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TELSTRA ARTICLES

TELSTRA

  • Special Announcements
  • Telstra Board
  • Telstra Shareholders
  • Telstra Top Management
  • Telstra Financial Performance
  • Telstra Executive Salaries
  • Special Announcements
  • Performance Market Share
  • Telstra Total Staff
  • Telstra Staff Breakdown
  • TELSTRA HISTORY

  • Letterheads
  • Background
  • SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS

  • Jun 99 Telstra announced that it had bought 5% of Computershare for $84m, with an option over another 10%.

  • Jun 99 Telstra announced an alliance with Skybridge, another LEO satellite telephone venture. Telstra would become the Australian and South East Asian operator.

  • Jul 99 Telstra paid $18.9m for 10% of Sausage Software plus an option to acquire another 30%.

  • Aug 99 Telstra paid $50m for 15% of Solution 6 Holdings plus an option to acquire a further 25% within 12 months.

  • Aug 99 Bob Mansfield, ex Optus, ex McDonalds and ex Fairfax and ex the Prime Minister's office on projects will be appointed CEO of Telstra. The market did not welcome the announcement (and virtual appointment) by the Government. The SMH observed that he did not have a long term track record.

  • May 00 CEO message to Telstra employees Enews 49/00 - 5 May, 2000
    The following message for all staff is from Ziggy Switkowski, Chief Executive Officer.
    I am pleased to announce today the next stage in the redefinition of the portfolios within Telstra as we continue to align our resources and organisation with the strategic priorities of the company.
    Over the past year you, and Telstra, have achieved many important milestones. We've dramatically enhanced our internet and online presence, we've grown strongly in the mobiles market, we've positioned ourselves robustly in newly competitive segments, and we've delivered to our customers a steady stream of attractive products, services and pricing plans.
    As with all journeys, we have to keep adjusting in order to stay on track. Today, I am announcing changes to our organisation structure which will make some of these adjustments.
    These changes will see us continue towards our goal of becoming a globally significant, modern, successful communications company. In making them, I have had at the forefront of my mind the following priorities:
    achieving strong revenue growth by offering customers innovative, relevant communications products and services in a timely and cost effective way;
    continuously improving the delivery of services to all Australians thereby increasing customer satisfaction, reducing churn and improving service levels;
    delivering levels of profitability and cash flow to enable appropriate levels of investment in world class infrastructure, the payment of attractive dividends to shareholders and increasing shareholder value; and
    environment that is competitive and productive, customer focused, empowered, using best-in-class processes.
    Our strategy anticipates a Telstra as the carrier of choice for telephony products; with a world class, national, internet-ready fixed and wireless infrastructure; an increasing proportion of non-traditional communications revenues reflecting the global digital revolution; error free delivery of service; and a growing set of businesses in Asia.
    It anticipates a Telstra which is a rewarding yet challenging place to work, one characterised by the satisfaction of delivering to customers great solutions and impeccable service, and by the buzz of winning in a competitive market through innovation and new business development.
    It requires a competitive cost base, modern technology and great people. It values speed to market, commitment to growth and customer service, as the defining qualities of enduring success in the decade ahead.
    These criteria are reflected in the changes being announced today.
    Infrastructure Services - Gerry Moriarty
    A new unit, Infrastructure Services, is being formed with Gerry Moriarty as its Group Managing Director (GMD). This group will comprise the existing Network and Technology Group (NTG) to which will be added all Access Field Services and the Olympic Unit.
    This represents a consolidation of field operations from Telstra Business Solutions (TBS) and Commercial & Consumer (C&C) together with NTG and is intended to lead to improved service performance across the nation, at progressively lower costs. The Infrastructure Services group will also have responsibility for Telstra's involvement in the Olympic Games.
    Excluding Network Design and Construction, which is being prepared for divestment later this year, this group will initially contain approximately 25,000 Telstra people.
    Retail Services - Ted Pretty
    A Retail Services group is also being formed with Ted Pretty as its GMD. This group is made up of the current C&C, TBS and Convergent Business groups, minus the field operations.
    In taking this step, I anticipate an improvement in meeting the needs of customers who have traditionally fallen between these units; more creative customer solutions; faster commercialisation of more relevant new products and services; a greater focus on bringing our customers with us in the online journey; and more coherent introduction of new economy products in all of our customer segments.
    The Retail Services group will be responsible for more than 70 per cent of the company's revenues.
    These are evolutionary changes. The net effect is that the roles previously carried out by GMDs Peter Shore and Lindsay Yelland have not been replaced and, instead, have been integrated into larger units with mandates to improve service, better meet customer needs, and fix demarcation issues.
    We have decided not to separate our internet related activities into a product line of business or company. The future of retail services is inextricably linked with internet related products and services and as such they remain with Retail Services. At least for the moment, we believe we can achieve adequate separation of business focus in the content and application space by our strategy of creating subsidiaries, joint ventures and investments such as Pacific Access, Advantra, IBM-GSA, Foxtel, PCCW, Solution 6, etc.
    Both Gerry and Ted will bring their well known strengths to help lead us forward - creativity, customer focus, different ways of thinking. These characteristics will be combined with, and reinforced by, strong support from our senior team and others around them.
    OnAir
    Our mobile retail sales and after sales support responsibility will continue in OnAir headed by Dick Simpson but importantly he will now control investment in wireless network and associated systems.
    Wholesale & International and corporate functions
    The GMD of Wholesale & International, Doug Campbell will remain in his current position. Finance & Administration will continue to be lead by Paul Rizzo and Legal & Regulatory by Bruce Akhurst and Employee Relations by Rob Cartwright.
    Graeme Ward, GMD of Public Affairs & Corporate Marketing has announced his retirement and consideration is now being given to the best organisational structure for this group.
    A concluding round of changes is scheduled for later this month as we finalise the details concerning our new regional unit.
    And finally you have my commitment that we will be working closely as one team to make sure Telstra succeeds in its important work and mission.
    Thank you.
    Ziggy Switkowski Chief Executive Officer

