Archives par mot-clé : video

China’s Tencent takes 5 percent stake in electric-car maker Tesla


Tesla Inc (TSLA.O), the California-based electric carmaker, said Chinese tech giant Tencent Holdings Ltd (0700.HK) acquired a 5 percent stake for $1.78 billion.

The purchase, revealed in a U.S. regulatory filing, pushed Tesla’s stock higher in early trading, making it the second most valuable U.S. auto company ahead of Ford Motor Co (F.N) but behind General Motors Co (GM.N).

The deal gives Shenzhen-based Tencent a growing presence in the rapidly expanding future mobility sector, with investments in U.S. and Chinese startup companies that provide ride sharing services and are developing self-driving electric vehicles.

Tencent’s investment also provides Tesla with an additional cash cushion as it prepares to boost production volume and launch its new Model 3. Tesla’s shares were up 2.6 percent at $277.19 in early trading.

Founded in 1998 by entrepreneur Ma Huateng, Tencent is one of Asia’s largest tech companies, best known for its WeChat mobile messaging app. With a market capitalization of about $275 billion, it is roughly six times the size of Tesla, whose $46-billion market cap on Tuesday topped that of 114-year-old Ford.

Tencent and fellow Chinese tech giants Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA.N) and Baidu Inc (BIDU.O) have invested billions in mobility startups. The services being developed by those newcomers promise to transform the global transportation landscape while providing significant new revenue streams to providers of mobile services.

Tencent was an early investor in NextEV, a Shanghai-based electric vehicle startup which since has rebranded itself as Nio and whose U.S. headquarters in San Jose is not far from Tesla’s Palo Alto base. Tencent also has funded at least two other Chinese EV startups, including Future Mobility in Shenzhen.

In addition, Tencent has invested in Didi Chuxing, the world’s second-largest ride services company behind Uber, and in Lyft, Uber’s chief U.S. rival.

Baidu has invested in Nio, as well as in Uber and Velodyne, a California maker of lidar sensors for self-driving cars. Alibaba’s mobility investments include Didi and Lyft.

As Tesla is doing, many of the mobility startup companies backed by Tencent, Baidu and Alibaba are developing self-driving systems that eventually could be introduced in commercial ride sharing fleets in the U.S. and China after 2020.

Tencent maintains a U.S. office in Palo Alto, in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley. Beijing-based Baidu and Hangzhou-based Alibaba also maintain offices in Silicon Valley.

Tencent owns about 8.2 million shares in Tesla, the carmaker said. Tencent is now the fifth-largest shareholder in Tesla, behind Elon Musk and investment companies Fidelity, Baillie Gifford and T. Rowe Price.(bit.ly/2nvNeMI)

Elon Musk-led Tesla raised about $1.2 billion by selling common shares and convertible debt earlier this month.

Musk is Tesla’s top shareholder, with a stake of about 21 percent as of Dec. 31.

(Reporting by Rishika Sadam in Bengaluru, Sijia Jiang in Hong Kong and Paul Lienert in Detroit; Editing by Nick Zieminski)

Trump administration sought to block Sally Yates from testifying to Congress on Russia

The Trump administration sought to block former acting attorney general Sally Yates from testifying to Congress in the House investigation of links between Russian officials and Donald Trump’s presidential campaign, The Washington Post has learned, a position that is likely to further anger Democrats who have accused Republicans of trying to damage the inquiry.

According to letters The Post reviewed, the Justice Department notified Yates earlier this month that the administration considers a great deal of her possible testimony to be barred from discussion in a congressional hearing because the topics are covered by the presidential communication privilege.

Yates and other former intelligence officials had been asked to testify before the House Intelligence Committee this week, a hearing that was abruptly canceled by the panel’s chairman, Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.). Yates was the deputy attorney general in the final years of the Obama administration, and served as the acting attorney general in the first days of the Trump administration.

President Trump fired Yates in January after she ordered Justice Department lawyers not to defend his first immigration order temporarily banning entry to United States for citizens of seven Muslim-majority countries and refugees from around the world.

