“Another one of the key problems with cyberspace is that it creates virtual and surreal worlds which serve as the hide-outs for the mentally disturbed and the socially inept and where unsuspecting users may easily fall prey to cyber criminals.”Mixael concluded his chitchat by stressing the importance of erring on the side of the conservative when evaluating social media and warned that one should be realistic as to what may be reasonably achieved through time spent on the net.

“The most important thing to remember is that when on the web one should take special care in meaning what you say and saying what you mean and that you should always do so accurately, in good taste and mindful of impeccable manners and common sense.

If this is done, the chitter-chattering can’t go wrong!”

Johannesburg, 6th December 2011

Monday, December 5, 2011

JOHANNESBURG PRESS CLUB 2011 NEWSMAKERS OF THE YEAR

The Johannesburg Press Club wishes to announce that Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu and the Public Protector, Advocate Thulisile Madonsela, jointly have been nominated the Johannesburg Press Club’s 2011 Newsmakers of the Year.
Mixael de Kock, Chairman of Johannesburg Press Club said, “Both the Archbishop and the Public Protector have displayed extraordinary courage, commitment and consistency in fulfilling their respective duties to the people of South Africa and, in particular, they have been nominated for the excellent manner in which they interacted with and made themselves accessible to the media.”
Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu is receiving the award for being the most quoted social commentator and social critic, for his Census 2011 ambassadorial duties, for his continuing moral leadership and, in particular, for his courage in addressing the issues around the Dalai Lama incident.

Adv Madonsela is being honoured for her unfailing, direct and courageous stance against immoral activities, her particular work ethic and her veracity and devotion to leading the Public Protector of South Africa’s office. She is particularly being lauded for her ongoing maintenance of cordial and positive working relationship with the media.

The Johannesburg Press Club Newsmaker of the Year has become a most sought-after award and last was bestowed in 2005 on Trevor Manuel for his handling of the media in communicating the issues of the South African economy.

Mixael de Kock said that the Johannesburg Press Club’s decision was not solely based on how much news a nominee generated during the year but also on how the news was communicated and to what extent the country benefitted from such news.

De Kock continued: “Both the Archbishop and the Public Protector responded immediately, accurately and with integrity regarding issues during 2011 and, in their respective fields of influence, they ensured that the values of democracy were upheld and that freedom of speech and access to information were assured at all times.”

Today the Archbishop and the Public Protector noted their delight in being nominated and will be accepting the award at a gala event to be announced.

Advocate Madonsela said in a statement that she would be accepting the award on behalf of her team at Public Protector South Africa. “I would like to express my gratitude to the Johannesburg Press Club for the honour bestowed on my team and we are humbled by the gesture. We hope that we will continue to serve the people of South Africa with courage and commitment”.

Johannesburg, Monday, 5 December 2011

Sunday, October 2, 2011

NEWS STATEMENT: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The London Speaker Bureau (LSB) - which has the most extensive speaker and advisory network of its kind in the world - launched the South African branch of its global operations in Johannesburg this week. Carte Blanche presenter Bongani Bingwa hosted the distinguished event held at Johannesburg’s exclusive Saxon Hotel. This new branch represents the 17th country from where the organization now represents its speakers and sources clients.

Mixael de Kock, (HS CEGRM), (DCDC) APR, F PRISA, Executive Chairman of The MAVERICK Group, delivered the keynote address at this gathering of eminent representatives from South African commerce, industry and academe. In his short but powerful address, Mixael said that in an ever-more connected and changing environment, “there is an increased need for external resources from which may be gained experience, knowledge, advantage, insight and wisdom”.

Mixael was one the first South Africans to be represented internationally by the LSB. Speaking from his own experience of having had become visually disabled some years ago, Mixael proposed to the audience that the world we inhabit today, sadly, also has become disabled since the dawning of the new millennium.

