Will nice guy Thodey finish last?

Renai LeMay
15 February 2010, 8:48 AM


Nobody wants the pugnacious Sol Trujillo back, but is Telstra's charming new CEO David Thodey too much of a soft touch to rescue Telstra from steady decline?


opinion David Thodey was dressed conservatively in a dark suit and grey tie as he took the stand in Sydney last Thursday morning to face the impertinent questions of a pack of reporters and a separate phalanx of analysts.

He wore a fashionable set of the slightly elongated rectangular glasses that became the height of style in eyewear in 2009, and his shirt was pristinely white. A touch of frost greying his temples was the only real sign that the CEO was in his middle-50’s, as opposed to being ten years’ younger.

The unusually tall and thin Thodey (pictured) towered over the room from the right of the raised stage Telstra has constructed deep in its corporate centre at 400 George St. The overall impression one first gets of the CEO, I have heard various people mention, can be a bit spooky as he darkly looms over you with his piercing eyes.

Thodey’s dress sense in general contrasts subtly but importantly with that of his predecessor, Sol Trujillo.

The former Telstra CEO often wore different coloured ties with varying patterns, and he had a wide reportoire of flambouyant suits ranging from light gray to blue, pin-striped, black and more. Even the colour of his shirts changed to match the rest.

Trujillo’s attire, combined with his shorter but bulkier stature, his power moustache and his highly expressive bushy eyebrows (just check the multitude of photos out there if you don’t believe me) tended to give you the impression of an executive who was a combination king-hit prize fighter and a some form of insurance salesman.

And their personalities match. Trujillo’s tenure at Telstra was characterised by his bombastic, take no prisoners nature, while Thodey’s much more reserved nature wouldn’t seem out of place visiting his aged grandmother — with flowers in hand.

However, ironically given Trujillo’s extroverted approach, Thodey’s performance delivering Telstra’s half-yearly financial results last week revealed the executive’s growing level of comfort in a forum that so often appeared to play to his predecessor’s weaknesses.

Trujillo never quite mastered the business and technology press, and his appearances at Telstra’s question and answer sessions were peppered with antagonism and hostility as his American brand of humour and propensity for answering legitimate questions with marketing guff fell flat in front of the critical fourth estate audience.

Thodey, by comparison, last Thursday charmed the pants off Australia’s press and analyst corps with his oh-so-Australian brand of understated humour.

Where Trujillo might have gotten defensive about the dozens of questions asked about Telstra’s ongoing and highly secretive negotiations with the Federal Government and National Broadband Network Company, Thodey played honest and to the heart. The negotiations were “very complex”, he repeated gently over and over again, attempting to coax the press into believing there was nothing worrisome about them.

Asked whether the talks were distracting Telstra from its business, he quipped that Telstra did have some staff working on it, but “thankfully, we have another 35,000 people in the business”.

Later on Thodey joked about Telstra’s customer service that he would love to have customers delighted with the telco. “I am sure there are some out there,” he chuckled.

And the CEO’s honesty was at times startling — at times he simply admitted he was in the dark. “I do not know the answer to that,” he said in response to a question about pending Government legislation.

The remarkable thing about Thodey’s charm offensive — witnessed up close — is that it appears to be genuine. The CEO had many journalists in the half-yearly results session chuckling along with him, where Trujillo’s brash jokes and back-slapping camaraderie with his frequent guest star partner CEOs might have won him a few forced smiles at best.

Journalists loved to poke fun at Trujillo — as the many newspaper cartoons featuring his face attached to unlikely circumstances will attest. But Thodey has the sort of charm that makes those questioning him feel as though he’s letting them be part of his crowd. You’re not supposed to be too harsh on me, his beguiling smile appears to suggest, because after all, we’re all insiders, party to the same secrets.

And it bodes well for Telstra in some regards.

As Thodey has been at pains to point out, Telstra desperately needs to move its customer service into the twentieth century and stop ending up on the front pages of newspapers for botches like sending bills to deceased former customers.

The gradual exit of several of the telco’s more publicly rambunctious staff from its ranks over the past year has no doubt been due to Thodey’s influence, as has the commencement of the healing process with Telstra’s unions.

And of course, the exit of Trujillo and then-Telstra chairman Donald McGauchie from the telco last year was emblematic of the fact that Telstra was fighting a losing battle with the Federal Government over regulation — and consequently getting punished more than many of its shareholders thought necessary. Thodey has already done much to heal that rift.

From this, one thing is clear. Thodey’s natural inclination is to be the nice guy.

But one other thing remains in question. With declining revenues and earnings, limited growth opportunities in a market that is rapidly becoming commoditised and subject to huge levels of government intervention, an inevitable separation of its wholesale and retail operations looming and a need to plough its growing cash pile into investment, Telstra is currently facing a raft of challenges the like it has never known.

For all the charm, Thodey did, after all, deliver a mediocre half-yearly financial result last week that led many analysts to question where growth in the telco’s businesses would come from. It’s a question that Trujillo always had an answer to.

But with the NBN negotiations being the elephant in Thodey’s room, it’s currently hard for the CEO to take charge of Telstra in the way he would like to. The future is just too uncertain.

Meaning that the question for Thodey will eventually become — will simply playing the nice guy be enough?

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Raindog (User):

It's not a matter of Thodey being a nice guy it's a matter of can Telstra ever become a nice Telco and good corporate citizen.

The color of Thodey's or Trujillo's ties or suits do nothing for those Telstra has denied service to. The cut of a suit or the quality of the press conference jokes do nothing to address them user unfair manipulation Telstra has applied across the copper network.

Unlike his predecessor when Thodey speaks it does not inspire the wish to pick up and hurl a missile at him. That said most of Australia still harbours the want to put a brick through the nearest Telstra window.

Thodey's initiatives are for the better, but making repairs after a succession of vandals is an almost insurmountable task.

15 February 2010, 9:07 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

Quoting Raindog:
That said most of Australia still harbours the want to put a brick through the nearest Telstra window.


Thankfully, Thodey is trying to fix that. Sol just seemed to want to encourage it for some bizarre reason. And I think Thodey's doing a good job with what he has to work with. I've been highly anti-Telstra for years, and even I'm starting to like where they are heading.

15 February 2010, 7:12 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (User):

Quoting Tin:
I've been highly anti-Telstra for years, and even I'm starting to like where they are heading.

While I'm a fan of the way Thodey is trying to steer Telstra, it will take real action before I'm convinced that he can bring about real change. I'll be happy to be proved wrong on this, but I want to see a lot more actual change, in pricing, in service availability and in cross company ethos before I'm convinced. If Thodey can pull that of in a few years he deserves twice the salary that Trujillo demanded.

Telstra are still scratching their heads to why copper line revenue is falling, Blind Freddy can see why and can see how easily it could be to reversed. Only time will tell.

15 February 2010, 7:24 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

petert (Advanced Forumologist):

Thodey needs to go skiing in Colorado (?) with Minister Conroy. It certainly worked for the tv stations!

15 February 2010, 9:21 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (User):

Quoting petert:
Thodey needs to go skiing in Colorado (?) with Minister Conroy. It certainly worked for the tv stations!

Now PeterT you know that is unfair, with Senator Steve needing a way to repay his debt after all those commercial TV station invites to major sporting events. It's only public money after all.

click here for details
and here

18 February 2010, 8:47 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Raindog (User):

Quoting petert:
Thodey needs to go skiing in Colorado (?) with Minister Conroy. It certainly worked for the tv stations!

Well Thodey may not have taken your advice Peter, but Jamie certainly did.

19 February 2010, 9:39 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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