Linkedin

Paul Dunn

B1G1: Business for Good
Chairman
[email protected]
65 6898 2446

B1g1 logo
Paul is a 4-time TEDx speaker. He is a Senior Fellow in one of the World’s Leading Think Tanks and holds a Lifetime Service Award to the Accounting Profession in the UK. He was honoured as a Social Innovation Fellow in his new home of Singapore; something he shares with film-star and philanthropist Jet Li and Walmart Chairman, Rob Walton. He was one of the first 10 people in Hewlett Packard in Australia. He then created one of Australia’s first computer companies and then The Results Corporation where he helped develop and grow 23,000 small and medium scale business enterprises. He then morphed that into Results Accountants’ Systems and introduced the breakthrough Accountants’ Boot Camp process to the profession. In the process he enabled over 17,000 Accountants worldwide to work with their clients in new ways. Paul is regarded as a marketing guru and he continues to push the boundaries. He recently featured in Forbes Magazine alongside Sir Richard Branson in a global piece on ‘disrupters’ in business. His best selling book, (co-written with Ron Baker and published by Wiley) ‘The Firm of the Future’, is widely regarded as a breakthrough book for professional firms. It’s estimated 226,000 businesses now use his insights, ideas and programs. He serves as Chairman of the B1G1: Business for Good, a company that’s already enabled businesses to created nearly 71 Million giving impacts around the world. In September 2015 he was honoured by the peak Accounting Body in the UK as the first recipient of its ‘Outstanding Contribution to the Profession’ award.

About Us: B1G1 is a Social Enterprise and non-profit organisation with a mission to create a world that’s full of giving. Unlike conventional giving models, B1G1 helps small and medium sized businesses achieve more social impact by embedding giving activities in their everyday business operations to create unique Giving Stories. Every business transaction (and as a result, your everyday activity) can impact lives from as little as just 1 cent.