Mark Pownall has more than three decades of media experience, predominantly in business media in Perth, with a foray to the financial centre of London in the mid 1990s.
Mr Pownall has a vast body of work available through the archives of Business News, including news articles and features on many subjects. He has written a regular column for Business News since he joined as Editor in 2000 and has also been a key part of the Mark My Words podcast duo with Mark Beyer since 2014. On stage, Mr Pownall has interviewed many of the state's business leaders.
For most of his time at Business News, Mr Pownall ran the content operations of the business and was integral to the implementation of all the company’s digital products – the twice daily email newsletters, weekly podcasts, deals database and the Data & Insights subscriber database and search engine.
In early 2017 he became CEO of Business News, a role he had for three years before transitioning to his last executive position as Director of Strategy & Innovation, where he was responsible for digital transformation and new product development, including the rollout of a new subscriber-only remuneration platform. He is now back on the tools as a working journalist.
Mr Pownall's media career started with sports reporting while he studied for a Commerce degree at the University of Western Australia. He followed that with a post-graduate qualification in English at Curtin University.
TO the untrained eye, (then) state treasurer Troy Buswell’s appearance at the Western Force game on Friday evening was run-of-the-mill. Mr Buswell seemed relaxed and comfortable, with little to show he expected a political storm to erupt within 36 hours.
WESTERN Australia’s four public universities, which all recorded improved financial positions for the 12 months after the global financial crisis, have revealed steady increases in student numbers and revenue that has outpaced rising staff costs
LISTED giant Sonic Healthcare has moved to increase its share of the occupational medicine market by buying Osborne Park-based Prime Health Group for an undisclosed sum.
A SERIES of moves by political staffers into roles linked to the resources sector reveals the growing need for corporate players to find their way around bureaucracy and political roadblocks.
THE Kailis name may be an integral part of the Western Australian business scene, but it has also been synonymous with privately held, family businesses.
State Treasurer Troy Buswell has cited potential costs of up to $467 million as a key reason for killing off the privatisation of government employees' superannuation administrator GESB, ending two years of speculation about its future.
IT might be every little boy’s dream to run a company that owns trucks and diggers, but yellow goods group Emeco Holdings’ new CEO Keith Gordon gives little indication of living out a childhood fantasy.
MOVEMENT at Perth law firms continues after a busy March of major shifts in the wake of the arrival of London-based Allen & Overy, with several big legal defections taking place.
THE Perth-based chief of one of Australia’s leading medical sector players – St John of God Health Care CEO Michael Stanford – has warned of a shake-up in the pathology business as a result of changing federal government policy.
AQUACULTURE has a chequered history in Western Australia but the growth in demand for seafood from Asia, coupled with the decline in wild stocks, continues to generate new opportunities.
State Treasurer Troy Buswell has killed off the privatisation of government employees' superannuation administrator GESB, ending almost two years of doubt about its future.
LAST year, the leadership at Aboriginal-owned BYAC Contracting learned a very big business lesson when the global financial crisis hit – the dangers of its over-reliance on a long-term customer.
DEPUTY Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s whistlestop tour of Western Australia last week returned the political conversation to industrial relations for the first time in several weeks.
Premier Colin Barnett's former chief-of-staff, Deidre Willmott will be leaving her role as coordinator for the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting in Perth but has ruled out a tilt at parliament, for now.
MINING magnate Clive Palmer might be from Queensland, but he doesn’t mind weighing into Western Australia’s political scene, as he did in Albany at the weekend with promises to spend up big in support of The Nationals WA campaigning at state level.
THE official stock exchange listing of Osborne Park-based rural merchandiser FarmWorks Australia has highlighted the seemingly sluggish passage of corporate plans at two other agribusinesses, AACL and Rewards Group.
AS Perth surveys the damage wreaked by Monday’s storm, political observers were picking over something completely different – the results of two state elections at the weekend and trying to assess the implications for Western Australia.
As Australia’s fiscal muscle shifts inexorably to Canberra, so too does the focus of everyone, from the premier down, who is seeking funding decisions from the national capital. And they are just as likely to be disappointed by the process as Colin Barnet
FINANCIAL responsibility was the big subject last week, as the state government and opposition sought to expose each other’s weaknesses on the fiscal front.
Perron Group chairman Stan Perron is a survivor, having ridden out the tough times and prospered in the good over several decades. Examining his business philosophy reveals the art of wealth preservation ... starting with an early shift into property.
PROMINENT demographer Bernard Salt has added his voice to calls for the development of a major population centre in the state’s north-west, believing a big military presence is a key element to that development.