Jayne Hrdlicka

Jayne Hrdlicka

executive Australia

Jayne Hrdlicka is a prominent Australian business executive known for her role as the CEO of Virgin Australia, a position she announced her intention to resign from amid ongoing challenges for the airline. Her leadership has been marked by efforts to revitalize the company post-administration, but her departure has led to uncertainty and chaos in the search for her successor.

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
0 wks
Reach
58,086
Power
3,144$
Sentiment
7.00
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
Australia 3 7.00 0.23% +0% 25,499,884 58,086 $1,380,000 3,144$
Totals 3 25,499,884 58,086 $1,380,000 3,144$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

Australia Australia: Former chief executive Jayne Hrdlicka had departed the recently listed airline with cash and shares worth more than $50 million. 7

The Sydney Morning Herald: Banks, miners drive ASX higher after Wall Street rally

Australia Australia: Jayne Hrdlicka departed Virgin Australia with cash and shares worth more than $50 million. 8

The Sydney Morning Herald: Jayne Hrdlicka’s $50m Virgin Australia bonanza

Australia Australia: Jayne Hrdlicka is noted for taking over as chief executive of the group that runs hotels, BWS and Dan Murphy’s. 7

The Sydney Morning Herald: The dunny lives on in the hearts of us all

Australia Australia: Jayne Hrdlicka will become the new boss of Endeavour, which operates bottle shop chains Dan Murphy’s and BWS. 8

The Sydney Morning Herald: Former Virgin boss Jayne Hrdlicka to head Dan Murphy’s, BWS chains

Australia Australia: Jayne Hrdlicka was the previous chief executive of Virgin Australia before Dave Emerson took over. 5

The Sydney Morning Herald: Virgin boss Dave Emerson in talks with investors over company IPO

Australia Australia: Jayne Hrdlicka signalled her intention to resign from her position as CEO of Virgin. 5

The Sydney Morning Herald: Airline sector too influenced by union, government