Thales appoints Jeff Connolly as CEO
Thales Australia and New Zealand has appointed Jeff Connolly as CEO following the decision by current CEO Chris Jenkins to retire after 14 years in the role.
Connolly will take up the role on September 1 2022, with Jenkins agreeing to continue to serve Thales and its customers as a non-executive director after a period of leave.
Thales Australia and New Zealand chair, Belinda Hutchinson, said the company was delighted to welcome a highly regarded senior business leader of Connolly's calibre to Thales.
"As an experienced, passionate and committed supporter of Australian research, innovation and modern manufacturing, Jeff has the strategic and operational capability to deliver for our customers and support our employees and other stakeholders," Hutchinson says.
"Among other notable achievements, Jeff established and chaired the Prime Minister's Industry 4.0 Taskforce, now known as the AiGroup Industry 4.0 Forum, and he remains on the Executive Council.
"More recently, Jeff chaired the Federal Government's Research Commercialisation Taskforce, the recommendations of which led to the $2.2 billion University Research Commercialisation Action Plan to drive industry and university innovation and collaboration."
"I am excited by the opportunity to lead one of Australia's most innovative and trusted companies at a time when demand for its mission-critical services has never been more acute," Connolly says.
"I look forward to continuing to build on Thales' well-earned reputation for innovation and world-class support for its defence and commercial customers in Australia, throughout the Asia Pacific region and beyond."
On behalf of the Thales Australia Board, Hutchinson thanks Jenkins for his significant contribution to Thales over 35 years, including 14 years as the Thales Australia and New Zealand CEO.
"Chris is an outstanding leader who has served the company with distinction, growing Thales into one of Australia's largest suppliers and exporters of mission-critical products and services," Hutchinson adds.
"The board is pleased that Chris, after a period of leave, will rejoin the company as a non-executive director continuing his strong advocacy for Australian engineering, technology, design and manufacturing."