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PEOPLE >
UP&DOWN
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
PEOPLE UP

Photo: Vl. Weiss |
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Tomáš Prouza
The co-founder and former director of financial portal www.penize.cz
was named deputy at the Ministry of Finance. He is now in
charge of financial markets control and will cooperate on
the pension reform proposal. |
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Photo: foto dal |
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Alexandr Pilař
In a contest organized by CzechInvest, the director of DHL
Information Services Europe received the Investor of the
Year 2003 award for the company with the biggest contribution
to the Czech economy. DHL's newly built service center will
employ 866 people in this country. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Michaela Huserová
With the assistance of Union Bank's bankruptcy trustee, more
than CZK 6 billion was saved, and creditors of the bank now
can count on much bigger returns than they originally expected.
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PEOPLE DOWN

Photo: ČTK |
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Milan Venclík
The ODS leader for the south Moravian region faces accusations
of embezzlement of sponsorship gifts for ODS. Three entrepreneurs
claim that he required "sponsorship" in return
for municipal contracts. The case is under police investigation. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Pavel Přibyl
He didn't enjoy his new post as head of the governmental office
for too long. The media revealed that under communism he
commanded police troops that beat citizens during anti-communist
demonstrations. Přibyl resigned after a few days under public
pressure. |
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Photo: archiv |
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Jan Slezák
The media discovered that the Prague councillor for ČSSD also
led troops charged with repression of anti-communist demonstrators.
Organizers of these demonstrations want to incite public
disapproval and force Slezák to resign. |
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| Photo: Tomáš Kubeš |
Radomil Novák: Climbing to the
top
AFTER EIGHT YEARS with CzechInvest, Radomil Novák (36) has been promoted from
deputy operational manager to general director of the agency, replacing Martin
Jahn. This government agency, whose main goal is to support business and attract
foreign investors, isn't expected to go through any great changes under his leadership. "There's
no reason to change a successful system whose strength lies in strong management
and market behavior," Novák says, adding that the agency's dream and long-term
goal is to add value to funds from the state budget so effectively that in ten
years the Czech Republic can rise from the bottom half of EU countries to the
top half.
This native of the wine-producing region around Hodonín studied at the Institute
of Technology and then briefly worked for Terinvest, which organizes trade fairs.
In 1996 he joined CzechInvest as a project manager, and two years later became
the "father" of the investment incentives program, based on which the
law was passed in 2000. He spent the next three years in Silicon Valley, California,
where he ran CzechInvest's foreign office. "I brought back not only experience,
but also my wife," he says with a laugh, noting that to her great credit
he now better understands the differences in the way Czechs and Americans think. "This
is very useful when I'm in contact with American investors. I can better predict
their reactions and expectations," claims Novák. Outside of business, he's
a passionate mountain climber, and scales the Prachovské cliffs anytime he can. "It
requires physical coordination and concentration. On a cliff I have a chance
to get away from every-day problems," he says.
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Photo: Tomáš Kubeš |
Kamil Čermák: Cleared for take-off
KAMIL ČERMÁK (34), Czech Airlines' (ČSA) executive director for sales and marketing,
says he has both a virtue and a shortcoming in one - he wants to change the
world overnight. That could be why he's a sought-out "transformation" manager.
He doesn't alike wading in stagnant waters. "I'm impatient, I want results,
and if they aren't immediate I get a bit irritated," he laughs. In May
he came to ČSA after eight years with Český Telecom, where he served first
as head of public affairs, then of marketing and sales, and finally as director
for corporate clients. However, after working together with Bessel Kok for
many years, he felt he needed a change, so he accepted an offer from Zuzana
Řezníčková, vice president for marketing and sales, to take part in transforming
ČSA to compete with low-cost airlines and become more attractive for business
clients. "Making sales more dynamic will require changes in corporate
culture and management, and that will be my job," says Čermák, who has
all it takes for success.
He can rely on his skills, not only in marketing, but also in communication.
He began is career in 1992 as a television reporter, and at age 23 became a news
announcer on Czech Television. He gained invaluable experience as a spokesperson
for the former trade and industry minister, Vladimír Dlouhý. Although he is a
workaholic and has an eight-year-old son, he still finds time for hobbies. "I've
flown as a sports pilot since I was young, but my newest hobby is cooking. I'm
studying under professional chefs, and I'm really into it. Also, since my friends
have praised my cooking I've gotten a swollen head," he chuckles.
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