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 AGM season is upon us and that perennial issue of their value is again being debated.
The issue has been discussed nationally, but it is as local as ever – just check out the response (page 12) of Australian Shareholders' Association WA branch pres
I had a consumer experience the other day that I have been stewing on, wondering how I could share my pain when I have a pretty solid rule that journalists should take a cautious approach to airing personal issues.
A Bremer Bay abalone farming venture is seeking $3.5 million from Western Australian investors to fund its expansion to commercially sustainable levels.
Fifteen years at one firm is the exception rather than the rule these days but despite his long tenure at Freehills lawyer Rob Franklyn might be able t
The City of Perth might oversee the heart of corporate Western Australia, but business is under-represented on its governing council. Mark Pownall reports that many believe the State Government should recognise the unique needs of our CBD.
The bulk of Perth's 30,000 potential business voters might be viewed as apathetic when it comes to going through the motions of getting or maintaining their place on the city's electoral roll, but at least one major group bucks that trend.
This week Geoff Gallop has effectively made the political trifecta, calling for a referendum on retail trading hours to remove the last of the three big issues threatening his government's re-election.
Our online poll said it all this week. We asked our readers if they were happy with the half-a-percentage point cut in payroll tax and barely any of them thought it was a good idea.
As financial services providers grapple with Financial Services Reform legislation, those within their ranks who have studied organisational behaviour might recall Pavlov's Dog.
Former Hockeyroos coach Ric Charlesworth thinks business has it too easy. It takes something special to reach the level of elite performance, as Mark Pownall reports.
In the wake of the Prime Minister's $6 billion weekend spending spree, I couldn't help reflecting on a piece I had read recently on the purchasing power of election promises.
Mark Latham's promise to give up to $75 million a year to Western Australia to attract major new gas and processing projects to the State largely went unnoticed at the weekend.
At this time of year it's perhaps not surprising that our universities start making new appointments as they prepare to compete for the hearts and minds of students-to-be.
I hate to be a killjoy when our Olympic athletes have performed so well, but I did feel it was time to put some of the bragging in context – but a little less subjectively than Roy & HG did in the various tallies they provided.
Overshadowed by some clever politicking by Labor leader Mark Latham on the US Free Trade Agreement, the Federal Opposition's industrial relations policy has failed to get the scrutiny it deserves.
As the Perth Convention and Exhibition Centre begins the process of opening its doors to the public, the foreshore building has attracted a fresh round of analysis/criticism.
The changing of the guard at retail car giant Automotive Holdings Group has coincided with a restructuring of the business to separate the flagship motor vehicle business and a growing property empire.
I did try to slip away quietly for a couple of weeks but my colleagues let it be known that I was “on assignment” in the US, so I'd best deliver a few pearls of wisdom on that front, otherwise some of you might be disappointed.
I have been dwelling on the remarkable news of a couple of weeks ago that unemployment in Western Australia had dropped to 5 per cent in May – the lowest level since seasonally adjusted monthly data was produced in 1978.
Imagine how many people would have laughed 10 years ago at the suggestion that, not only was a CEO from Western Australia lauded as the nation's best, heading a company that was a market darling,