IT Brief Australia - Technology news for CIOs & IT decision-makers
Story image
Macquarie Govt partners with Fortem Australia to close skills gap
Fri, 6th Jan 2023
FYI, this story is more than a year old

Macquarie Government, part of Macquarie Telecom Group, announced it has signed an agreement with Fortem Australia to become an Employment Partner, committing the company to recruitment and career transfer opportunities for first responders throughout Australia.

Founded in 2019, Fortem Australia supports the mental health and wellbeing of Australian first responders and their families. The non-for-profit organisation was co-founded by John Bale, also co-founder of Soldier On, a similar organisation which supports career transition opportunities for Australia’s veterans.

The partnership will see Macquarie work closely with Fortem to reskill and recruit first responders into new careers, transitioning them into cybersecurity, cloud, and data centre security roles to support Macquarie’s federal government customers, with a specific focus on national security and defence ICT.

The company will also develop and implement its own First Responder Recruitment Strategy, in partnership with Fortem, to identify opportunities for first responders within Macquarie Government.

Through the partnership, Macquarie will work directly with Fortem to support training opportunities, resources, networking events and other initiatives to enable first responders looking to switch careers and join the cyber and data security sector.

The agreement comes following the Federal Government underscoring in the Budget the need for partnership with industry to tackle skills shortages in key industries.

Cybersecurity is in need of a minimum of 17,000 new workers by 2026 according to AustCyber. Macquarie Government Managing Director Aidan Tudehope says the partnership with Fortem will help to grow Australia’s sovereign cyber and defence talent to meet the Government’s cybersecurity agenda.

Tudehope says, “Australia needs to considerably increase its cyber posture right across the economy. To deliver this uplift we need, as a nation, to exponentially grow the available talent pool.

“The nature of cybersecurity means we need to develop and nurture that talent through a sovereign lens - ensuring we have Australians learning and working to protect Australian data.”

Tudehope continues, “Australia’s first responders are among the best in the world. Many of them possess the analytical, investigative, problem-solving, and pattern-recognition skills necessary for success in cyber, defence technology and related industries. In many cases, they already have the essential security clearances needed to work with sensitive data.

“We’re committed to continuing our goal of uplifting Australian sovereign capability in cybersecurity and ICT, and this important partnership with Fortem will help us in that effort.”

Fortem Australia Managing Director and Co-Founder John Bale says the partnership with Macquarie Telecom Group will help more first responder families make a smooth, supported transition into the next chapter of their careers.

Bale says, “We’re thrilled to welcome Macquarie to the Fortem family. Partnering with the right companies to enable career transition for first responders and their families is central to our mission to provide specialised wellbeing and mental fitness support to first responder families.

“Macquarie has long championed Australian jobs and skills development and is a leading company in an industry where there is close values alignment with and strong mutual benefits for first responders.”

The partnership follows Macquarie Telecom Group recently joining VMware’s Sovereign Cloud initiative, an extension of the company’s commitment to sovereign IT capability.