Former Macquarie University CIO Marc Bailey has left the university after almost five years in the role. According to his LinkedIn profile, he will be joining Intersect Australia in mid-May as COO after a vacation. Bailey also tweeted that he was “delighted to announce sign on as COO for @IntersectAust to focus on researchers, innovation and technology execution.” Bailey had been at the University since October 2009. Prior to the CIO role, he worked as a CTO for Australian firm Objective Corporation. During his time at the University, Bailey made inroads into reducing ICT costs while updating the technology experience for students and staff. In May 2011, most of its student computer labs were virtualized as part of a ploy to better utilise licensed software both on premise at the university and remotely. The ‘iLab’ project allows students to use the VMware View client applications on Windows, Mac and Linux PCs to access software usually confined to the computer labs at the institution. Qamp;A: Macquarie University CIO, Marc Bailey In March 2013, Bailey told CIO Australia that he rolled out an open source customer relationship management (CRM), SugarCRM, as part of a $2 million four year contract. Known internally by academic staff as Tracker, the SugarCRM system is used to manage relationships with more than 44,000 Australian and international students. Macquarie University departments using Tracker include student management services, community engagement, global programs, international agents and the graduate school of management. His preference for open source and cloud-based systems was due to reducing complexity and costs. “We don’t necessarily want to own any hardware or maintain software if we can help it,” Bailey said at the time. A Macquarie University spokesman told CIO Australia that the reasons for a staff member leaving the University is a “private matter” between itself and the employee and it would make no public comment. “The University will be filling the position, and the search process is underway,” said the spokesman. Follow Hamish Barwick on Twitter: @HamishBarwick Follow CIO Australia on Twitter and Like us on Facebook… Twitter: @CIO_Australia, Facebook: CIO Australia, or take part in the CIO conversation on LinkedIn: CIO Australia Related content brandpost Sponsored by BMC BMC on BMC: How the company enables IT observability with BMC Helix and AIOps The goals: transform an ocean of data and ultimately provide a stellar user experience and maximum value. By Jeff Miller Dec 07, 2023 3 mins IT Leadership brandpost Sponsored by BMC The data deluge: The need for IT Operations observability and strategies for achieving it BMC Helix brings thousands of data points together to create a holistic view of the health of a service. By Jeff Miller Dec 07, 2023 4 mins IT Leadership how-to How to create an effective business continuity plan A business continuity plan outlines procedures and instructions an organization must follow in the face of disaster, whether fire, flood, or cyberattack. Here’s how to create a plan that gives your business the best chance of surviving such an By Mary K. Pratt, Ed Tittel, Kim Lindros Dec 07, 2023 11 mins Small and Medium Business IT Skills Backup and Recovery interview WestRock CIDO Amir Kazmi on building resiliency Multidimensional resiliency is vital to setting yourself, your teams, and your organization up for success. Kazmi sets the tone at WestRock by recognizing the pace of change, instilling a learning and growth mindset, and being transparent with his te By Dan Roberts Dec 07, 2023 8 mins IT Strategy Staff Management IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe