I think Phil was brought in on contract and decided not to renew.
However, he was the CEO of NZ Hearld before that so take from that as you will. Nt exactly someone to bring into a company aiming for high growth.o
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Agree with you Winner. Administrators and Liquidators (especially Liquidators!) really wallow in this stuff. What I've noted quite a few times is their services seem to "interestingly" come to an end once the receivables are all in and the bank accounts are empty. Some of their final reports are startling!!
A grim turn-up. Just wish to extend thanks to the posters on ST who have thrown up some good information on dynamics and valuation of tech start-ups on here over the years, particularly as a counterpoint to the blind optimism generated out of the sector itself (supported by govt) through the late noughties until Xero "dug in" and heads cooled.
If I were an investor, I'd also be looking deeper than the directorship for names to add to the naughty list - particularly with key management roles concerned with product/market fit (i.e. marketing and sales managers, product owners etc.). There's such little depth of experience available in NZ in terms of technology-savvy corporate leadership to scale these kind of companies and establish in foreign markets.
It was always going to be a tricky market to crack given the head-spinning political sensitivities attached to security/intelligence software.
Might get a buck for some of their software
http://www.sharechat.co.nz/article/4...ware-for-1html
So obvious
From twitterland
@ClareCapital: We say to clients that there are only two rules: "make sales and manage cash flow". Wynyard (NZX:WYN) is what happens when you do neither.
NBR says 3 possible buyers for Wynyard
Fire sale to pay KordaMentha fees, shareholders get nix...that's my reckoning on this fiasco.
Vultures are flying overhead, everyone wants a piece now. I could write the Kord Mentha report now and save the company $1.5m. "Failed business model, with software that didn't perform, reckless management, and high flying ideas." Wasnt this the company where the CEO sold his shares at some price above $2-00 because he wanted to paint or do up his house, or was that PEB.