“Despite the stated commitment from the most powerful governments on earth - to eradicate poverty by 2014 - we are now confronted by the prospect of poverty for all but a handful of the most privileged in an economic disaster that may very well become the most severe depression in the history of humankind.

We are talking of times in which raiders and looters sail the seas of our destiny and, wherever the banks go, the tanks go. It is a war of greed and the public simply has become dumbed-down and compliant onlookers.”

Short-term profit taking, the ill-considered ditching of people and skills, the invention of dishonest financial products and the way in which rogue traders have lost trillions for the banking sector, are just some of the reasons why the majority of people now live under the shadow of financial fear.

Mixael pointed out that the world is drowning in information while starving for wisdom: “Raw data in itself is not very useful in our attempts to solve the seemingly insurmountable problems that surround us.

There is a critical need for individuals who have the ability to identify appropriate relationships between relevant data and true knowledge and who, at the same time, possess the ability to identify the differences and similarities of patterns within the context of those relationships.”

It is Mixael’s belief that once their origins and consequent implications are understood, such patterns may then translate into valuable knowledge. “Knowledge is the only departure point from where we can make predictions about our world. Information by itself does not allow for making such forecasts and, thus in itself, is quite useless. Wisdom arises when knowledge is transformed into insight and principles and, once the source of such patterns becomes implicit, evidence of truths may then emerge that can be applied universally and eternally.”

Mixael is of the view that solutions to the current state of international political and economic instability cannot be expected to be found in the leadership of statesman only. Instead, he reasoned that “a confluence of wisdom from many different fields of inquiry and, an ability to debate differing perspectives in non-aggressive intellectual environments, remain the only rational and sequential means by which global crises may be resolved”.

The LSB is a repository of wisdom where many of the world’s greatest minds have been brought together. The names on the LSB’s listing include numerous Nobel Laureates and range through the world’s top scientists, economists, anthropologists, businessmen, clerics, philosophers, sports personalities and many more diverse professions.”

Mixael de Kock concluded: “The LSB is representative of great names and great ideas and to that list now is added the names of distinguished South Africans who bring with them a very particular brand of understanding and a unique experience of a shared world and the concomitant challenges which have become commonplace to all humankind.”

Johannesburg, Monday 3 October 2011


NOTES TO EDITORS:
1. Full Text of Keynote Address by Mixael de Kock may be read at: http://themaverickgroup.blogspot.com/2011/09/speech-by-mixael-de-kock-at-launch-of.html

2. Mixael de Kock is Executive Chairman of The MAVERICK Group (TMG), an alliance of South African communication-related companies which he founded in 2002. TMG is a recipient of a Gold World Award for Excellence in Public Relations.

Mixael served as President and Board Member of many institutions among others the Public Relations Institute of Southern Africa (PRISA), Global Alliance and Chairman of The Johannesburg Press Club. Mixael is also the co-founder of the South African Consumer Psychology Association.

Mixael has worked for the Japanese Government (JETRO) and, for 17 years headed group communication at the mining giant, Gold Fields (GFSA). As part of his portfolio he managed the Group’s social responsibility programme and, pioneered the concept of environmental education and established 37 environmental education centres across Southern Africa. For this work he received international recognition when he became one of 25 international awardees as part of the WWF’s 25th Anniversary Celebrations.

Mixael is in great demand as a speaker and speaks and writes on numerous cutting-edge subjects discussing human behaviour and the role of communication in the survival of our species and the planet. In 2006 Mixael was critically injured in a robbery and left visually disabled. Despite this setback he lives a fuller life than ever before.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:
1. Wendy Morris
The London Speaker Bureau
London Dublin Paris Frankfurt Stockholm Istanbul Cape Town Delhi Hong Kong Kuala Lumpur Rio de Janeiro
Your global resource for keynote speakers, business leaders, facilitators, in-house masterclasses
Tel: +44 (0) 208 748 9595
Mob: +44 (0) 7960 611728
www.londonspeakerbureau.co.uk

2. Mixael de Kock
The MAVERICK Group

Tel: +27 (0)11 646 8501
Mob: +27 (0)83 651 4424

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Keynote Address by Mixael de Kock: Launch of the London Speaker Bureau (LSB) in SA, at the Saxon Hotel, Thursday, 29th September 2011, Johannesburg.