As acting attorney general, Yates played a key part in the investigation surrounding Michael T. Flynn, a Trump campaign aide who became national security adviser before revelations that he had discussed sanctions with the Russian ambassador to the United States in late December led to his ouster.

Yates and another witness at the planned hearing, former CIA director John Brennan, had made clear to government officials by Thursday that their testimony to the committee probably would contradict some statements that White House officials had made, according to a person familiar with the matter who spoke on the condition of anonymity. The following day, when Yates’s lawyer sent a letter to the White House indicating that she still wanted to testify, the hearing was canceled.

A White House spokesperson called the Post article “entirely false” and said, “The White House has taken no action to prevent Sally Yates from testifying and the Department of Justice specifically told her that it would not stop her and to suggest otherwise is completely irresponsible.”

The Justice Department had no immediate comment.

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the Intelligence Committee, said the panel was aware that Yates “sought permission to testify from the White House. Whether the White House’s desire to avoid a public claim of executive privilege to keep her from providing the full truth on what happened contributed to the decision to cancel today’s hearing, we do not know. But we would urge that the open hearing be rescheduled without delay and that Ms. Yates be permitted to testify freely and openly.’’

In January, Yates warned White House counsel Donald McGahn that statements White House officials made about Flynn’s contact with the ambassador were incorrect, and could therefore expose the national security adviser to future blackmail by the Russians.

In a March 23 letter to Acting Assistant Attorney General Samuel Ramer, Yates’s attorney David O’Neil described the government’s position. O’Neil, who declined to comment, noted in the letter that Yates is willing to testify, and that she will avoid discussing classified information and details that could compromise investigations. The correspondence was later shared with the Intelligence Committee.

“The Department of Justice has advised that it believes there are further constraints on the testimony Ms. Yates may provide at the [Intelligence Committee] hearing. Generally, we understand that the department takes the position that all information Ms. Yates received or actions she took in her capacity as Deputy Attorney General and acting Attorney General are client confidences that she may not disclose absent written consent of the department,’’ the lawyer wrote.

“We believe that the department’s position in this regard is overbroad, incorrect, and inconsistent with the department’s historical approach to the congressional testimony of current and former officials,’’ the letter continues. “In particular, we believe that Ms. Yates should not be obligated to refuse to provide non-classified facts about the department’s notification to the White House of concerns about the conduct of a senior official. Requiring Ms. Yates to refuse to provide such information is particularly untenable given that multiple senior administration officials have publicly described the same events.’’

Scott Schools, another Justice Department official, replied in a letter the following day, saying the conversations with the White House “are likely covered by the presidential communications privilege and possibly the deliberative process privilege. The president owns those privileges. Therefore, to the extent Ms. Yates needs consent to disclose the details of those communications to [the intelligence panel], she needs to consult with the White House. She need not obtain separate consent from the department.’’

Yates’s attorney then sent a letter Friday to McGahn, the White House lawyer, saying that any claim of privilege “has been waived as a result of the multiple public comments of current senior White House officials describing the January 2017 communications. Nevertheless, I am advising the White House of Ms. Yates’ intention to provide information.’’

That same day, Nunes, the panel’s chairman, said he would not go forward with the public hearing that was to feature Yates’s testimony.

Video Chief – A video marketing library that allows users to get over 150 ready-to-use videos from different …

(MENAFN Editorial) Video Chief is an ultimate video marketing resource that enables users to earn income with videos in just four steps and lets them choose from over 150 ready-to-use videos, 150 script templates, 150 voice over templates, and over 50-course training templates and HD video.

Reader could see the features of Video Chief at their official site here.

Video Chief is a resourceful video marketing library, and it facilitates users to have access to this inventive library easily. It is a known fact that video is considered as the biggest asset for a successful business and a successful marketing strategy. The business marketing requires a lot of time and also money and effort. Many companies spend a lot of money on developing video content, video design, its ranking and appearance of the video on the internet. Now, with VideoChief, you can start generating income in just four simple steps.