    TELSTRA BOARD

    At 1st September 1998 Directors:

    Dr Zygmunt (Ziggy) Switkowski 50 CEO from 1st Mar 1999
    David Hoare Chairman 65 (BT Pioneer Dec95/2y retired late 1999)
    Bob Mansfield        48 (PM Office, Optus, McDonalds, Fairfax) 
    John Ralph D/Chair   65 (Fosters, Pac Dunlop) Oct96/4y
    Ross Adler           53 (Santos CBA) Oct96/4y
    Anthony Clark        59 (KPMG) Oct96/4y
    M Codd               58 (ISSC, Qantas, MLC, IBM) Feb97/4y
    Elizabeth Nosworthy  52 (Freehills David Jones, Bris Port) Dec96/3y
    Christopher Roberts  53 (MD Arnotts) Dec96/3y
    Malcolm Irving       67 (Caltex AIDC) Jul97/3y
    John Stocker         53 Oct96/4y
    Stephen Vizard       42 Oct96/4y
    Donald McGauchie        Sep98/?
    Mrs Celie Moar          (farmer) Sep98/?

    HISTORY OF DIRECTORS

    At 1st March 1996
    Directors: D Hoare (BT Pioneer)(Dec 95 reappointed for 2y but stayed till Nov 1999) A Morokoff, M Codd (Director ISSC & Qantas), T Finn (former chairman IBM), W Mansfield (ACTU), E Nosworthy (Freehill, Hollingdale & Page Solicitors), P Redlich (Holding Redlich Solicitors), C Roberts (MD Arnotts), R Tsenin (MD Goldman Sachs Aus), M Williams, S Wilson (MD Wilson HTM), J Menadue, F Blount.
    Mark Burrows (BT Aus, Comalco, Pioneer) appointed D/Chair for 5y).

    Frank Blount CEO 60 appointed in 1992. Formerly with AT&T. retired March 1999.

  • Jun96: The election of the Liberal Government will see changes on the Board. Terms of seven of the Board expire in December 96. Speculation has arisen that F Blount will leave early. This has been denied. Harvey Parker is still mentioned as a successor to Frank.

  • Sep96: The Liberal Party effectively sack 6 directors and replace them with their preferred members. Those asked to resign were: M Burrows, B Finn, B Mansfield, S Wilson and H Williams. Mr J Menadue refused to resign and was sacked after the shareholder (Liberal Party) held a shareholders meeting and voted him out.

    The Liberal replacements are Steve Vizard (entertainer/CRA lawyer), John Ralph (Pratt Industries, Fosters Brewing) is new deputy chairman, John Stocker (former head CSIRO), Anthony Clark (Santos) and Ross Adler (KPMG). The others on the Board now are: F Blount, D Hoare, E Nosworthy, C Roberts and M Codd.

