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Shemara Wikramanayake, CEO of Macquarie Group, Lisa Annese, CEO of CEW, Vicki Brady, CEO of Telstra, and Susan Lloyd-Hurwitz, president of Chief Executive Women, at the CEW 40th Anniversary dinner in Sydney.

Wikramanayake: Diversity is not woke, it’s smart business

Corporate leaders shared stories of success and failure at a dinner honouring the 40th anniversary of Chief Executive Women.

Pinar Abay, ING’s global head of retail and business banking, in Sydney last week.

We taught Macquarie how to do mortgages: ING boss

The Dutch giant wants to chase its copy-cat in mortgages and business lending, in another indication of the red-hot competition the big four banks face.

Men just have more experience capital than women, McKinsey reckons.

McKinsey solves the gender pay gap this International Women’s Day

Once women have earned their own equality, Elizabeth Arden will also help them celebrate with free lipstick applications.

Macquarie Group CEO Shemara Wikramanayake warned pushing women into executive positions could backfire.

Women need credible pathways to reach C-suites

Organisations should focus on broadening the diversity pool by providing support and development opportunities to women.

Professor Emma Johnston is the first female vice chancellor of the University of Melbourne in its 172 year history.

Emma Johnston takes the reins at Melbourne Uni in a time of crisis

Melbourne University just got its first female vice chancellor, Emma Johnston, and her road ahead will not be plain sailing.

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This Month

Mia Klitsas, Moxie.

Why this CEO saves creative work for after her period

When Mia Klitsas founded Moxie period care 20 years ago, talking about periods was taboo. Now it’s all over TikTok.

February

Mary Wooldridge hopes the data release can be used to identify areas of difference based on gender and understand how they can be successfully removed to an employer’s benefit.

Here’s what the latest gender pay data can tell you about your workplace

Evidence shows that improved gender equality leads to improved productivity and profitability and the ability to access broader pools of talent.

July 2024

Anna Wiley, BHP’s asset president of copper South Australia; Siobhan Toohill, Westpac’s chief sustainability officer; Tammy Medard, managing director of ANZ’s Institutional in Australia and PNG.

‘I shot Bambi’: Women leaders on their toughest decisions

Often the toughest decisions are those that affect other people. Here winners of the Women in Leadership awards share their hardest calls.

June 2024

Productivity Commission chairwoman Danielle Wood.

‘You smile too much’: the early career advice Danielle Wood ignored

Be brave and have fun, is what Australia’s leading women would say to their younger selves.

Tammy Medard, Managing Director, Institutional Australia & PNG at ANZ, Danielle Wood, Chair of the Productivity Commission, and Jessica Vanderlelie, Deputy Vice Chancellor Academic and Professor La Trobe University and Bronwyn Le Grice
CEO and Managing Director of AND Health.

The winners of the Women in Leadership Awards

Meet the winners of the 2024 Women in Leadership Awards, in eight key economic categories.

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‘What she’s doing is shaping not just Telstra, but Australia’

Cybersecurity boss Narelle Devine, the winner of the Tech & Telco category, uses lessons from a decade in the Navy to fight off international hacking attacks.

Danielle Handley, BUPA chief customer and transformation officer, is passionate about the way technology, data and digital continue to enable innovation.

‘We need to be champions of other women’

By the time Danielle Handley arrived at health insurer BUPA, the executive who hired her had left. She had to lead a company transformation without a boss.

‘You need to trust your gut’: How to build an empire

The founder and CEO of MCo Beauty, the winner of the Retail category, knows she is underestimated. It’s what drives her to succeed.

Danielle Wood, chair of the Productivity Commission; Danielle Handley, Bupa’s chief customer and transformation officer; Haseda Fazlic, Commonwealth Bank of Australia’s executive general manager.

How COVID-19 redefined leadership for these award-winning women

There can be no leaders without followers – and the pandemic reminded us that followers respond best when treated like human beings and not like machines.

Anna Wiley has been handed one of the biggest jobs at BHP as asset president for copper in South Australia,

BHP entrusts rising star with its copper mines

Anna Wiley, a leader in the Resources category, has barely put a foot wrong in a diverse career in mining that has led her to the top job in the group’s copper operations in South Australia.

Rio Tinto chief executive of minerals Sinead Kaufman is no stranger to making tough decisions.

Rio Tinto leader never shies away from hard talks and tough calls

Sinead Kaufman, the winner of the Resources category, also shows great care and sensitivity for families and communities across her career in mining.

Kerryn Coker and Kate West believe the cooperative model has, in addition to its benefits for work-life balance, allowed more effective strategic and operational guidance of the company.

‘Non-conforming bid’ that took dynamic duo to the top

The winners of the Professional Services category are two Arup engineers who proposed a unique joint arrangement to enable them to balance leadership and family commitments.

Siobhan Toohill, Westpac’s chief sustainability officer, is leaving Westpac to pursue a new challenge. “Challenging times can present the greatest opportunities for impact,” she says.

The ‘utterly shocking’ moment that made Westpac leader want to flee

Siobhan Toohill, the winner of the Financial Services - Banking category, faces a new frontier after 10 years leading Westpac’s sustainability efforts, including convincing the board to ditch new oil and gas projects.

Jaki Virtue was drafted in as Soul Patts’ first chief operating officer across its 120-year-plus history in 2023.

Versatile risk-taker who shines when the going gets tough

Washington H Soul Pattinson’s Jaki Virtue swears by the power of ‘unknown sponsorships’, as she takes out the Financial Services - Non-banking category.

Ingrid Maes, CEO of W23 Global; Tammy Medard, managing director of ANZ’s Institutional in Australia and PNG; Alison Telfer, country head Australasia for UBS Asset Management.

What’s your best career tip? Award winners share theirs

Lead with compassion, don’t assume you know all the answers, and play to your strengths: winners in the Women in Leadership Awards share advice that has helped them.

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Danielle Wood, chairwoman of the Productivity Commission, Tammy Medard, managing director, institutional Australia & PNG at ANZ, Bronwyn Le Grice, CEO and managing director of AND Health, and Jessica Vanderlelie, deputy vice chancellor academic and professor at La Trobe University.

‘Inclusion, resilience, empathy’: How modern leadership is changing

Modern leadership is about more than successfully deploying skills and industry expertise – it strongly encompasses the people side, writes Patricia McKenzie.

Women in Leadership award winner Danielle Wood.

The ‘magic and mundane’ leadership style of Danielle Wood

The chairwoman of the Productivity Commission was selected as the overall winner for her contributions to economic policy and a preparedness to take an unpopular position in key national debates.

Tenacious’ partners (l-r) Vela Georgiev, Matthew Pryor and Sarah Nolet are celebrating a rare fundraising victory in a tough market.

Tenacious Ventures lives up to its name with $18m raise in hard market

Members of the Schwartz, Denholm and Murdoch families have committed money to the agricultural technology investor that has overcome hurdle after hurdle.

Stephanie Smith, who was appointed Trade and Investment Commissioner for Greater China when she was just 28. She jokes that she wears glasses because they make her look older.

She was made a trade leader at 28 and pregnant

The winner of the Young Leader category in the Women in Leadership awards has honed her leadership skills straddling two vastly different cultures and Australia’s most important trade relationship.

Westpac chief executive of institutional banking Nell Hutton. “When I thought about where I could have an impact, it made sense to think about the big four [banks].”

From Goldman Sachs to Westpac, Nell Hutton is climbing the ladder

Having reached the top of the Wall Street giant by her mid-40s, the career banker has big plans to turn around Westpac’s once-dominant institutional bank.

Original URL: https://www.afr.com/topic/women-leadership-hz7