National HR Summit 2018: what you need to know

HRD has all the important details about Australia’s leading HR event, which starts tomorrow at Luna Park in Sydney

National HR Summit 2018: what you need to know

1000 HR professionals are confirmed to attend the National HR Summit when it returns to Sydney’s iconic Luna Park this week.

The event will run over two days on Wednesday and Thursday comprising two separate conference streams plus a packed program of free HR workshops, an informative exhibition floor, live interviews, motivational speakers, networking events and a Grand Prize Draw to win $10,000 cash. 

Headlining this year’s speaker line-up are Olympic champion skier Alisa Camplin OAM and best-selling author Saroo Brierley, whose remarkable real-life story inspired last year’s award-winning film Lion. In addition, attendees will hear from HR Directors, CEOs and business leaders from diverse industries with companies including PwC, KFC, NAB, Toyota Finance, Australian Bureau of Statistics, Aurecon and NSW Police.

The National HR Summit will once again feature an official event app, which delegates, speakers and sponsors can use to customise their agenda, network, answer poll questions and more. 

Dates: 14-15 March
Venue: Luna Park Sydney
Time: Doors open at 8am Wednesday/8:30am Thursday
Entry: Conference sessions for paying delegates only. Expo and workshops free for HR professionals

The HRD team will be covering the event live so look out for updates this week or follow us on Twitter at @HRDAustralia and #HRSummitAU. For more information visit www.hrsummit.com.au.

Recent articles & video

New business owner dismisses worker via phone call: Is it unfair dismissal?

Fired for 'disrespecting' co-workers? Chef cries unfair dismissal after walkout

Unemployment rate sees uptick to 3.8% in March: ABS

JCU confirms underpaying casual employees

Most Read Articles

WA introduces changes to long service leave regulations for local government workers

Remote worker speaks out about 'unfair dismissal'

Firm offers more leave days for in-office workers: reports