    The mass sackings follow the most successful year ever for Telstra. The very good results embarrassed the Liberals who want to sell Telstra. The new Board is expected to soon come to the conclusion that the best thing for Telstra will be a sale.

  • Aug 98: Several of the Board are linked to the HR Nichols (sick) Society or CRA or have other anti union links

  • Sep98: Telstra has taken another step to being a right wing anti union organisation, funded from telecommunications income.
    Alan Ramsey in the SMH this week said it all.
    "Then, on Saturday, just 24 hours before Howard at last put an end to the election speculation farce, the Government did some last-minute repayment of political debts. Donald McGauchie, the former president of the NFF and one of the Givernment's most strident and involved allies in its assault on native title and waterfront unionism, was appointed to the Board of Telstra."

  • Jan99: Blount still there as CEO. Media reports say that the choice is from 4 internal applicants (Rizzo, Shore, Moriarty, Switkowski) and the inevitable US applicant.

  • Feb99: Switkowski appointed to head Telstra for the next 5 years commencing 1st March 1999. The shares fell 19c to $8.21 in a slow market. Analysists (commission agents) were disappointed as an ATT applicant with a history of staff slashing was overlooked. Nevertheless Ziggy said he would "cut down on costs". These works have a technical meaning along the lines that "we will sack more staff". Everybody knows that one proven way to increase share prices is to announce staff sackings! The media have tagged him a "rocket scientist" probably because of his nuclear physicist qualifications.
    It will be interesting to see which internal faction emerges as dominant. Ziggy is new to Telstra and has no track record with Optus. The ultra right wing group is still pursuing a fierce anti union agenda while the traditional Telstra group are trying to run a phone company. The "resignations" at the top in the next few months will give us a answer. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the problem, but it may take one to fix it!
    (Background: On 30th April 96, Optus announced that was the new CEO. He is an Australian, a nuclear physicist and was chairman and MD of Kodak (Australia). Ziggy was credited with the rescue of Kodak. Kodak was almost a basket case but the Labor Federal Government offered incentives. Kodak is now a successful exporter of film. On 13 June 97, Switkowski "resigned". The papers reported that his severance payment was a mere $4.85m. Accounts later showed that it was around $3.5m.)

  • Mar99: Telstra published the following details about Ziggy:
    Zygmunt (Ziggy) Edward Switkowski - a lifetime of leadership
  • Telstra Group Managing Director, Business & International, Sept 1997-Feb 1999
  • Optus Chief Executive Officer, Optus Communications and Chairman, Optus Vision, 1996-1997
  • Kodak Chairman and Managing Director, 1992-1996 Deputy Managing Director, 1988-1992 Director, Business Planning, Eastman Kodak, New York, 1985-1988 Marketing Manager, Consumer Products, 1983-1985 Sales Manager, 1982-1983 Manager, Research and Development, 1980-1982 Joined Kodak (Australasia) as a senior research scientist, 1978
  • Academic Queen Elizabeth II Fellow, University of Melbourne, 1977-1978
  • Institutions Visiting Fellow, Neils Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, 1975-1976 Senior Research Fellow, California Institute of Technology, 1973-1975
  • Current memberships of boards, industry bodies and professional associations Director Amcor Limited, Director Advantra Pty Limited, Member Australian Information Economy Advisory Council Member, Australian Coalition of Service Industries
  • Awards Inaugural Australian Quality Prize Kodak Australia, 1992 Advance Australia Award for Outstanding Achievement in Industry and Commerce, 1995
  • Formerly Chairman Australian Quality Council, Member Australian Manufacturing Council, Vice President Victorian Employers Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Director, Melbourne Exhibition Centre, Member Business Council of Australia, Member Communications & Multimedia Taskforce Victorian Government, Chairman Advisory Council on Industrial Property (patents and trademarks)
  • Personal Born: 21 June 1948
    Educated at: St Bernards Collage
    Essendon: University of Melbourne
    Qualifications: B.Science (Hons), 1968. Ph.D (Nuclear Physics), University of Melbourne, 1973 Harvard Business School, Advanced Management Program, 1993
    Spouse: Jadzia
    Children: Clare and Mark

    TELSTRA SHAREHOLDERS

    Only one third of Telstra shares are available for trade.

