Michael McLeod

Chief Executive Officer
Michael is CEO and a founding Director of Message Stick. Michael took up his new position in
January 2004.
Michael’s journey to this new role in corporate Australia is not the
typical route of Australia’s senior businesspeople.
Michael is a Ngarrindjeri Monaro man from Southern NSW.
In 1963, at the age of two, Michael was removed from his mother and
family. He was not to know his father. He did not see his mother
again until Michael was 18, when they first met at his father’s
funeral in 1979.
Michael’s boyhood was spent in foster homes and in state ward homes
throughout New South Wales. Michael’s inner determination to survive
adversity saw him complete his Higher School Certificate in 1979.
Tertiary studies in Aboriginal Affairs at the South Australian
Institute of Technology in Adelaide were completed in 1984.
In his late twenties, Michael overcame serious drug and alcohol
addictions that almost claimed his life.
Michael then spent time in assisting the rehabilitation of others. It was now that he accepted a position with the Illawarra Area Health Service as the Illawarra Aboriginal Health Officer, providing programs and workshops to Aboriginal communities from Helensburgh to Ulladulla.
He has been nominated, accepted and sat on a number of National
Aboriginal Health Policy Working Parties, being directly responsible
to the Federal Health Ministers of the day, in relation to specific
Aboriginal health service delivery issues and policies.
Michael’s input at both Federal and State Health and Education
Government levels has earned him recognition and respect throughout
Aboriginal communities nationally.
As an artist, he has exhibited his works at the Australian Museum in
NSW, the National Art Gallery in Canberra, the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Island Exhibition in Darwin and has entered the Archibald –
Suliman Portrait Exhibition, on a number of occasions.
Throughout the 1980’s, Michael enjoyed painting exclusively on a
private commission basis only. Few of his paintings were exhibited
as most of his works completed in this period were purchased outside
of Australia, mainly to overseas visitors who commissioned him for
family or group portraits.
The 1990’s brought Michael’s artwork to national attention, with the
completion and exhibition nationally of his widely recognised “Don
Freed and Friends” which was purchased by the Wollongong City
Gallery.
Michael’s future is aimed at advocating the need for Australian
society (particularly the private sector and our Governments) to
embrace, and support, the challenge Indigenous people face when his
people begin the journey towards economic independence.
His Message Stick business model is aimed at proving that Indigenous
and non-indigenous people can work together to achieve generic
economic results - yet still fully support, and participate in,
community growth.
Michael’s specific objective with Message Stick is to carefully
build a modest, but credible, national Aboriginal Telecommunications
business that is relevant and significant to remote Indigenous
communities.
Remote Indigenous communities remain the most disadvantaged
telecommunications users in Australia – a situation Michael aims to
make an impact upon in the coming decade.
Michael entered the private sector in 1996, starting an Indigenous
ISP business and promoting this to both National/Sate Government and
the corporate sectors. It was during this period that Michael gained
exposure and experience in the IT and Telecommunications sectors.
If you would like to contact Michael, you can e-mail him at:

Indigenous Australia Engaging Australian Business

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