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 Brenda McGahan resigns from AWI 

Brenda McGahan resigns from AWI

02 Mar, 2010 06:57 AM
Australian Wool Innovation chief executive officer, Brenda McGahan, has today informed the board of her intention to resign.

AWI chairman, Wal Merriman, has accepted her resignation.

Mr Merriman said that while he was disappointed Ms McGahan was not staying on in the role, he understood her rationale for leaving.

"I know of no better advocate for the wool industry in Australia than Brenda McGahan," Mr Merriman said.

"I know I will be just one of many woolgrowers who will be disappointed at Brenda’s decision.

"She created a great sense of excitement and hope for the future of the wool industry in what has been a very tough environment over the past couple of years."

Mr Merriman said Ms McGahan's decision was brought about by her frustration at the ongoing differences of opinion amongst members of the board, particularly since the annual general meeting.

"Brenda has achieved a great deal in her time with the business including the successful outcome of the 2009 Wool poll, the partnership approach to integrated marketing with both trade and consumer, and reduction in overall costs of $25 million as well as generating a general sense of unity amongst growers across Australia," Mr Merriman said.

"There is no doubt she will be leaving the organisation in much better shape than it was when she arrived."

Ms McGahan will stay on as CEO until a replacement has been appointed.

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Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Over the past decades, there is hardly a day goes by without promises being made by the wool bureaucracy that things are going to get better with regard to industry representation. Yet, there is hardly a day goes by that we are not exposed to evidence to the contrary. All I can say is that you can't blame me - I voted for zero %.
Posted by Steve, 2/03/2010 8:14:16 AM
This is yet another sad development in what has become an unbroken sequence of appalling news out of AWI. The press release is as noteworthy about what it doesn't say as what it does say. How can the chairman of a public company confess that board disharmony is the reason for the industry shining star's departure and not say what is being done to reel his badly behaved board in? How can he claim that Brenda leaves AWI in better shape than when she joined when the reality could not be more different? That may not be Brenda's fault. The fact is that the board has its clumsy hands and self interests all over day-to-day management of the company and Brenda's resignation, if that is what is was, was the only honorable call she could make. Wake up AWI and get your house in order - you will find it difficult to get a quality candidate to work in the environment you have created.
Posted by factnotfiction, 2/03/2010 8:52:38 AM
Another one bites the dust!!!! Sir George...I look forward to your predictions - provide this industry with some wise words because clearly there is NO ONE in AWI that can. Advert for new CEO: "Anyone available to take up the poison chalice?"
Posted by Farming Princess, 2/03/2010 8:59:08 AM
AWI has been a basket case for years. You cannot have cockies and others with vested interests running the wool industry. Unfortunately the damage has been done. The younger generation would not know what wool is, they are only interested in the design and what is written on the product. Somehow all the board members need to resign and the appropriate 'professional' company directors be invited to stand. The whole wool industry needs a broom through it, brokers need to lift their game, AWEX should be abolished, computer selling initiated and a new, all encompassing body established. Forget about all the splinter groups, inland woolbrokers, private treaty merchants etc, they all have their own barrows to push for their own end. It is probably too late for real innovation and wool will just drift around with the Chinese pulling the strings.
Posted by jerangle, 2/03/2010 9:39:09 AM
This is a real pity. Brenda McGahan is not only a very nice lady, but was a real ambassador for wool. Thanks Brenda, you were good, but I guess the egos got too much for you.
Posted by Will, 2/03/2010 10:18:27 AM
Well Brenda, you walked in to a male oriented board room with big egos and gave them a shove. I can understand that your candle burnt brightly but only briefly. Let's hope the next one along looks outside the square for solutions. Jerangle, the 'real innovation' is in Feb 2011. Mark that in your diary or go to www.wooltrade.sqarespace.com for a hint.
Posted by Tony Benson, 2/03/2010 10:38:53 AM
Wrong link Jerangle, try http://wooltrade.squarespace.com/wool-e-auction-forum/
Posted by Tony Benson, 2/03/2010 11:31:09 AM
The issue that completely amazes me is what the chairman has done. The chairman admits publicly that the AWI board is so dysfunctional that his CEO’s only choice was to resign. Clearly he has no power or authority at the board table which is a completely untenable position for any chairman. Normally if the board is out of control, it is the chairman that resigns but I suppose no one could ever accuse the AWI board of being normal. What happens now? Well, the CEO resigning does nothing to fix a broken board. We have two political factions fighting furiously to gain power over AWI, so they can get their hands on the growers’ money. We have one faction (Meredith, Chick & Laurence) openly defying the chairman and trying to plot their own ‘palace coup’ (and move the palace to the UK). If these guys get control, forget any research and forget any focus on “Australian Wool”. All you will get is good old AWC generic advertising (based in Old Europe of course). And a lot of directors expenses. Best thing would be a spill of all board positions and a new election but that would take courage, integrity and honour – three things in very short supply around the AWI board table at the moment.
Posted by Sir George, 2/03/2010 12:18:14 PM
In the words of Monty Python, Wally and the board of AWI are "not the Messiah, he's just a very naughty boy". AWI cannot continue to go through capable and talented staff like it has. It must either get its act together or resign and get people in who understand the value of corporate governance and talent to make AWI work.
Posted by shedstaffer, 2/03/2010 1:04:56 PM
Tis a sad day for the industry, Brenda you will be sadly missed.
Posted by Alistair Calder, 2/03/2010 1:40:41 PM
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AWI chief executive Brenda McGahan.
AWI chief executive Brenda McGahan.
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