MEMBER UNDER THE MICROSCOPE – CARL TITCHMARSH
Carl Titchmarsh, Head of Business Development at Clough has had an incredible journey in the resources cross-industry.
He started his career in South Africa where he studied to be a civil engineer and soon followed the “well-travelled migration path to the UK”.
Carl joined the British Army as a Royal Engineer and worked on projects in more than 30 countries.
After serving for four years, Carl became a Senior Project Manager on the East London Line 2012 Olympic Games Railway program.
He joined Qualcomm as a Senior Project Manager working on various projects including the integration of an IT company purchased in Silicon Valley.
For Carl, “Australia was the next big thing” when he was appointed Project Manager on the BHP Quantum 100 project. His career took a change from project management to business development and executive management.
Before joining Clough three years ago, Carl had stints with Calibre Global and Civmec Construction & Engineering where he managed business development projects and participated in implementation, planning and development for the wider business.
As the Head of Strategy and Development at Clough, Carl is responsible for client management, strategic partnering and supply chain to deliver competitive tenders delivering positive outcomes for the company and clients. He guides the future direction of Clough and leads the pursuit of future projects for the company.
He describes Clough as a “pioneering engineering and construction company who has been helping customers release their vision since 1919”. Clough builds iconic energy, resources and infrastructure projects across the world and will always find a way to deliver.
Carl has been a member of the Petroleum Club of WA for four years and believes the club serves as a good vehicle to meet others in the industry. He says PCWA is “on the pulse with regards to industry issues and trends”.
Outside of the corporate world, he loves camping with his family and friends to explore the beauty that is found across Western Australia. He is also enduring the F45 eight-week challenge where he is pushing himself through 45-minute, high-intensity training whilst fueling up on what he refers to as “dust”.