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• Facebook, which has introduced Video Ads
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Media Contact
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Contact Person: Gerald I. Smedley
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23 people ask the Justice Department to launch a criminal inquiry into its chief, Jeff Sessions


Attorney General Jeff Sessions (Alex Brandon/AP)

Nearly two dozen people from five states are accusing Attorney General Jeff Sessions of lying to the Senate Judiciary Committee about his communications with the Russian government and subsequently trying to cover up that lie, according to a complaint sent to the Department of Justice.

The complaint, which names 23 residents, states that Sessions gave false and misleading testimony during his confirmation hearing in January when he told the Senate committee that he “did not have communications with the Russians.” It further accuses the attorney general of covering up the alleged perjury by directing a spokeswoman to make a public statement saying he did not mislead the committee.

“We feel there is probable cause to charge him with a crime,” J. Whitfield Larrabee, a Massachusetts lawyer who represents the 23 residents, told The Washington Post. “We want indictments in the case. We want Attorney General Sessions to be treated just the same as anyone else. We don’t think that just because he’s the attorney general, that there should be a higher standard to bring charges against him.”

Larrabee said the complaint was sent Monday to three Justice Department divisions that investigate alleged crimes and misconduct by agency employees and public officials.

How the agency will handle a complaint against its leader is unclear. Larrabee said the department should appoint a special prosecutor to handle the investigation and prosecution.

A spokesman for one of the divisions, the Office of Inspector General, declined to comment on the allegations. Other Justice Department spokesmen haven’t responded to a request for comment.

The group of complainants, which includes three doctors and pastor, are from California, Maine, Massachusetts, Oregon and Vermont.

Earlier this month, The Washington Post revealed that Sessions met with Russia’s ambassador to the United States twice last year and did not disclose those communications when asked during his confirmation hearing. The report intensified calls for a congressional investigation into Russia’s involvement in the presidential election and also prompted ethics complaints calling for disciplinary actions against Sessions, who has been an attorney for more than four decades.

After The Post’s March 1 story, Sessions acknowledged that he briefly spoke with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland in July and again at his Senate office in September, but denied discussing President Trump’s campaign. The former Republican senator from Alabama, who became Trump’s nominee for attorney general in November, has also recused himself from Justice Department investigations related to the election, saying he was following the advice of the agency’s ethics officials.

The allegations in the complaint were partially over Sessions’s answer to a question by Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) during his Jan. 10 confirmation hearing. Franken asked Sessions what he will do if “anyone affiliated with the Trump campaign” had communications with the Russian government.

“I’m not aware of any of those activities. I have been called a surrogate at a time or two in that campaign and I did not have communications with the Russians,” Sessions responded.

Sessions submitted written statements a week later in response to questions by Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.). Leahy asked: “Several of the president-elect’s nominees or senior advisers have Russian ties. Have you been in contact with anyone connected to any part of the Russian government about the 2016 election, either before or after Election Day?”

His response: “No.”

The complaint further accuses Sessions of making additional false statements to cover up the “perjurious testimony.” It cited a March 6 letter he wrote to the Senate Judiciary Committee in which he defended his earlier testimony, as well as a statement posted on social media saying Sessions never discussed the presidential campaign with any Russian officials.

In the March 6 letter, Sessions said he “correctly” and “honestly” answered questions about a “continuing exchange of information” between Trump surrogates and intermediaries of the Russian government.

“I did not mention communications I had had with the Russian ambassador over the years because the question did not ask about them,” he wrote.

Earlier this month, the American Civil Liberties Union filed an ethics complaint against the attorney general with the Alabama State Bar’s disciplinary commission. Sessions, whom the Senate confirmed last month following an acrimonious partisan debate, has been a member of the bar since 1973.

Chris Anders, deputy director of the ACLU’s legislative office in Washington, claims that Sessions had violated Alabama’s rules of professional conduct preventing lawyers from engaging in “conduct involving dishonest, fraud, deceit or misrepresentation,” according to the complaint, which also cites The Post’s story.

Larrabee, the Massachusetts attorney, also filed a complaint with the Alabama bar around the same time the ACLU did.

“It seems to me that this is part of a pervasive culture of dishonesty in the White House,” Larrabee said, citing Michael Flynn, Kellyanne Conway and the president as examples.