    As at float:

    Australian Government 66.66%
    Telstra Employees      1.40%
    Broker Clients         5.03%
    Foreign                6.33%
    Aus Institutions       7.00%
    Public                13.75%

    Largest Shareholders at float AMP Investments 102.4m Axiom Funds Management 71.9m BT Funds Management 52.4m Bank of Ireland 39.7m Lend Lease 37.1m Maple Brown Abbott 33.2m Portfolio Partners 29.0m Bankers Trust 28.0m Queensland Investment Corp 27.3m LGT Asset Management 18.0m

    20 LARGEST SHAREHOLDERS

                        28-8-98     13-8-99 
    (rank/m shares/%)     m   %       m   % 
    Aus Government      8578 66.7   8578 66.7 
    Westpac            1 350 8.1   1 347 8.1
    Chase Manhattan    2 230 5.4   2 296 6.9
    National Nominees  3 182 4.3   3 246 5.7
    Telstra ESOP       4 135 3.2   4 110 2.6
    BT Custodial Serv  8  67 1.6   5 100 2.3
    Permanent Trustee  5 106 2.5   6  89 2.1
    ANZ Nominees       9  65 1.5   7  84 1.9
    AMP Life           6  92 2.1   8  77 1.9
    Qld Investment Co  7  67 1.6   9  67 1.6
    Citicorp          10  62 1.4  10  63 1.5
    Cth Custodial Ser 12  55 1.3  11  42 1.0
    MLC               11  59 1.4  12  40 0.9
    Perpetual Trust V 15  37 0.9  13  39 0.9
    Permanent Trustee 14  41 1.0  14  35 0.8
    HKBA Nominees     17  29 0.7  15  30 0.7
    Perpetual Trustee 16  35 0.8  16  25 0.6
    NRMA              19  23 0.5  17  23 0.5
    National Mutual   20  21 0.5  18  20 0.5
    Mercantile Mutual --          19  19 0.5
    AMP Nominees      --          20  18 0.4
    SAS Trustee       13  43 1.0  --        
    Perpetual Nominee 18  27 0.6  --        
    

    DIRECTORS SHARE HOLDINGS

    Share holdings of Directors, both direct and indirect.

             26-8-98  26-8-99
    Hoare     27,720   27,720
    Ralph     40,600   40,600
    Blount    12,700  
    Switkowski         67,120
    Adler     50,000   50,000
    Clark     48,000   48,000
    Codd       8,000    8,000
    Irving    16.000   16.000
    McGauchie           2,200
    Moar                2,200
    Nosworthy 16,600   16,600
    Roberts   46,360   46,360
    Stocker   32,480   32,480
    Vizard    16,000   16,000        
    Payments to Directors
               98-99
    Hoare     $124495
    Ralph     $ 74707
    Adler     $ 53500
    Clark     $ 53500
    Codd      $ 53500
    Irving    $ 53500
    McGauchie $ 43469
    Moar      $ 43469
    Nosworthy $ 53500
    Roberts   $ 53500
    Stocker   $ 53500
    Vizard    $ 53500 

    TELSTRA TOP MANAGEMENT Oct 99

    This is not the complete list. It only lists those who have most connection with the Union. For past greats and the passing parades we have:

    TELSTRA'S LEADERSHIP TEAM

    The Telstra executive team is made up of the CEO and 10 Group Managing Directors as follows:

    • Bruce Akhurst Group General Counsel & Legal & Regulatory
      • Chris Gardner Employee Relations
        • Kate Christie ER

    • Doug Campbell Wholesale & International

    • Rob Cartwright Employee Relations
      • Paul Baulch OHS
      • Justin O'Connell Leadership and Organisation Effectiveness
        • Laurie Wood Reward & Analysis
        • Ann Diamond Employment
      • Ken Sharpe Payroll
      • Gary Cassidy Personnel
        • Stuart O'Keefe Workplace Reform
        • Ros Holihan TBS
        • Cathy Callagan Personell NSW
        • Robyn Clark Personell Vic
        • Gary Clifton Personell WA SA
        • Jeff Seymor Personell Qld
        • Brian Douglas Simplification
        • Karen Halfpenny ER F&A L&R PA&CM
        • Glen Peterson ER C&C
        • John Wood ER MTG
        • Jeremy Scrivens Compensation
      • Alf Forster Learning

    • Gerry Moriarty Network & Technology Group
      • Phil Hastings Infrastructure Management and Operations
    • Ted Pretty Convergent Businesses

