CIO's Five Minute Primer: Sol Trujillo's return home
- 21 May, 2009 15:53
- Comments
Telstra's ex-CEO Sol Trujillo.
The quiet exit of former Telstra CEO Sol Trujillo will perplex some, while many others think his departure is in line with the management style he displayed at Telstra over the past few years.
Here’s a quick summary of what the Australian press has been saying in the wake of Sol Trujillo’s return to America.
The Australian says the manner of Trujillo’s departure was in stark contrast to his dramatic arrival in 2005, when he was heralded as the company's saviour by then chairman Donald McGauchie. But with a much-deflated share price, the sword of regulation swinging over the telco's head and an incomplete transformation program, most market investors are clearly disgruntled with the results almost four years on.
Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has brushed aside comments from former Telstra chief Sol Trujillo, who questioned whether the Government's $43 billion national broadband network would ever see the light of day.
The SMH says: The Telstra's tactic to play hard ball with the Government and the regulator has resulted in Kevin Rudd's decision to build competing telco infrastructure and strangle Telstra with more onerous regulation.
Sol Trujillo’s homecoming appears to have been anything but warm.
Trujillo makes quiet return home. Former Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo has returned home to the US more than a month before he was due to leave the telco giant.
iTwire says Tick, tock Thodey, your Telstra time as CEO has started, and the legacy you build will determine whether you’re seen as Thodey the Tough, Thodey the Terrible, Thodey the Tame, Thodey the Technologist, Thodey the Temporary, Thodey the Thorough, Thodey the Terrific or some theatrical combination of all of the above. Time will tell!
The Telegraph says: SOL Trujillo was in a typically combative mood yesterday, saying he left Australia with no regrets and cynically suggesting the Rudd Government's $43 billion fibre-optic network plan was little more than a political stunt.
The AFR says: The early departure of former Telstra chief executive Sol Trujillo was quiet and without much fanfare. (login and password required).
Sober send-off for last amigo. The lavish Crown Towers on the southern bank of Melbourne's Yarra River refers to itself in its brochures as "a hotel that truly understands the meaning of opulence".
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
The 30 best Safari extensions -- so far
-
Apple and Google disagree over licensing of essential patents
-
Monash Uni reduces IT teams after consolidation project
-
FTC warns makers of background checking apps
-
QLD govt demands answers after pay glitch
-
Improving the Management and Sharing of Massive Data Volumes
Making sound business decisions requires timely access to accurate data. Every day operations in every industry generate vast quantities of data, including email, video, complex computer simulations, scientific data sets, medical images, records, and more. In addition, regulatory and industry requirements mandate ongoing data preservation, hastening the growth of massive volumes of data that must be managed and retained. This data poses serious challenges in the areas of management, sharing, protection, and retention. Read on. -
Best Practices for Energy Efficient Storage Operations Version 1.0
The energy required to support data center IT operations is becoming a central concern worldwide. For some data centers, additional energy supply is simply not available, either due to finite power generation capacity in certain regions or the inability of the power distribution grid to accommodate more lines. Read on. -
IDC Whitepaper: Next Generation Firewall - Enabling New Security Strategies
The firewall market has traditionally been a staple, yet, mature market within the security space with little innovation being introduced. However, with the rapid change in the technology and threat landscape, a newer breed of of innovation focussing on applications visibility and control, termed Next Generation Firewalls has surfaced. This paper examines how Next Generation Firewalls can help organisations identify and block threat, while at the same time enforcing policies at an application level and ultimately helping organisations reduce the number of security devices and thus, saving costs.
-
Lego Mindstorms for Dummies
-
HTML
-
Poems New and Selected PPR Original
-
Expert PHP and MySQL
-
Crystal Reports 8 for Dummies
-
Blogging for Dummies, 3rd Edition
-
Java for Dummies, 4th Edition
-
Mac OS X Snow Leopard Just the Steps for Dummies®
-
Professional Microsoft Sharepoint 2007 Development Using Microsoft Silverlight 2











Comments
Post new comment