Today, 29th September was the only day this year on which the London Speaker Bureau could schedule its launch in Johannesburg. But today happens to fall on one of the two major Jewish Holidays, Rosh Hashanah – Yom Kippur being the other. The result is that many of our Jewish colleagues and friends could not be here this evening – however, I have seen at least three of my Jewish friends in the room and I really appreciate your support.
To the Jewish community of our country – and the world – I wish to say L'Shanah Tovah Tikatevu – the literal translation being “May you be inscribed in the Book of Life for a good year." It is often shortened to Shanah Tovah simply “Good Year”. We also have Gemar Chatimah Tovah which means "May your final sealing in the Book of Life be good." Or, one could just say Yom Tov “Good Day” or Gut Yuntiff which means "Good Holiday." Whichever, may all of you be blessed on this, the first day of Tishrei in the year 5772.
In the introduction you have heard reference was made to my disability. And, indeed, losing the major portion of one’s vision is a daunting test. The challenge, however, is to find ways to overcome a disability and, eventually to live a bigger and more fruitful life than before.

And that, Honoured Guests, is the theme of this short address to you this evening.

What I would like to propose to you is the topic of “Disability” and, in particular, how this world we inhabit has become disabled since an unregulated and corrupt free market – nevertheless under the unethical control of some and with the promise of untold riches - was unleashed upon us. Never before have we seen such wealth and, never before had it been held in so few hands!

But, before I expound upon this thesis of “A World Disabled”, I should like briefly to sketch to you one of the themes from that amazing set of books by Ursula Le Guin - “The Earthsea Quartet” - which teh author based on a parallel earth, at a time long ago and light years away from this planet.

The noble Arren arrives on the Island of Roke, where the great school of the Mages - the wise men – is situated. Arren, which means “sword”, says to the Archmage: “The winds blew fair, but the news I bear is ill.”

Arren then talks about how the magic had gone from the lands. Spells had no more power and the words of wizardry were forgotten. There was a sickness among people and, even though the autumn harvest had been poor, the populations of the different lands seemed careless about it. And when the sickness befell one, you became like a person who has been told he must die within a year, and tells himself it is not true, and that he will live forever.

People were speaking but there was no depth in their speech and no meaning. They had become people that lost the ability to feel all passion.

The world had become rebellious and piratical; most men had become liars and the story all over was the same: The Springs of Wizardry had Run Dry. It was all evil and no remedy in sight; a plague that drifted from land to land, blighting the crops and the flocks and peoples’ spirits.

“They go about, Arren says, without looking at the world”.


Now let as Fast Forward.

Some years ago now the most powerful governments of our world made a pact to eradicate poverty by the year 2014. Instead, now we have to come to terms with the most dire of prospects: Poverty for all except a handful of the privileged – our greatest disability and challenge since our ancestors stood up on their hind legs for the first time.

When the President of the world’s greatest military power last week could say that the European crises is scaring the world and that the current financial crisis is the worst crisis since World War II, then there is something rotten going on.

But are we surprised? No, we cannot be when we accept that in supposedly democratic capitalist structures oligarchies control the central banks and, politicians deliver their constituents to all kinds of financial evil in exchange for the funding of their campaigns

We are talking of times in which raiders and looters sail the seas of our destiny and, wherever the banks go, the tanks go. It is a war of greed and the public has become dumbed-down onlookers.

Long-term planning has been traded for short-term profit taking. And, in the process, we’ve become victims of new words, such as retrenchment, downscaling, rationalization, change management – all pseudonyms for simply firing people in an effort to increase returns – and, it is done without paying heed to the losses incurred in terms of valuable skills and, our humanity.

