Thomas Arthur (GM) resigned in April 2011
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Thomas Arthur (GM) resigned in April 2011
This page has the following sub pages.
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Thomas would do a much better job as CEO than Bruce
Too bad he’s resigned 😦
When quality leaders like this get pushed out, the organisation is already on a downward spiral.
Was he pushed? I know it was sudden, what happened?
Surly you guys are joking? Thomas was a shocking leader and saying you think he was better than Bruce and a quality leader discredits this forum!
Lady Gaga maybe you need to go back to wearing skimpy outfits singing tone deaf songs.
Thomas is a better leader than Bruce, Gerry and Michelle combined. Good luck finding a better leader that actually cares about what goes on at Sensis.
Well based on comments you we’re obviously given the arse like Thomas. You guys could start your own company!
Of course he would have been pushed out – what else is there for him to do? He did a fantastic job over in China to establish everything and Sensis made $$$ millions from these websites – and then Sensis get rid of them. No wonder we are going backwards and not forwards in this “digital age”.
Thomas didn’t do anything in China. That was Robert Rath, another great potential CEO. He truly gets online.
Thomas, you will be missed.
Thomas was managing Telstra business in China, well before he started work at Sensis. Robert Rath was there more recently as the Sensis representive of a business that already exisited but was funded by Sensis. Don’t make comments without knowing your facts.
I was pretty sure that Thomas 1) took a package and left sensis, but recently I heard 2) he’s back at telstra. Can someone confirm both 1) and 2)? Why would telstra do that? Made someone redundant and hire him back? Is that even legal? Oops, wrong watch blog.
Sure Thomas cared, no one could doubt that, and he was marginalised and never really recovered from being battered and humiliated by Greg Ellis through the last decade.
But to hold him up as a great manager now that he is gone is wrong. He was where good projects and aquisitions went to die. He was a poor communicator, strange interpersonal skills, a lousy leader and Telstra never wanted him within a bull’s roar of China after they pulled him out.
A decent enough guy, but a poor leader who hung on for miles longer than anyone could imagine he would