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Property was initially a stepping stone to a career for Campbell Hanan.

Mirvac’s Campbell Hanan didn’t plan for a career in property

The new chief executive comes to the job from a career in office property, and has to manage the fallout as that sector takes its most serious turn since the GFC.

  • Michael Bleby
Here are eight charts putting the latest wages growth data in perspective.

Why bonuses are now less dependent on financial wins

Australian companies have been slow to include ESG metrics in leaders’ incentive plans, but remuneration experts say that is changing.

  • Updated
  • Sally Patten
Orica executive Andrew Stewart, left, and his executive coach, Amos Szeps, outside Orica in Melbourne.

The surprising things this CEO learnt from his executive coach

From being too positive about every idea to being overly intense, CEOs and top executives are increasingly turning to coaches to help improve their game.

  • Patrick Durkin
V Pappas says coming out as non-binary has changed her leadership style.

TikTok’s COO is an Aussie success story (who happens to be non-binary)

TikTok chief operating officer V Pappas opens up about their professional and personal journey to the apex of the global tech sector.

  • Jessica Sier
John Mullen says Telstra and Brambles are reviewing their banking counterparty risks.

‘A lot of banks and companies are struggling under the surface’

Frederik Anseel, senior deputy dean at UNSW Business School, says people are “afraid of what comes next”.

  • Sally Patten
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March

Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson believes volatile markets will play into the hands of active fund managers.

The moment this $2trn fund manager realised her industry has a women problem

As the CEO of a 13-figure company, Jenny Johnson is no stranger to the sectors’ gender imbalance. But a chat with her daughter really put it into perspective.

  • Euan Black

Rex boss: ‘Who’s flying from Coffs Harbour to Maroochydore?’

Rex deputy chairman John Sharp is bemused by the decision of rival regional airline operator Bonza to fly on smaller regional routes.

  • Sally Patten
John Sharp in the garden of his 200 acre property in the Southern Highlands.

Why Rex’s boss put pork schnitzel back on in-flight menus

Rex deputy chairman John Sharp is working to lure travellers back to the regional airline after COVID.

  • Sally Patten
Naomi Edwards embarked on her first drastic career change in her early 20s.

This business leader took a career break to be a stand-up comedian

Business leaders often say they have taken a circuitous route to the top. It is truer of director Naomi Edwards than most.

  • Sally Patten
Lorie Argus CEO Melbourne Airport

From baggage handler to Melbourne Airport CEO

Lorie Argus says while travel and the airlines have bounced back from the pandemic, the string of recent interest rate rises has dampened demand.

  • Updated
  • Patrick Durkin
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Alison Mirams says she is the poster child that sponsorship works.

‘I am the poster child’: Why work sponsors are good for women

Three senior directors discuss how having a sponsor propelled their careers and made them take risks.

  • Sally Patten
Melanie Evans hasn’t always moved in a linear fashion through her career.

The event that changed this CEO’s view of the world

Melanie Evans, chief executive of ING Australia, answers our CEO Q&A.

  • Sally Patten
Melanie Evans first job at St George was a bank teller in the Bankstown Square branch in south-west Sydney.

From front counter to CEO: how this bank boss made it

The time spent working as bank teller during her first job at St George is fresh in the mind of ING boss Melanie Evans even today.

  • Sally Patten
Setting goals might give you a permanent sense of failure.

Why setting goals is bad for you

While it’s useful to know what you want to achieve and the direction you want to take, goal-setting might not actually be the best way to get you there.

  • Amantha Imber
SPC CEO Robert Giles

The best career advice this CEO was ever given: stay steady

Robert Giles is chief executive of Victorian food processor SPC. He answers our CEO Q&A.

  • Patrick Durkin

February

Can-do attitude that made high school dropout chief executive of SPC

Robert Giles is facing rising prices of energy, petrol, wages and raw materials head on, as it plans to treble revenue from $300 million to more than $1 billion.

  • Patrick Durkin
John Denton in his Melbourne studio in December.

How this industry veteran copes with failure

Leading architect John Denton has learnt to enjoy achievements and successes for while, and then to forget them and move on.

  • Michael Bleby
“There needs to be an explicit and formal recognition that part of the funding mix of universities is international education,” says Catherine Livingstone

Stop bashing universities over international students: chancellor

University of Technology Sydney chancellor Catherine Livingstone says governments and industry should plan to help universities in downturns such as that created by the pandemic.

  • Sally Patten

These women made it in business. Now they’re going back to school

BOSS talks to seven female business leaders helping to reshape tertiary education as chancellors of some of the country’s top universities.

  • Sally Patten

Boards sound alarm on Labor spending, intervention

Leading directors caution against unfettered government spending and unsustainable debt.

  • Patrick Durkin and Sally Patten
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While Bill Gates has succeeded in many things, he finds it impossible to keep up with all the podcasts and TV shows he should be consuming.

What Bill Gates regrets and the best piece of advice he’s received

White Lotus and Drive to Survive are among the billionaire’s favourite streaming shows.

  • Paul Smith
Susan van der Merwe is a self-confessed night owl.

How going it alone was the best thing this CEO ever did

Making the decision to go against what everyone else was saying was a key moment in the career of Susan van der Merwe, the chief executive of Lottery Corp.

  • Sally Patten
Susan van der Merwe has led Lottery Corp since it was spun out of Tabcorp in May last year.

From hiding behind her mother’s skirt to CEO of an $11b company

Lottery Corp chief Susan van der Merwe decided against studying law because it would have required her to stand up in front of a crowd and present arguments.

  • Sally Patten
CSL boss Paul Perreault

CSL boss Paul Perreault reveals his biggest regret

After 25 years at CSL, Paul Perreault is stepping down. This is what he learnt from a decade running one of Australia’s biggest companies.

  • Patrick Durkin

January

Jennifer Coolidge in The White Lotus.

The shows that CEOs can’t resist

Chief executives tuned in to everything last year, from political dramas and sports documentaries, to crime thrillers and reruns of The West Wing.

  • Euan Black and Sally Patten