Flynn resigned from his post as Trump’s national security adviser last month over revelations about his potentially illegal contacts with the Russian ambassador to the United States, and his misleading statements about the matter to senior Trump administration officials, including Vice President Pence, The Post’s Greg Miller and Philip Rucker reported.

Conway, counselor to the president, attracted criticism when she said during a television interview in January that White House press secretary Sean Spicer “gave alternative facts” about the size of Trump’s inauguration crowd.

President Trump himself has been a purveyor of false claims, many of which have been repeatedly debunked.

READ MORE:

Amid deep partisan rancor, Senate confirms Sessions for attorney general

Jeff Sessions’s denials of contact with Russians are falling apart quickly

Read the letter Coretta Scott King wrote opposing Sessions’s 1986 federal nomination

Oakland mayor: Raiders fans “deserved better”

Getty Images

A coffee-table book could be made, at this rate, featuring politicians’ statements after an NFL franchise relocated from their cities. Disappointment. Some version of “we, the city, did what we could.” At times, anger.

That it’s become so routine is a testament to the 15 months it’s been in the NFL.

Libby Schaaf joined the book Monday.

The Oakland mayor expressed her dissatisfaction with a 31-1 NFL owner vote in Phoenix. It approved the Raiders’ move to Las Vegas, which will be executed once a stadium becomes available at the latter. The Raiders are scheduled to continue at the Oakland Coliseum in the interim.

Bay Area fans, she said, “deserved better.”

“I am disappointed that the Raiders and the NFL chose Las Vegas over Oakland when we had a fully-financed, shovel-ready stadium project that would have the kept the Raiders in Oakland where they were born and raised,” the statement read.

“I am proud that we stood firm in refusing to use public money to subsidize stadium construction and that we did not capitulate to their unreasonable and unnecessary demand that we choose between our football and baseball franchises.

“As a lifelong Oaklander, my heart aches today for Raider Nation. These are the most committed and passionate fans any city or team could hope to have. They deserved better.”

Indeed, this was the latest mayoral statement in a string of NFL franchise relocations.

Here was St. Louis on Jan. 12, 2016, after losing the Rams to Los Angeles.

“The NFL ignored the facts, the loyalty of St. Louis fans, who supported the team through far more downs than ups, and the NFL ignored a strong market and viable plan for a new stadium,” Mayor Francis Slay said. “I am proud of our effort and what St. Louis was able to accomplish in an extraordinarily short period of time. I thank everyone who worked so diligently on this project, especially the Governor’s Task Force.

“In the meantime, we need to increase our focus on the region’s hospitality industry — conventions, tourism and amateur sports. These events and the hotels and restaurants that support them put thousands of City and County residents to work in good jobs. St. Louis is great place to live and build a business — with or without NFL football.”

Here was San Diego on Jan. 12, 2017, after losing the Chargers to Los Angeles. (Or did they?)

“At the end of the day, Dean Spanos was never willing to work with us on a stadium solution and demanded a lot more money than we could have ever agreed to,” Mayor Kevin Faulconer said. “We live in a great city and we will move forward. San Diego didn’t lose the Chargers, the Chargers lost San Diego.”

There is another commonality between such statements.

None paint a full picture of the events precipitating the NFL’s departure.

Interview with Luca Di Persio, Head of Global Marketing Communications – Mosaicoon

On Marketing Technology


MTS:
Tell us a little bit about your role and how you got here.

I’m in charge of Global Marketing and Communications at Mosaicoon, the award-winning tech company  – Facebook Marketing Partner – specialized in Video Advertising and Digital Marketing. I lead the overall marketing strategy, the local marketing mix – according to the different goals of each country – and the digital strategy. I have been working for Mosaicoon since last year, after a wide experience as Director and Entrepreneur in international digital media agencies and in tech companies focused on digital transformation and new technology.

MTS: Given the massive proliferation of marketing technology, how do you see the martech market evolving over the next few years?