    • Paul Rizzzo Finance & Administration

    • Dick Simpson Mobile & Wireless Communications

    • Graeme Ward Public Affairs & Corporate Marketing

    • Lindsay Yelland Business & Government
      • Roger Bamber Service

    • Peter Shore Consumer & Commercial
      • Graham Markey Business Planning
      • Darian Stirzaker Payphone
      • Les Ayres Service Improvement
        • Bob Gibbons Area Implementation WA/SA
      • Michael Rocca Service
        • Greer Furmage Rural and Remote
        • Anthony Rix Service Assurance
        • Jim Neibling Access Renewal
        • Mark Hatton Field Services

    TELSTRA FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE

    Key indicators

                           91-92 92-93 93-94 94-95 95-96 96-97 97-98 98-99 99-00
    Revenue  $m            12229 12656 13363 14081 15239 15983 17302 18218 19840
    EBITDA pre Abnormal $m  5252  5316  5743  5576  6021  6597  7375  8351
    Deprec & Amort          2084  2122  2123  2204  2351  2326  2322  2502  2646
    EBIT before Abnormal    3168  3193  3620  3373  3670  4244  5102  5898
    Net Interest            1048   837   678   400   428   439   511   499
    Op Profit pre Abnormal  2120  2356  2942  2973  3242  3805  4468  5320  5921
    Abnormal Items         -1461  -362  -414  -568   204 -1732     0     0  -572
    Operating Profit pre tax 658  1994  2528  2405  3447  2073  4468  5320  5349
    Income Tax               345  1090   823   650  1145  -464  1468  1832  1676
    Op Profit after Tax      313   904  1705  1755  2302  1609  3000  3488  3673
    Minority Interest        -14  -0.5    -5    -3    -3    -8    -4    -2     4 
    Op Profit after Tax&Min  300   905  1699  1753  2305  1617  3004  3486  3677
    Dividend                 478   674   738   944  1368  4146  1802  4247
    Capital Investments     2925  2726  2651  3351  4093  4504  3890  4386
    Total Assets           22827 23160 21139 24083 24362 25858 26470 27682
    Gross Debt              8922  7717  5901  6149  5355  7981  7722  7211
    Shareholders' Eqity     9905 10886 10756 11727 12667  9886 11033 10256 11602
    Dividend (cents/share)                          10.6  32.2  14.0  33.0  18.0
    Earnings/share cents                            16.9  20.0  23.3  27.1  28.6
    
    			 2011  2010  2009  2008  2007
    			   $m    $m    $m    $m    $m
    Sales revenue 		24983 24813 25371 24657 23673
    EBITDA(1) 		10151 10847 10948 10416  9861
    EBIT(2) 		 5692  6501  6558  6226  5779
    Profit			 3250  3940  4076  3711  3275
    Dividends (c per share)    28    28    28    28    28
    Total assets 		37913 39282 39962 37921 37837
    Gross debt 		16232 16031 17036 16285 15547
    Net debt 		13595 13926 15655 15386 14724
    Total Equity 		12292 13008 12681 12295 12580
    Accrued capital expend	 3410  3471  4598  4897  5879
    Free cashflow 		 5477  6225  4365  3855  2899

    (1) Operating profit before interest, depreciation and amortisation and income tax expense. EBITDA is used as a measure of financial performance by excluding certain variables that affect operating profits but which may not be directly related to all financial aspects of the operations of the company. EBITDA is not a measure of operating income, operating performance or liquidity under A-IFRS. Other companies may calculate EBITDA in a different manner to us.
    (2) EBITDA less depreciation and amortisation.
    (3) Profit for the year after non-controlling interests

  • Feb97: Telstra announced that for the 6 months ending Dec 96:
    Profit at $1397m (up 16%) despite reduced revenue growth.
    However, an abnormal loss of $1026m is posted to cover redundancies. The final profit is only $742m. Staff are to be cut by 22000 by 1999.
    Staff have been cut by 7000 from 76522 to 69483.
    Visionstream accounted for some staff cuts.
    Foxtel losses of $98m (cumulatively now $270m) also included.

  • Aug97: A 17% increase in pre tax profit to $3.8m. Writedown of Pay TV was $818m. Provision for redundancies was $1100m. An abnormal loss of $394m on JORN was recorded. JORN lost a total of $600m. However an abnormal gain of $600m was recorded, from accounting changes. Debt rose by at least 3bn as Telstra simply gave the Liberal Government $3000m to help the Federal Budget (and the Liberals).
    John Howard will also be delighted with the announcement of more full time staff cuts. A total of 25,500 quality full time jobs, located in every electorate in Australia, will be cut.

