• Latest
CANTO HR Conference urges people-centred leadership for competitiveness

CANTO HR Conference urges people-centred leadership for competitiveness

4 months ago
Training of cooks, teachers and parents

National Nutrition Week 21–27 June 2026

18 hours ago
Over 100 hospitality professionals complete Caribbean Supercharged Training in Grenada

Over 100 hospitality professionals complete Caribbean Supercharged Training in Grenada

22 hours ago
This Day in History

This Day in History: 19 June 1980

24 hours ago
This Day in History

This Day in History: 19 June 1796

1 day ago
This Day in History

This Day in History: 19 June 1971

1 day ago
Enforcement of Physical Planning and Development Control Act #23 of 2016

PDA extension of deadline for Expressions of Interest — Check Consultants Register

2 days ago
Lower gas prices for January 2025

Gas prices for June 2026

2 days ago
Inland Revenue Division outreach and 5% rebate deadline

IRD reminds property owners of 5% property tax discount for early payment

2 days ago
Island Life book launch celebrates young authors at Belmont Estate

Island Life book launch celebrates young authors at Belmont Estate

3 days ago
The total siege against Cuba

The total siege against Cuba

3 days ago

REOI: Consulting Services – Individual Consultant

3 days ago
CYEN Grenada calls on youth to recognise, respect, and restore land

CYEN Grenada calls on youth to recognise, respect, and restore land

3 days ago
NOW Grenada
  • Front Page
  • Categories
    • General News
      • All
      • Agriculture & Fisheries
      • Arts & Culture
      • Business
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Health
      • History
      • Lifestyle
      • Law
      • Politics
      • Technology
      • Travel & Tourism
      • Weather
      • Youth
    • Sports
      • All
      • Athletics
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • Watersports
    • Community
      • All
      • Tribute
    • Crime
    • Features
      • All
      • Today in History
    • Opinion/Commentary
    • Press Releases
      • All
      • Advertisements
      • Notices
  • Video
  • Notices & Vacancies
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Front Page
  • Categories
    • General News
      • All
      • Agriculture & Fisheries
      • Arts & Culture
      • Business
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Health
      • History
      • Lifestyle
      • Law
      • Politics
      • Technology
      • Travel & Tourism
      • Weather
      • Youth
    • Sports
      • All
      • Athletics
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • Watersports
    • Community
      • All
      • Tribute
    • Crime
    • Features
      • All
      • Today in History
    • Opinion/Commentary
    • Press Releases
      • All
      • Advertisements
      • Notices
  • Video
  • Notices & Vacancies
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
NOW Grenada
No Result
View All Result

CANTO HR Conference urges people-centred leadership for competitiveness

HR leaders call for stronger governance, talent and culture across Caribbean telecoms

4 March 2026
in Business, PRESS RELEASE, Technology
6 min. read
L-R: Debra Thomas, Kurleigh Prescod, Simone Martin-Sulgan, Pieter Verkade, and Richard Solomon, moderator. Photo: CANTO Connect
0
VIEWS
Share

Caribbean HR leaders, regulators and telecommunications executives are calling for a new approach to global competitiveness, one driven not only by technology and infrastructure, but by people systems, governance and leadership culture.

That message emerged during the inaugural CANTO HR Leadership Conference, held on 4 and 5 February 2026 at the Hyatt Regency in Port of Spain. The conference, titled Elevating People, Power and Purpose — HR Leadership for a Globally Competitive Caribbean, was a new addition to the annual CANTO Connect.

The 2-day event, held at the tail end of CANTO Connect, brought together HR leaders and practitioners, CEOs, regulators and regional stakeholders from leading technology and telecommunications companies across the Caribbean and Latin America to examine how leadership, talent development and organisational culture must evolve to support digital transformation and long-term economic resilience across the Caribbean.

HR Leadership and Digital Competitiveness

Delivering the keynote address, Cavelle Joseph-St Omer, President of the Human Resource Management Association of Trinidad and Tobago (HRMATT), positioned HR leadership as central to the region’s digital and economic future.

“Digital transformation has advanced across the Caribbean, with adoption rising significantly in recent years,” Joseph–St Omer said. “Yet nearly 60% of regional companies still struggle to implement new technologies because they lack the skilled people to support them.”

She noted that while technology and investment are increasingly available, talent pipelines and governance structures are not keeping pace. “The technology is here. The investment is here. But the talent pipeline — and the governance structures around it — are not keeping pace,” she highlighted.

