‘Never looked back’: Lindsay Partridge on retirement after 25 years with Brickworks
Lindsay Partridge has reflected on his time as Brickworks CEO after announcing his plans to retire.
Mr Partridge has been the chief executive of Australia's biggest brickmaker for 25 years.
The board acknowledged him by saying when he started the company had an asset base of $500 million, now it has $6 billion.
Mark Ellenor, Brickworks Chief Operating Officer, will become the new CEO after Mr Patridge retires on July 31.
“When I started in 1985 I was factory manager and we had a factory that was the worst performing factory you had ever seen,” Mr Patridge told Sky News Business Editor Ross Greenwood.
“It was the dirtiest place you had ever seen and my job was to turn it around … and turned it into a really magnificent plant and from there I never looked back.”
Видео ‘Never looked back’: Lindsay Partridge on retirement after 25 years with Brickworks канала Sky News Australia
Mr Partridge has been the chief executive of Australia's biggest brickmaker for 25 years.
The board acknowledged him by saying when he started the company had an asset base of $500 million, now it has $6 billion.
Mark Ellenor, Brickworks Chief Operating Officer, will become the new CEO after Mr Patridge retires on July 31.
“When I started in 1985 I was factory manager and we had a factory that was the worst performing factory you had ever seen,” Mr Patridge told Sky News Business Editor Ross Greenwood.
“It was the dirtiest place you had ever seen and my job was to turn it around … and turned it into a really magnificent plant and from there I never looked back.”
Видео ‘Never looked back’: Lindsay Partridge on retirement after 25 years with Brickworks канала Sky News Australia
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Lendlease 'unfocused' and faces ‘fundamental questions’ about its future: John WylieDaylight saving time ending for parts of Australia tomorrowRichard Marles slammed for ‘desperate’ flights over limousine ridesLabor government has spent a ‘colossal’ amount on renewables and the NDISCardiologist opposes daylight savings for three big reasonsPhilip Lowe to front Senate committee ahead of rates decisionLandslide triggers building collapse in MexicoBusiness Weekend | 7 AprilLabor government’s budget to have Australia in deficit for ‘the next 40 years’‘Tensions’ between Richard Marles and leaders of the Defence ForceAlbanese’s decision to choose Sam Mostyn as Governor-General ‘clearly a political one’Albanese’s invite to King Charles likely out of ‘good form’ rather than personal anticipationAll possible survivors rescued from Greek fishing boat tragedy‘Hypocrisy’: Democrat calls out ‘woke elites’ for Martha’s Vineyard reactionMegyn Kelly blasts Scotland’s ‘dopey’ First Minister over new hate crime lawsEvacuation warnings in place for parts of New South WalesElon Musk scores huge win as Twitter caves to his requestsEarthquake hits East Coast of the United StatesElon Musk secures enough funding to take over TwitterBiden is ‘building Trump’s wall’ with no media outrage