In my opinion, “Automation” – one of the most important trends in the field of Marketing Technology – will not replace people, but it will make human’s super-skilled, able to bring out talent and to share value. I believe that Technology has to reduce complexity (it must remain transparent to users) and it has to cut wasted resources, but always in an easy way. Simplification is the keyword. “Less is more” is a good claim to summarize this point of view. Our tech company is going towards this goal: breaking the rules of traditional creative processes to create energy and value for all – brands and creative people.

MTS: What do you see as the single most important technology trend or development that’s going to impact us?

I see a fast and deep evolution of Social Networks. From now on, the Social Networks will increasingly form a supporting frame, a unique and main structure for data, content, creativity, apps… and for the physical reality (health care, politics, culture and more…). The Marketing Technology will evolve in this amazing and growing landscape.

MTS: What’s the biggest challenge that CMOs need to tackle to make marketing technology work?

It’s quite simple: what matters is the power of Data. That’s true both for the strategy and for the tactic. Indeed, Mosaicoon is a “data-driven” tech company, able to feel the evolution of the market through analysis. For example, we introduced Sonar. Based on a proprietary algorithm, Sonar describes the ability of a brand to communicate effectively through videos and assesses its video strategy potential.

MTS: Could you tell us about a standout digital campaign? (Who was your target audience and how did you measure success)

We have two main target-goals: marketing and creators. Consequently, we lead the planning and execution of two different media strategies (cross-channel), with specific KPIs and advertising contents. We have a specific Marketing KPIs dashboard, to measure success and growth level.

MTS: What company are you watching/keen on right now?

I’m really interested in watching the next evolution of Facebook, a very relevant reference for me and for Mosaicoon. Facebook allows me to say: wow, it works, it looks easy to use.

MTS: What tools does your marketing stack consist of in 2017?

We have a data-driven marketing approach. We use Salesforce, Pardot and Mailchimp in order to improve data-cooperation. Moreover, we are introducing advanced (and custom) automation marketing tools, to speed up the sales flow. About our capability to formulate complex market analysis, We have designed and introduced “Sonar”, a proprietary algorithm to analyse brand’s skills in video strategy.

In my opinion a good marketing stack always includes tools such as Salesforce and Pardot, to improve the quality of data acquisition and to introduce efficient automation activities, which are useful in every marketing strategy. But, sure, a good marketing specialist has to know DMP, Programmatic and Ad-Tech platforms very well.

 

This Is How I Work

 

MTS: One word that best describes how you work.

I have two sentences, to describe my vision.
A good idea must be explained in the elevator time: from the ground floor to the tenth floor. And, if the idea itself matters 99%, the execution weighs 100%. This is the approach we follow in Mosaicoon, every day, in every division. By the way, I’m a “data-driven” manager able to mix overall marketing vision and strong technical skills in ad-tech and new technology.

MTS: What apps/software/tools can’t you live without?

I enjoy using lots of mobile apps, for both my job, free time and travel. But email is always the first tool I check.

MTS: What’s your smartest work related shortcut or productivity hack?

Of course, the global marketing strategy and the local marketing mix for Mosaicoon.

MTS: What are you currently reading? (What do you read, and how do you consume information?)

I try to spend my free time reading Italian literature and some American writers. For my job, I read articles and posts on LinkedIn, TechCrunch and trade marketing publications.

MTS: What’s the best advice you’ve ever received?

Change is the King. Time is the Queen.

MTS: Something you do better than others – the secret of your success?

I’m always really and fully committed on my goal. The more the challenge, the more I enjoy doing it. I can say that I found this element in Mosaicoon: everyone has the overall vision and, at the same time, a focused lineup.

MTS: Tag the one person whose answers to these questions you would love to read:

Levent Guenes – Chief Growth Officer Havas Group APAC CEO Southeast Asia
Agnieszka Aga Giedroyc – Havas Media International General Manager for APAC at Havas Media

MTS: Thank you Luca! That was fun and hope to see you back on MarTech Series soon.

PS4 Pro Media Player Gets 4K Video Support

Starting later today, PlayStation 4 Pro owners will be receiving an update to support 4K video playback on the console, which will make 4K videos in mp4 format saved on a USB stick or on the home server playable through the system’s Media Player app. Nevertheless, Sony Interactive Entertainment didn’t state exactly when the update would be available beyond its confirmation of going live today.