  • Feb98: Interim results for 6 months: Profit $1613m, Revenue $8425m, Depreciation $1157m, Net Interest -$302m. Reveune up 8.7%, Expenditure up 6.2%. Foxtel loss was $86m, with $43m to Telstra.

  • Aug98: Annual report. Record profits, 8,900 staff slashed during the year. A 7c final dividend to make a total for the year of 14 cents per share. The shares immediately fell 14c to $4.47.

  • Mar99: Telstra announces a 6m profit of 1.81bn. As expected the shares dipped in a strong market. The dividend stayed at 7 cents per share. Main features were: Mobile revenue up 17%, data and text 12% International down 15% CPE down 30%. Telstra claims 55% of digital market with 1.41m customers and just over 1 million analogue customers. Only 2500 staff were sacked this 6 months.

  • Mar99: Telstra dividend of 7 cents per share paid.

    TELSTRA FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE

                           91-92  92-93  93-94  94-95  95-96  96-97  97-98  98-99
    Financial Ratios
    Earnings per share (cents)
    - (before abnormals)                                      20.0c  23.3c  27.1c
    - (after abnormals)                                       12.6c  23.3c  27.1c
    Dividends per share
    - (ordinary)                                              32.2c  14.0c  17.0c
    - (special)                                                             16.0c
    
    Return on Assets
    - (before abnormals)     14%    15%    17%    16%    16%  17.7%  20.1%  22.7%
    - (after abnormals)       8%    13%    15%    13%    17%  10.1%  20.1%  22.7%
    Return on Investments
    - (before abnormals)     17%    19%    22%    22%    23%
    - (after abnormals)       9%    16%    20%    18%    24%
    Return on Equity
    - (before abnormals)     12%    14%    18%    18%    18%  20.1%  28.7%  29.9%
    - (after abnormals)       3%     9%    16%    16%    19%  12.7%  28.7%  29.9%
    Interest Cover (times)
    - (before abnormals      3.0    4.0    5.0    8.0    9.0    9.7   7.6    9.4
    - (after abnormals)      2.0    3.0    5.0    7.0    9.0    5.5   7.6    9.4
    Debt Ratio               47%    42%    36%    35%    30%  44.5%  41.1%  36.9%
    
    Expenses               11570  10661  10834  11676  11900
    Wages/Super/Compo      2687m  2851m  3914m         4332m  4401m  3665m  3270m
    Wages as % of expenditure     36.3%  44.6%                24.9%  21.2%  17.9%

    TELSTRA EXECUTIVE SALARIES

    (FROM ANNUAL REPORTS)

                         91-92 92-93 93-94 94-95 95-96 96-97 97-98 98-99
    Executives where
    salary greater $1.6m   -     -     -     -     -     -     -     1*
    salary $1.3m - $1.6m   -     -     -     -     -     1     1     1
    salary $1.2m - $1.3m   -     -     -     1     -     -     -     -
    salary $1.1m - $1.2m   -     -     -     -     -     -     -     1
    salary $1.0m - $1.1m   -     -     -     -     -     1*    -     2
    salary $900k - $999k   -     -     -     -     1     -     1     3
    salary $800k - $900k   -     -     -     -     -     -     -     1
    salary $700k - $800k   -     -     1     2     2     2     1     1
    salary $600k - $700k   -     -     -     2     5     3     5     3
    salary $500k - $600k   -     1     -     3    10     3     4     4
    salary $400k - $500k   1     -     2     2    10     8     8    16
    salary $300k - $400k   -     2     6     6    10    10    15    14
    salary $200k - $300k   5    11    13    28    44    28    37    30
    salary $100k - $200k   ?    73    69    59    37    38    33    20
    
    Total Executives       ?    87    91   103   116    93   103    94
    *includes redundancy payment
    
    MD Salary approx $k     450   515   785   1205   915  1415  1415  2100*
    
    *estimate

    Actual income of top execs - this includes fixed, short and long term incentives

                 98-99
    Blount     $3,709,561
    Switkowski $1,173,838
    Rizzo      $1,078,420
    Campbell   $1,008,586
    Moriarty   $  997,420
    Shore      $  939,253
    Yelland    $  926,003
    

    TELSTRA PERFORMANCE ESTIMATES MARKET SHARE

    Telstra Market Share Estimates only
                      1991-92   1993-94  Dec96
    STD calls            100%     90%     82%
    International        100%     78%     70%
    Mobile AMPS          100%     66%   
    Mobile GSM            na      45%   
    Local calls          100%     98%   
    Basic access         100%     98%
    Dec 96: Cable has passed 1.5 million living units.
    Digital lines now at 79% - target 100% by Dec 98.
    SDH transmission capacity is 59% - target is 100% by Dec 97.

