James Spenceley - News, Features, and Slideshows

News

  • Vocus posts $66.9m revenue

    Vocus Communications (ASX: VOC) has announced revenue of $66.9 million for the financial year 2013, up 47.8 per cent on the previous year.

  • Vocus guns for US Cloud providers

    Fibre wholesaler Vocus (ASX:VOC) has moved to position itself as a key capacity provider for US companies selling Cloud services to Australian customers via South East Asia.

  • Vocus acqusitions lead to 77% revenue growth

    Following numerous acquisitions over the last 12 months, fibre wholesaler Vocus Communications (ASX:VOC) has posted a 77 per cent increase in revenue to $33.98 million for the year ending 30 June 2011.

  • The Grill: Vocus CEO, James Spenceley

    Vocus CEO, James Spenceley, talks to Tim Lohman about winning the Deloitte Fast 50, the local ISP landscape, IPv6, the NBN, customer service, and data centre trends in 2011.

  • Vocus opens first data centre

    ASX-listed wholesale telco Vocus Communications (ASX:VOC) will open its first data centre this Friday with a focus on high-density co-location services.

  • Careers Q&A: Vocus' James Spenceley

    Recent winner of Ersnt & Young's 2010 Young Entrepreneur Of The Year, Vocus Communications chief executive, James Spenceley, has accomplished a fair amount in the past 15 years, from starting his own service provider to sparking industry-wide discussion on the National Broadband Network (NBN) through the [[Artnid:358962|Alliance for Affordable Broadband]]. As Spenceley recovers from the recent AusNOG conference, he speaks to <i>Computerworld Australia</i> about how he got started and the importance of passion in the industry.

  • Vocus Communications IPO oversubscribed

    Vocus Communications’ decision to sell itself to an ASX-listed private equity firm and undergo a public offering appears to have paid off, with the initial prospectus closing oversubscribed.

  • ISP-level filter bad for industry

    The Federal Government's decision to implement mandatory ISP-level content filtering is a bad day for the industry, according to one of the founding members of the Australian Network Operators Group (Ausnog).

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