As explained on the PlayStation Blog by the Vice President of PlayStation Brand Marketing, John Koller, users’ home server will automatically appear as a media option in the Player, which will make finding and playing files that much quicker. However, Koller stressed that any USB storage already formatted as extended storage for the PlayStation 4 Pro can only be used to save games and apps, and it can’t be used to save and play videos.

ps4-pro-4k-video-update-console

While this is particularly good news for PlayStation 4 Pro owners, the update ought to be even more beneficial to those who have both the console and PlayStation VR headsets, as the improvements for the Media Player will support 4K VR videos, too. Of course, it’s important to note that the headset itself doesn’t actually feature a 4K display–its resolution is 1920×1080, to be specific–but video playback on PSVR should end up looking more polished than before, with the update providing a higher image quality compared to HD VR videos.

Even though most PlayStation 4 Pro owners will be thankful for today’s Media Player update, there will still be some who are upset by Sony’s decision to not support Blu-ray playback in 4K on the console, as the system lacks an actual drive for such a feature to work. Without a doubt, the company’s choice to exclude a Blu-ray drive for the PS4 Pro was odd, especially considering it touted the console as a 4K-capable device. Sony explained the reasoning behind the Pro’s lack of Blu-ray 4K support as one in favor of streaming video, which is more prevalent than ever.

All things considered, it’s great to see that Sony is updating the PlayStation 4 Pro’s Media Player, but it still has a ways to go to ensuring full customer satisfaction for owners of each of its PS4 consoles. For instance, the most recent firmware update–version 4.5.0–has reportedly stopped some consoles from connecting to Wi-Fi. Hopefully, the company will be able to address this issue soon enough and guarantee a better experience for all of its myriad users.

The PlayStation 4 Pro is available now.

Source: PlayStation Blog

VOLT® Lighting Reaches Milestone of One Million Views of their Landscape Lighting Videos – Produced to Inform …

VOLT® Lighting, leading factory-direct lighting manufacturer, reached the milestone of one million views of their landscape lighting videos. As a key component of the company’s marketing strategy, these videos serve to inform, instruct, and inspire the landscape lighting market.

Tampa, FL (PRWEB) March 27, 2017

VOLT® Lighting, leading factory-direct manufacturer of lighting products, reached the milestone of one million views of their landscape lighting videos. Currently, 129 videos are hosted on the Official VOLT® YouTube channel. The videos also appear in various locations on the company’s website and through VOLT® social media channels.

Josh Barter, VOLT® Marketing Associate, manages the video production. « We produce three types of videos – product information, installation instruction, and lifestyle. The first type focuses on product features. They start with opening the box and removing everything inside. We shoot this from the perspective of the customer so viewers feel as though they are handling the products. They see the light fixture, turning it over in their hands and discovering each feature one-at-a-time. We informally call these « What’s in the Box? » videos. People love them.

« The second type is instructional. Videos in this category include actual installation of products in the field. They require finding an installation site, using a landscape lighting professional, and shooting all installation steps. While these videos are resource-intensive, they are also the most highly valued by do-it-yourselfers and professionals.

« Finally, my favorite video category, lifestyle. These videos hardly mention product features and offer no instruction. Instead, they allow viewers to explore the illuminated scene so they can experience the feeling, the lifestyle. »

Many other companies produce videos to sell their products, but VOLT® is one of the few that seeks to promote the landscape lighting lifestyle. This approach is very much aligned with the company’s initial imperative – to provide professional-quality products at a low price so everyone can afford (and experience) landscape lighting.

The VOLT® approach has been uniquely successful. Proof of that can be found by reading their (over 6,000) ‘Google Trusted Store’ reviews. In these reviews, customers mention all aspects of the company’s products and services giving them an average of 4.9 stars. Especially appreciated are the product quality, fast delivery, and generous warranties.

VOLT® plans to continue its video projects, and to expand its production capabilities. In the meantime, visitors to the company’s website and YouTube channel can enjoy the videos, and preview the products they promote.