Joseph-St Omer outlined the areas where HR leadership must drive change, including AI-augmented workforces, data-literate decision-making, cyber-resilient cultures, project governance aligned to digital delivery, and fluency in cloud and automation technologies. “This is how we build Caribbean competitiveness from the inside out,” she said.

She was direct about the link between governance and competitiveness. “Let me be clear: the Caribbean cannot achieve regional competitiveness without strong governance. Competitiveness is built on trust — and trust is built on people and systems.”

People-first Leadership in the region

Touching on this theme, Liberty Caribbean’s Dominic Boon, VP, People, Liberty Caribbean, delivered a feature presentation that focused on the human aspects of technological transformation. He noted that 85% of the company’s leadership team is Caribbean talent, and half are women, which speaks to our commitment to equity and inclusive leadership.’ “Diverse perspectives strengthen decision-making and help us build organisations that better reflect and serve our communities. A people-first strategy is what turns infrastructure into long-term competitive strength,” Boon highlighted.

Liberty’s team also presented a powerful panel moderated by Reneasha Simmons, People Business Partner, who opened the discussion with how the regional telecom is redefining people practices in the Caribbean through trust-based flexibility, inclusive benefits, and agile, people-first leadership. She reinforced the notion that ‘wellness is not an option, it’s a strategy’ as well-rested and supported employees simply perform better.

Ellen Seed‑Gray, Senior Manager B2C Sales, Liberty Caribbean added, “You have got to put your people first. Our job is to remove barriers, support them, and help them find their direction.” Liberty has refocused on Agile Performance Development (APD) and constant engagement with employees and away from annual and strictly quantitative performance reviews across the region, which, according to Laura Maharaj‑Ramlal, Manager Financial Reporting, has changed the tone of conversation and management in the company. She elaborated, “Our agile performance conversations are no longer about defending a score — they’re about growth, flexibility and what our people need to succeed.”

Adding to this, Valerie Brunken, People Experience Director, encouraged Caribbean firms to explore flex PTO as a policy. “It’s one of the policies that can bring engagement, trust, collaboration to an organisation,” she suggested, if managed well. It’s a flagship policy for Liberty Caribbean and is especially impactful for men who utilise it to contribute shared caregiving in their homes.

Managing a multi-generational workforce

The theme of leadership and inclusion continued in a featured session on Generational Team Building — Bridging Generational Gaps to Foster Collaboration Across Age-Diverse Teams, delivered by Debra Thomas, Chief Human Resources Officer at TSTT and co-host of the conference.

Thomas said the future of work will not be won through policies alone, but through listening and understanding across generations, identities and lived experiences. “This leadership conference is about moving from vision to value creation,” she said. “It’s about being comfortable with bold ideas, but more importantly, when you walk out of this room, you must walk with purposeful action.”

She noted that HR leaders across the region are being asked to move beyond workforce management and into future design. “We are no longer being asked to simply manage the workforce of today. We are being asked to help our organisations design and recreate a future that many of us are still trying to come to terms with.”

Thomas highlighted the unprecedented generational mix now present in Caribbean workplaces. “We now have 4 generations in the workplace, some say even 5. And that reality exists not just at work, but at home as well,” she said.

She challenged leaders to confront the realities of generational difference. “How do we bridge the gap between a 21-year-old and a 55-year-old? Both have earned their place, but they come with very different wants, needs, communication styles and aspirations.”

Thomas cautioned against misreading employee feedback. “What we are hearing is not resistance. What we are hearing is concern. We are hearing hurt. And we are hearing a desire for respect, relevance and belonging.”

She added that many organisational frameworks are outdated. “Many of our policies, procedures, KPIs, career paths and perspectives were designed for a world that no longer exists.”

Talent, Culture and Customer Trust

A highlight of the conference was a panel discussion titled Leading the Future Workforce: How Telecom CEOs are Redefining Talent, Culture and Creativity, moderated by Richard Solomon, Managing Director of the Development Consulting Centre Ltd.

The panel featured Simone Martin-Sulgan, Vice President and General Manager at FLOW; Kurleigh Prescod, Chief Executive Officer of the Telecommunications Authority of Trinidad and Tobago (TATT); and Pieter Verkade, Chief Executive Officer of Digicel Trinidad and Tobago.

Panellists explored how telecommunications leaders are shifting from infrastructure-centric narratives to people-centred outcomes.

