Delicious/delimiterau
- The rise of the vendor management office
- NSW Government signs mega data centre deal
- NBN FUD: will Abbott ever learn?
- Telstra cloud pilot in e-health system
- T-Box tension as IPTV boss departs
- Shorten monitoring Game collapse
- Will NSW deliver on its ICT plan?
- Inside NSW's evolving ICT strategy
- WA Education battles SOE funding squeeze
- NBN rollback to cost at least $1.8 billion
News - Written by Renai LeMay on Monday, April 11, 2011 14:56 - 0 Comments
Birks quits the AIIA
The peak representative group for Australia’s technology vendors has started looking for a new chief executive, following a decision by its incumbent Ian Birks to leave his position to start his own consulting company.
The Australian Information Industry Association represents hundreds of technology companies operating in the local market, including global giants like IBM and Microsoft but also smaller, Australia-based groups. It is active in a wide range of areas, particularly relating to Government policy on technology.
“Over the last three years I have very much enjoyed working for AIIA and have had the opportunity to engage closely with some highly impressive local ICT industry business leaders,” Birks said in a statement, noting he planned to step down later this year. The executive had previously worked as a board director with the AIIA and as an industry volunteer.
Birks said he would be “sad” on a number of levels to leave the CEO role, but that he was looking forward to building up his own consulting company, “which will focus on the three way convergence of the ICT industry, not-for-profits and market research and analysis”.
“I remain a passionate advocate for the local ICT sector and its role in the Australian economy, and I will continue to seize every opportunity to progress it,” Birks said.
The AIIA will now look to identify a successor chief executive. “Ian Birks has provided very strong leadership through a particularly important period for both the Association and the industry,” said Philip Cronin, AIIA chair and Intel Australia chief. “The enthusiasm, knowledge and passion that he has injected into AIIA as CEO is greatly appreciated by the Board.”
Image credit: AIIA
Related posts:
- Plan now or be a NBN “dinosaur”, AIIA tells business
- IP war: AIIA tries to “enlighten” Gartner
- Spat continues: Gartner rejects AIIA’s “squatter’s logic”
- Gartner launches all-out war on ‘self-interested’ AIIA
- “Red tape”: Industry group slams Victoria’s opt-in NBN
| Tweet | |
![]() |
Enterprise IT, News - May 17, 2012 15:20 - 0 Comments
Microsoft beats Salesforce to utility CRM deal
More In Enterprise IT
- NSW finalises colossal datacentre consolidation
- Two good Australian CIO interviews
- Three lessons ING’s private cloud teaches us
- SAP considers Aussie datacentre
- How much more do servers cost in Australia?
Photo Galleries, Telecommunications - May 17, 2012 12:14 - 23 Comments
Pristine Telstra network photos: We sourced our own
More In Telecommunications
- NBN no CommBank or Qantas, says Hockey
- NBN debate not about technology, says Turnbull
- No pristine photos: Telstra rejects copper challenge
- Politicos reject NBN referendum idea
- We’re not shutting down T-Box, says Telstra
Blog, Gadgets - May 17, 2012 15:38 - 1 Comment
Will Telstra skip Nokia’s Lumia 900?
More In Gadgets
- New BlackBerry OS 7.1 hits Australia
- ASUS Transformer Pad tablet hits Australia
- HTC One XL on sale: Compatible with Telstra 4G
- Optus a “disgusting” company, says AFL chief
- GAME Australia goes into administration
Reviews - May 7, 2012 18:16 - 2 Comments
Telstra Mobile Wi-Fi 4G: Review
More In Reviews
- Samsung Galaxy S III: Preview
- HTC Titan II 4G: Preview
- Nokia Lumia 710: Review
- Sony Xperia S: Review
- Samsung Omnia W: Review








sponsored post ING Direct recently implemented a private cloud solution to virtualise its entire banking platform, allowing it to provision a new copy of itself -- a so-called 'bank in a box' -- within minutes. 
Leave a Comment