Traders, or rather rogue traders, have lost billions for the banks. What we forget is that someone else’s loss are always another’s gain - we only get to know who lost the money but, we are never informed as to who it is had come into possession of those riches!

And believe you me ladies and gentlemen, we have to be very careful when we seek to think about millions, billions, trillions and zillions, because only a handful of people have the slightest inkling of what magnitudes these numbers represent. That is why the world – and even the bankers and ministers of finance themselves and even economists - can so easily be fooled by the clever clowns that focus on playing with our lives by the folly of speculation and fluctuation.

Those are the reasons why you and I have come to live under the shadow of financial fear.

This has become a sad world in which even religion and philosophy has failed us dismally.

The world is sick; the world is bleeding through a hole that has opened into the realm of death and destruction. As in Le Guin’s Earthsea Quartet this world is in dire need of sages to venture forth, identify the hole through which we are bleeding and, close up that fatal and fearful wound.

Sages who, once the repairs have been completes, will restore to all creatures their divine right to demand noble leadership, to insist on the re-institution of the ideals of service, of volunteerism and of chivalry and, to have wisdom, proper justice, a deeply entrenched sense of the fair, true equity and considered tolerance to this world.

As the Archmage tells Arren: “Nature is not unnatural. What we are experiencing in the world right now is not the righting of the balance, but an upsetting of it, and there is only one creature that can repair it, and that creature is called “we” and only “we” can do so by regaining the desire for life and the joy of its simplicity.

It is when we crave power over life – endless wealth, unassailable safety, immortality – it is then that desire becomes greed. And if knowledge allies itself to that greed then comes evil. It is then that the balance of the world is swayed and ruin weighs heavily in the scale.”

In an age where we are drowning in information but starving for wisdom, we require urgently the integration and confluence of the wisdoms from many different minds and many diverse fields of inquiry.

Raw data in itself is not very useful in our attempts to solve the seemingly insurmountable problems that surround us. There is a critical need for individuals who have the ability to establish appropriate relationships between relevant data and true knowledge and who, at the same time, possess the ability to identify the differences and similarities of patterns within the context of those relationships.

It is my belief that once the origins and consequent implications of these patterns are understood that these may then transmute into valuable knowledge. It is knowledge only which allows us to make predictions about our world. Information by itself does not do so and is quite useless.

Wisdom arises when knowledge is transformed into insight and principles and, once the source of such patterns becomes implicit, evidence of truths may then emerge that can be applied both universally and eternally.

The Archmage from Le Guin’s Earthsea – in our modern world - will have to be found in the ability of many intellects to debate differing perspectives in neutral and non-aggressive environments – a unique process of rational and sequential discussion by which global crises may become resolved.

The LSB is such a repository of wisdom where many of the world’s greatest minds have been brought together. The names on the LSB listings include numerous Nobel Laureates and range through the world’s top scientists, economists, anthropologists, businessmen, clerics, philosophers, sports personalities and many more diverse professions.”

The LSB has the most extensive speaker and advisory network in the world. It represents the greatest names and a plenitude of magnificent ideas. To that list now have become added the names of distinguished South Africans who bring with them a very particular brand of understanding and a unique experience of a shared world and its concomitant challenges which have become commonplace to all humankind.”

In an ever more connected and changing environment, organizations increasingly require external experience to gain knowledge, advantage, insight and wisdom.

In salutation to you, Wendy Morris, who has been responsible for all of this evening to finally happen in South Africa , I conclude with the words from that wonderful sixties song by the Beatles:
“Whisper words of wisdom,
let it be, let it be

And when the brokenhearted people
Living in the world agree

There will be an answer,
let it be, let it be

For though they may be parted
There is still a chance that they will see

There will be an answer,
let it be, let it be.”