Graeme Wood, CEO of the latest Australian tech IPO sensation Wotif.com, was good enough to sit down for a yarn with yours truly for an article I'm preparing for AFR Boss.
He's a rare animal among the bosses of ASX-listed Australian CEOs in that he speaks his mind, and doesn't recite from memory carefully prepared remarks penned by PR people. In fact, on the two occasions we've talked so far, there wasn't a PR person in sight, but I digress.
The subject was leadership, and taking a risk in business. How do you know if you're making the right decision or not?
"It's about ruthless personal honesty," he says. "If you are kidding yourself, you are gonna try and kid other people. If you are not kidding yourself you are off to a good start."
Obvious, perhaps. But very insightful considering he's the boss of an internet company that doesn't care about Web 2.0, SOA, XML, AJAX, blogs, or podcasts, or whatever's big on Techmeme right now. The Internet is a delivery channel for his online accomodation business. The means to an end. Business before technology, not the other way around. And before you get too excited about that being an invalid opinion - consider that he personally banked $42 million from Wotif's IPO.
Ruthless personal honesty. Dang, that's just a refreshing perspective.
Maybe ruthless personal honesty translates into general honesty - no need to hide behind PR or use it as a crutch if you follow this kind of creed.
Posted by: Simon Sharwood | Monday, July 10, 2006 at 10:35 AM
No XML?
I'd like to see how his business uses mapping, payments and gathering all that data without it. He might not call it SOA but it certainly smells like it. NAB for booking, multimap for mapping...
Posted by: cank | Thursday, July 13, 2006 at 11:26 PM