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.
BUSINESS is the big winner from a wide-ranging Electricity Reform Task Force report that recommended the carving up of Western Power into four new State-owned bodies.
AS the insurance crisis continues it is becoming increasingly clear who has the most to win if, as appears apparent, so many professionals fail to get indemnity cover.It is those who always win when there is a crisis – the lawyers and accountants.
The pending merger with Cranswick Premium Wines means a hectic schedule ahead for Evans & Tate’s Franklin Tate, but it’s a challenge he approaches with relish, as Mark Pownall reports.
THE wine industry needs new leadership and government cooperation if it is to overcome the next challenge for growth – cracking the non-English speaking world, according to Evans & Tate’s Franklin Tate.
BLUEWAVE Seafood’s re-invention as a public company will take a very decisive step next month with wholesale changes planned for its board of directors.Two of Perth’s best-known business people already have been signed up, with Ray Della-Polina, ex...
TONY Howarth (pictured) is stepping down as Westpac’s chief in WA ending an 11-year reign at the head of the banking operation that was Challenge Bank until the 1995-96 takeover.Mr Howarth said he was informing his staff and colleagues this week of ...
I SPENT some time in the country at the weekend and was once again reminded of the fickle nature of farming.Looking out over the green fields of York it was hard to believe there is yet another crisis in our rural sector.
MIXED signals are coming from business about the state of the WA economy.While generally all the indicators show robustness, anecdotal evidence – the stuff that really counts – is mixed.
THE WA Government has overhauled its low-cost housing assistance program, Keystart, shifting its distribution to mortgage brokers in a move that could substantially increase its loan book and profitability.
REMEMBER the drama surrounding the premium property tax?It was only a year ago that Treasurer Eric Ripper sought to tax owners of valuable residential properties to raise about $12 million.
BBC Hardware might have beaten its rivals into the Australian warehouse game but Bunnings boss Joe Boros believes that was the only time a competitor has had the edge.
WA’S universities may have been pitching for offshore business for decades, but have been criticised for procedures that keep tabs on revenue or enrolments from international students associated with new ventures.
I WAS interested to learn that the financial failings of companies associated with WA’s biggest vineyard development have attracted more than a passing interest from the State’s self-appointed corporate watchdog, Denise Brailey.
AS the US corporate markets go up in flames, it is worth speculating how we can benefit from this and where we need to protect ourselves.Firstly, from a global perspective, this apparent catastrophe actually brings some good news.
THE drama surrounding last week’s ousting of Skywest chief executive Bill Meeke and his fellow director Miles Cattle was the culmination of months of infighting in what both sides seem to agree was a dysfunctional board.
Nine months after the terrorist attacks that shook the world, several Western Australians working in the US share their thoughts on the impact of those events.
DAVID DeLoub made a three-year commitment to New York when he decided to accept an internal offer from Alcoa to join the company’s core corporate finance and financial risk management team.
AS the US equities market convulses from the shock news of company collapses and massive reporting breaches, few people are as close to the action as former Perth accountant Tim Andrew.
TIMING, they say, is everything.Lisa Johnston knows that. She was head hunted from her London-based recruitment position to join Michael Page International in New York early last year.
WHILE wine makers in WA have reported an increasingly competitive domestic domain, many of the biggest operators are finding interstate growth through acquisition and strong success in a diverse range of offshore markets.
WITH just five months in New York under his belt, former army officer and Duntroon graduate Stirling Fielding has already found a big difference in the way he works as a senior associate in the US treasury division of Lehman Bros.
ALLAN Fels and his Australian Competition and Consumer Commission have been copping quite a pasting in recent times for their tough attitude and, most importantly, their exploitation of the media.Terrible isn’t it.
A COLLAPSED telco, auditors under fire, leading executives being subpoenaed, an integral part of the national transport infrastructure seeking a financial lifeline from the government to stay afloat … Does all this sound familiar?