Background
Rich was born to a German Jewish father, Steven Rich, who in 1963 settled in Australia to manage Hunter Douglas, a venetian blind manufacturer, and an Australian mother.
Businessman Chief Executive Officer
Rich was born to a German Jewish father, Steven Rich, who in 1963 settled in Australia to manage Hunter Douglas, a venetian blind manufacturer, and an Australian mother.
Jodee Rich wrote his first software programme on punch cards in 1972 at the age of 12. He was educated at Cranbrook School in Bellevue Hill, Sydney. During his Cranbrook days Rich started a business renting fish tanks.
At Cranbrook he met Rodney Adler who would become a director of One.Tel.
In 1980 Rich developed a commodity analysis system on 64k Apple II, which he later sold to investment banks. He studied Accounting, Economics and Computer Science at University of Sydney, earning a Bachelor of Economics in 1981.
He is described by Business Spectator as a "charismatic but drama prone entrepreneur" and "the man behind failed phone company Tel and one time computer sensation Imagineering Australia". He subsequently created Focus Publishing. Imagineering Tel In 2007, Rich founded PeopleBrowsr.
In 2011, PeopleBrowsr launched Kred Influence Measurement.
On 27 March 2013, Rich launched the TLD lieutenant is marketed to Chief executive officers.
In 1981, Rich launched Imagineering Australia and the company was floated in 1987. Shares in Imagineering peaked at $8 but the company sold to a Hong Kong group for 10c a share in 1990. Rich formed One.Tel, a service provider of Group Special Mobile mobile and long distance calls, in Australia in 1995 (with James Packer as a shareholder) competing against Telstra and Optus. The company acquired a Group Special Mobile operation for $500 million in 2000. One.Tel Australia was placed in administration in May 2001. One.Tel United Kingdom was sold to Centrica for $200 million and later to Carphone Warehouse who retired the brand in favour of its TalkTalk brand. Beginning in December 2001, Rich was the defendant in legal proceedings brought by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission (application-specific integrated circuit). During the case, known as application-specific integrated circuit v Rich, Rich was in the witness box for over 33 days. Justice Austin later said in his judgment Rich "demonstrated that he was a very well prepared witness, knowledgeable about the subject matter of his evidence, who responded to questions thoughtfully and clearly, sometimes even perceptively. This was notwithstanding the arduous circumstances of his cross examination, extending over 25 days". Rich was exonerated on 18 November 2009 when Justice Robert Austin ruled that application-specific integrated circuit had "failed to prove any aspect of its pleaded case.".
In 1987, Rich married Maxine Brenner, a corporate lawyer who has sat on the board of a public company, Neverfail Springwater, and has served as a member of the Takeovers Panel, a government body involved in the resolution of sharemarket disputes.