About VOLT Lighting

VOLT® Lighting is the leading factory-direct manufacturer of landscape lighting products. With an aggressive product development program, the company continues to innovate, inspire, and support the outdoor lighting market. For more information, go to http://www.voltlighting.com or call 813-978-3700.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/03/prweb14179680.htm

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Trump taps Kushner to lead a SWAT team to fix government with business ideas

President Trump plans to unveil a new White House office on Monday with sweeping authority to overhaul the federal bureaucracy and fulfill key campaign promises — such as reforming care for veterans and fighting opioid addiction — by harvesting ideas from the business world and, potentially, privatizing some government functions.

The White House Office of American Innovation, to be led by Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and senior adviser, will operate as its own nimble power center within the West Wing and will report directly to Trump. Viewed internally as a SWAT team of strategic consultants, the office will be staffed by former business executives and is designed to infuse fresh thinking into Washington, float above the daily political grind and create a lasting legacy for a president still searching for signature achievements.

“All Americans, regardless of their political views, can recognize that government stagnation has hindered our ability to properly function, often creating widespread congestion and leading to cost overruns and delays,” Trump said in a statement to The Washington Post. “I promised the American people I would produce results, and apply my ‘ahead of schedule, under budget’ mentality to the government.”

In a White House riven at times by disorder and competing factions, the innovation office represents an expansion of Kushner’s already far-reaching influence. The 36-year-old former real estate and media executive will continue to wear many hats, driving foreign and domestic policy as well as decisions on presidential personnel. He also is a shadow diplomat, serving as Trump’s lead adviser on relations with China, Mexico, Canada and the Middle East.

Jared Kushner, President Trump’s senior adviser and son-in-law, center, arrives for a Feb. 15 event at the White House with wife, Ivanka, left, and Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council, right. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

The work of White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon has drawn considerable attention, especially after his call for the “deconstruction of the administrative state.” But Bannon will have no formal role in the innovation office, which Trump advisers described as an incubator of sleek transformation as opposed to deconstruction.

The announcement of the new office comes at a humbling moment for the president, following Friday’s collapse of his first major legislative push — an overhaul of the health-care system, which Trump had championed as a candidate.

Kushner is positioning the new office as “an offensive team” — an aggressive, nonideological ideas factory capable of attracting top talent from both inside and outside of government, and serving as a conduit with the business, philanthropic and academic communities.

“We should have excellence in government,” Kushner said Sunday in an interview in his West Wing office. “The government should be run like a great American company. Our hope is that we can achieve successes and efficiencies for our customers, who are the citizens.”

The innovation office has a particular focus on technology and data, and it is working with such titans as Apple chief executive Tim Cook, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, Salesforce chief executive Marc Benioff and Tesla founder and chief executive Elon Musk. The group has already hosted sessions with more than 100 such leaders and government officials.

“There is a need to figure out what policies are adding friction to the system without accompanying it with significant benefits,” said Stephen A. Schwarzman, chief executive of the investment firm Blackstone Group. “It’s easy for the private sector to at least see where the friction is, and to do that very quickly and succinctly.”

Some of the executives involved have criticized some of Trump’s policies, such as his travel ban, but said they are eager to help the administration address chronic problems.

President Trump, center, talks with IBM chief executive Ginni Rometty, left, and senior adviser Jared Kushner, right, before speaking to business leaders at the White House on Feb. 3. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

“Obviously it has to be done with corresponding values and principles. We don’t agree on everything,” said Benioff, a Silicon Valley billionaire who raised money for Democrat Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign.

But, Benioff added, “I’m hopeful that Jared will be collaborative with our industry in moving this forward. When I talk to him, he does remind me of a lot of the young, scrappy entrepreneurs that I invest in in their 30s.”

Kushner’s ambitions for what the new office can achieve are grand. At least to start, the team plans to focus its attention on reimagining Veterans Affairs; modernizing the technology and data infrastructure of every federal department and agency; remodeling workforce-training programs; and developing “transformative projects” under the banner of Trump’s $1 trillion infrastructure plan, such as providing broadband Internet service to every American.

In some cases, the office could direct that government functions be privatized, or that existing contracts be awarded to new bidders.

