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Saturday | 30 August, 2008
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More than a memory
Kingston regional manager A/NZ, Vaughan Nankivell, tried his hand in the distribution and reseller space before joining the memory vendor a year ago. He spoke to ARN about his international ride into IT, working in Nashville and playing off a scratch golfing handicap.
Nadia Cameron 14 May, 2008 12:53:22

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What was your first job?

After I left high school I worked as a teller for the Bank of New Zealand.

How did you progress into IT?

I stayed with the bank for a few years before transferring to the finance department at Air New Zealand, then moved into their reservations sales team and then to Los Angeles to work in their national sales team. It wasn't hard convincing the Americans to come and visit 'down under'.

While I was working at Air New Zealand I assisted setting up a Novell network. I started thinking it was the way I wanted to go in terms of my career, so I bought my first computer and went from there. My first foray into IT was working in field sales in LA for a distributor of electronics called Hallmark Electronics. I started working with Kingston back then as they were one of the brands we had.

How did you end up on the vendor side?

It was a massive progression. I'd been in LA for a couple of years around when the Rodney King situation and LA riots occurred. We had a nine-month-old baby and many of our friends were moving. The recruitment areas at that point were Seattle, Denver or Nashville. I chose Nashville, which was a very good move, particularly for a young family starting out. During that time I worked for a reseller heading up a systems program and did my engineering certifications and Novell CNE training.

We moved the family back to New Zealand in 1996 for personal reasons and I took a general manager's role at an electronic commerce company in Auckland doing document management services around EDI transactions. I moved back to the US for an eight-month contract in Arizona, then in 2001 returned to New Zealand and eventually landed at Tech Pacific, where I was brand manager for Kingston and a couple of other products.

A year ago, Kingston made a big change. Half the Australian distributors were reporting to Asia and the other half to the states, so it was very fractioned. One of the guys managing Australia retired and my position was created so we had a general manager looking after both countries. We have also unified our distributors to work through the Taiwan team.

Was it very different working for a distributor and a reseller?

The business issues are very different. When you're a vendor you're so far removed from that customer, as you are when you're a distributor. But a reseller has to work with the customer - it's their lifeblood. That's what I bring to the job at Kingston - I have a passion for the end customer. Working for a reseller taught me to listen to what end customers are going through and become more solutions-focused.

What do you like about your job?

The variety. It is unusual to have a regional manager based in NZ and responsible for Australia. I appreciate the diversity across the territories.

What's the main focus for Kingston this year?

There are a number of key things we've been working on, which many of the other vendors are also talking about. Virtualisation is getting bigger. We've been a technology partner with VMware for a long time globally and co-authored technical whitepapers on virtualisation. The consolidation of servers and adding more virtual servers into the environment requires an overhead in the memory space. We're skilled in how to scale those systems up when organisations are deploying a virtualisation solution.

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