    TELSTRA STAFF BY DESIGNATIONS

    From EEO Report of        31-1-95 30-6-95 31-3-96
      Admin                    20114   19850   20329 
      Artisan                    600     521     478 
      Building Services          631     294     284 
      Communications Officer   13484   14829   16734 
      Drafting                   348     308     276 
      Executive                 1033    1090    1081 
      Information Technology    1847    2117    2816 
      Manager                   1424    1511    1643 
      Material Distribution      656     631     613 
      Media                        5       4       1 
      Operator service          6921    6356    6207 
      Product/Other               34      36      34 
      Professional              2551    2544    2494 
      Salesforce                1830    1877    1892 
      Technical                   47      44      48 
      Technician               19337   19777   19669 
      Trainee                     20      11       6 
           TOTAL               70882   71800   74605

    TELSTRA TOTAL STAFF

    History: Total Telstra staff peaked about 1986 at about 96,700 (includes about 2,200 OTC staff).
    1994: A low was reported in early 1994 at 67,000 - this followed a major slash and burn exercise. Telstra found that some cuts had been excessive.
    1995: prediction re Staff estimated 60000 by year 2000. 1995: In mid 1995 staff numbers rose to about 73,000. This rise was caused by a correction to the excessive cuts and by the roll out of Pay TV cable.
    1996: Mar 96 the staff was 74605.
    1996: Jun 30 - there were 76,522 staff.
    1996: In late 1996, Telstra confirmed that staff would be cut by 22,000 over 3 years, in order to satisfy Government demands.
    1997: Mar 31 - staff now at 67,364.
    1997: Jun 30 - staff now at 66,100.
    1998: Jun 30 - staff now at 57,234 1998: June 30 - In annual report Telstra say their (previously unannounced) policy is to reduce staff by 27,500 over 5 years beginning 1st Jul 96. So far 20,800 were sacked in the first 2 years. Another 7,000 are yet to be sacked.
    1999: Dec 31 - staff at 51,667
    2000: Dec 31 - staff at 47,075 - another 5,000 (11% staff cut is projected. The sale of NDC would see 6,000 more "let go".

    STAFF SLASHINGS IN TELSTRA

                     Apr96-Mar97   Mar97-Mar98   
    Location         Telstra C&C   Telstra C&C
    QLD Brisbane       -91  -388    -923  -559
    QLD Country        -68  -278   -1313  -686
    SA  Adelaide       -92  -247    -461  -129
    SA  Mt Gambier     -13   -15     -22   -10
    SA  Murray Br      -29   -19     -34   -20
    SA  North SA         8   -46     -64   -37
    SA  Pt Lincoln       8    -6     -18     1
    TAS Hobart          98    58     -91   -65
    TAS Burnie           8     9     -18    -8
    TAS Devonport       -3    -4     -15   -11
    TAS Launceston       0     8     -23   -17
    VIC Melbourne      706   420   -2668 -1291
    VIC Ballarat        30    24    -100  -111
    VIC Bendigo         82    79     -65   -22
    VIC Central V       94    92    -103   -79
    VIC Geelong         39    21     -55   -35
    VIC Gippsland      104    84    -109   -64
    VIC Nth W Vic       33    28     -31   -12
    VIC Sth W Vic      142   121    -104   -67
    WA  Perth         -266  -456    -435  -151
    WA  East WA        -27   -26     -38   -21
    WA  Geraldton       -7    -7      -9    -8
    WA  North WA        -8     3       2     3
    WA  South WA       -14   -23     -59   -31
    Unknown          -8379 -5531     -19     2
    TOTAL            -7390 -6652   -8749 -3503
    
    Country Losses     422   260   -2069  -977
    City Losses        562 -1381   -6681 -2523
    
    Source: Senate hearings May 1998


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