“We’re moving away from talking about tech and infrastructure, and becoming truly customer-obsessed,” Martin-Sulgan said. “Our message isn’t ‘bigger, better, faster’ anymore — it’s about the real benefits in people’s lives. That’s how we change the narrative and build the trust we need for customers to let us play a meaningful role in their digital journey,” she added.

Thomas also shared a candid reflection on culture change within TSTT. “Three years ago, our people told us we had to do better. We confronted it,” she said. “We ran a programme that challenged our mindset and focus, and we put our leaders through a kind of boot camp. It didn’t change overnight, but the very next year our engagement scores jumped ten points.”

She said the experience demonstrated the value of confronting uncomfortable truths. “It proved that if you confront the hard truths, you can genuinely reshape culture.”

Group shot. Photo: CANTO Connect

HR Strategy as a regional imperative

Charles Douglas, Vice Chairman of CANTO, reminded attendees that HR strategy is now inseparable from the region’s ability to compete. “As an industry, we are investing heavily in networks, digital platforms and emerging technologies such as AI,” Douglas said. “But none of this delivers value without a workforce that is skilled, adaptable and engaged.”

He noted that talent challenges are amplified in small, open Caribbean economies. “In small, open Caribbean markets, where talent mobility is high and competition is global, HR strategy is directly linked to our ability to compete and to serve our societies. This forum reflects CANTO’s role as a convenor, bringing the region together to share practical experience, align thinking and learn from one another. The challenges we face are not unique to any single operator or country,” he reminded attendees.

He encouraged participants to engage openly and apply what they had learned. “Today is about honest conversation and practical exchange. I encourage you to challenge assumptions and make full use of the expertise in the room.”

People at the centre of competitiveness

Across 2 days of high-level discussion across regional telecoms, the inaugural CANTO HR Leadership Conference delivered a clear conclusion: technology alone will not secure the Caribbean’s future.

That future depends on people-centred governance, resilient leadership cultures and HR strategies aligned to digital delivery. As organisations across the region invest in AI, automation and next-generation networks, participants agreed that HR leadership must evolve in parallel to build trust, sustain talent and translate innovation into lasting economic and social impact.

The conference marked a significant expansion of CANTO Connect’s agenda, placing human capital firmly at the centre of the Caribbean’s competitiveness conversation in the technology and telecommunications sectors.

CANTO Connect

NOW Grenada is not responsible for the opinions, statements or media content presented by contributors. In case of abuse, click here to report.
Tags: canto connectcavelle joseph-st omercharles douglasdevelopment consulting centre ltddominic boonellen seed‑grayflowhrmatthuman resource management association of trinidad and tobagokurleigh prescodlaura maharaj‑ramlalliberty caribbeanpieter verkadereneasha simmonsrichard solomonsimone martin-sulgantatttelecommunicationstelecommunications authority of trinidad and tobagovalerie brunken

Comment on post Cancel reply

Please enter your valid email address.
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

© NOW Grenada Ltd. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

No Result
View All Result
  • Front Page
  • Categories
    • General News
      • All
      • Agriculture & Fisheries
      • Arts & Culture
      • Business
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Health
      • History
      • Lifestyle
      • Law
      • Politics
      • Technology
      • Travel & Tourism
      • Weather
      • Youth
    • Sports
      • All
      • Athletics
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • Watersports
    • Community
      • All
      • Tribute
    • Crime
    • Features
      • All
      • Today in History
    • Opinion/Commentary
    • Press Releases
      • All
      • Advertisements
      • Notices
  • Video
  • Notices & Vacancies
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Copyright NOW Grenada

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in . Visit our Privacy Policy | Terms of Use.

No Result
View All Result
  • Front Page
  • Categories
    • General News
      • All
      • Agriculture & Fisheries
      • Arts & Culture
      • Business
      • Education
      • Environment
      • Health
      • History
      • Lifestyle
      • Law
      • Politics
      • Technology
      • Travel & Tourism
      • Weather
      • Youth
    • Sports
      • All
      • Athletics
      • Cricket
      • Football
      • Watersports
    • Community
      • All
      • Tribute
    • Crime
    • Features
      • All
      • Today in History
    • Opinion/Commentary
    • Press Releases
      • All
      • Advertisements
      • Notices
  • Video
  • Notices & Vacancies
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Copyright NOW Grenada

Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful. Visit our Privacy Policy | Terms of Use.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.