The office will also focus on combating opioid abuse, a regular emphasis for Trump on the campaign trail. The president later this week plans to announce an official drug commission devoted to the problem that will be chaired by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R). He has been working informally on the issue for several weeks with Kushner, despite reported tension between the two.

Under President Barack Obama, Trump advisers said scornfully, some business leaders privately dismissed their White House interactions as “NATO” meetings — “No action, talk only” — in which they were “lectured,” without much follow-up.

Andrew Liveris, chairman and chief executive of Dow Chemical, who has had meetings with the two previous administrations, said the environment under Trump is markedly different.

After he left a recent meeting of manufacturing chief executives with Trump, Liveris said, “Rather than entering a vacuum, I’m getting emails from the president’s team, if not every day, then every other day — ‘Here’s what we’re working on.’ ‘We need another meeting.’ ‘Can you get us more input on this?’ ”

Kushner proudly notes that most of the members of his team have little-to-no political experience, hailing instead from the world of business. They include Gary Cohn, director of the National Economic Council; Chris Liddell, assistant to the president for strategic initiatives; Reed Cordish, assistant to the president for intergovernmental and technology initiatives; Dina Powell, senior counselor to the president for economic initiatives and deputy national security adviser; and Andrew Bremberg, director of the Domestic Policy Council.

Ivanka Trump, the president’s elder daughter and Kushner’s wife, who now does her advocacy work from a West Wing office, will collaborate with the innovation office on issues such as workforce development but will not have an official role, aides said.

Powell, a former Goldman Sachs executive who spent a decade at the firm managing public-private partnerships, also boasts a government pedigree as a veteran in George W. Bush’s White House and State Department. Bremberg also worked in the Bush administration. But others are political neophytes.

Liddell, who speaks with an accent from his native New Zealand, served as chief financial officer for General Motors, Microsoft and International Paper, as well as in Hollywood for William Morris Endeavor.

“We are part of the White House team, connected with everyone here, but we are not subject to the day-to-day issues, so we can take a more strategic approach to projects,” Liddell said.

Like Kushner, Cordish is the scion of a real estate family — a Baltimore-based conglomerate known for developing casinos and shopping malls. And Cohn, a Democrat who has recently amassed significant clout in the White House, is the hard-charging former president of Goldman Sachs.

Trump’s White House is closely scrutinized for its always-evolving power matrix, and the innovation office represents a victory for Wall Street figures such as Cohn who have sought to moderate Trump’s agenda and project a friendly front to businesses, sometimes in conflict with the more hard-line conservatism championed by Bannon and Chief of Staff Reince Priebus.

The innovation group has been meeting twice a week in Kushner’s office, just a few feet from the Oval Office, largely barren but for a black-and-white photo of his paternal grandparents — both Holocaust survivors — and a marked-up whiteboard more typical of tech start-ups. Kushner takes projects and decisions directly to the president for sign-off, though Trump also directly suggests areas of personal interest.

There could be friction as the group interacts with myriad federal agencies, though the advisers said they did not see themselves as an imperious force dictating changes but rather as a “service organization” offering solutions.

Kushner’s team is being formalized just as the Trump administration is proposing sweeping budget cuts across many departments, and members said they would help find efficiencies.

“The president’s doing what is necessary to have a prudent budget, and that makes an office like this even more vital as we need to get more out of less dollars by doing things smarter, doing things better, and by leaning on the private sector,” Cordish said.

Ginni Rometty, the chairman and chief executive of IBM, said she is encouraged: “Jared is reaching out and listening to leaders from across the business community — not just on day-to-day issues, but on long-term challenges like how to train a modern workforce and how to apply the latest innovations to government operations.”

Trump sees the innovation office as a way to institutionalize what he sometimes did in business, such as helping New York City’s government renovate the floundering Wollman Rink in Central Park, said Hope Hicks, the president’s longtime spokeswoman.

“He recognized where the government has struggled with certain projects and he was someone in the private sector who was able to come in and bring the resources and creativity needed and ultimately execute in an efficient, cost-effective, way,” Hicks said. “In some respects, this is an extension of some of the highlights of the president’s career.”