Gender pay gap transparency: How would Australia's tech titans fare?
If the proposal goes ahead it will lay bare those companies that have the highest gender pay gaps and fewest women in leadership positions.
If the proposal goes ahead it will lay bare those companies that have the highest gender pay gaps and fewest women in leadership positions.
A global survey of consumer trust in organisations to protect their data has found Aussie’s faith in businesses to be the lowest in the world.
It can be difficult for big companies to remain innovative. Particularly 11,000 employee, $19 billion-valued, 42 year old companies like CA Technologies.
The typical chief information officer tenure, or so goes the noughties C-Suite folklore, works to a five year cycle...
Broadcom plans to acquire CA Technologies in a US$19 billion deal aimed at diversifying the tech giant beyond semi-conductors.
CA Technologies is dishing out three months paid leave to men and women during the first 12 months following the birth or adoption of their child.
Barely a month goes by without a horror story involving sexual harassment or discrimination emerging from the tech industry.
No matter your profession – be it providing legal services or flipping burgers – your work will inevitably be affected by automation and algorithms.
CA Technologies has named Janice Cox as its new managing director for Australia and New Zealand.
SAP has appointed former COO Colin Brookes to the position of president and managing director for the company’s A/NZ operations.
Silicon Valley is not known for its diversity. And its ‘brotown’ image is not helped by the too-frequent horror stories that come out of the companies based there.
CA Technologies has been in the software business for more than 40 years. It works with most of the US's biggest companies (including 49 of the Fortune 50), and in Australia with the likes of NAB, Qantas, Toyota Financial Services and Ausnet.
Otto Berkes knows firsthand how an idea dreamt up by a small bunch of engineers can change the course of one of the biggest companies in the world.
Swinburne University of Technology and the University of Melbourne are partnering with CA Technologies for a three year project to advance service virtualisation with machine learning.
In a recent report, Forrester analyst Tim Sheedy said that IT chiefs who have not embraced the shift to digital business are now under threat from chief data officers or CTOs with digital and customer experience expertise.