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.
THE green light for the Gorgon is a major step ahead for Western Australia and, as the Federal politicians know, a significant boost to the nation’s treasury.
IT seems that we have seen our first results from negotiations for a free trade agreement with the US, with many Western Australian farmers ending up winners even though no deal has been signed yet.
WA Business News played host to a wide range of business people and the leading State Government figures on the issue of taxes and charges imposed in Western Australia.
THIS week’s vote by BankWest shareholders to agree to a takeover by UK-based HBOS should come as no surprise.
Faced with the prospect of the bank becoming a lame duck with a parent that might refuse to invest, shareholders had little choice.
BEST Employers in Western Australia is an important project for WA Business News, one we intend to develop into something of a signature award like our successf
HOUSING affordability is being billed as a Federal election issue.
On the face of it, concern for new homebuyers or, more importantly, renters wanting to become home owners, is understandable.
HIGH profile Western Australian weight loss group The Metabolism Centre has signalled a major challenge to the weight loss market by going to the Australian Stock Exchange to fund a national roll out.
FRANKLAND River Olive Company Pty Ltd has won the approval of investors in the troubled Preston Vale wine project to take over as the responsible entity for Western Australia’s largest vineyard-based scheme.
THE development of the Gorgon gas field off Western Australia’s north west coast is shaping as the major test of the Gallop Government’s business-friendly credentials ahead of the next election.
EVER since The West Australian newspaper ran Dullsville as its front page headline, there has been significant public debate about whether or not this is a great place to live.
WA Business News has won third prize for Best Newspaper, Small Tabloids at the Association of Area Business Publication’s Editorial Excellence Awards, announced
WESTERN Australia’s dominant media player The West Australian newspaper has advertised nationally for a new editor following the departure of Brian Rogers, who surprised the industry recently by resigning just six months into a two-year contract.
WHILE Save Ningaloo campaigners were in the final stages of their long running and, ultimately, successful battle against the Maud’s Landing development, a wealthy conservationist linked to their cause may well have had his mind elsewhere.
INVESTORS in the ailing Preston Vale vineyard are being asked to replace the $27 million project’s original management company Southern Wine Corporation in a bid to keep the managed investment scheme alive.
THE high-profile dumping of the Maud’s Landing proposal near Coral Bay may have been politically expedient but it leaves the Gallop Government looking extremely weak when it comes to policy.
EVERY week we publish dozens of government-based contracts and tenders in our For The Record section – doing our bit for transparency by picking through the reams of available information.
THE legacy of Kingstream Steel continues to linger with the Supreme Court of Western Australia finding that Landcorp had significantly undervalued land that was to be compulsorily acquired for the ill-fated project north of Geraldton.
ALAN Green jokes about how he is going to improve his golf handicap after June 30, the date he steps down from his management position at EG Green & Sons, the company behind Harvey Beef and Western Australia’s dominant force in meat processing.
FOR anyone thinking of making a tax-effective investment during the final weeks of this financial year, a review of the collapse of Tuart Resources should prove a timely eye opener.
THE Federal Government’s Australian Research Council has backed WA wine producer Evans & Tate’s ambitious five-year project to develop Australia’s best chardonnay, providing $500,000 in funding through the University of Western Australia.
THE situation occurring in the Western Australian parliament with the Greens (WA) decision, unusually backed by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in at least one instance
AUSTRALIA is missing out on a major trade opportunity because it lacks a coordinated approach to attract foreigners here for medical treatment, according to Professor Ian Constabl
AN article I wrote last week on the Federal Government’s plans to place an environmental levy on plastic shopping bags has highlighted a number of issues — including a pet subject of mine, taxation.
WESTERN Australian businessman Jeff Burch is bewildered by the fact that the plastic bags he introduced to Australia’s supermarkets 20 years ago suddenly appear to have been elevated to the top of the Federal Government’s environmental hitlist.
WHATEVER you might think of the way Singaporeans run their state, you have to hand it to the head of its airline and his management team for taking a pay cut due to the tough economic circumstances.
AM I wrong or are there a lot more ideological battles taking place in our country than there has been for a long time?
Recently we’ve had the obvious ideological battleground of whether Australia should commit forces to war.