Nearly a decade ago, Michael Tremblay left the comfort of Microsoft’s executive suite because he couldn’t resist the chance to lead Invest Ottawa as the city’s main economic development agency moved to a new home and expanded its mandate. Now, the 40-year tech industry veteran is once again stepping away from a high-profile job at […]
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Nearly a decade ago, Michael Tremblay left the comfort of Microsoft’s executive suite because he couldn’t resist the chance to lead Invest Ottawa as the city’s main economic development agency moved to a new home and expanded its mandate.
Now, the 40-year tech industry veteran is once again stepping away from a high-profile job at a private-sector powerhouse to help guide another non-profit industry organization through its next phase of growth.
Tremblay, 63, has been named president and CEO of CANARIE, a federally funded corporation based in Ottawa that works with partners in Canada’s 13 provinces and territories to provide high-speed wireless networks, cybersecurity protection and other critical digital infrastructure for researchers, students and startups in a range of industries.
He replaces former CANARIE chief executive Kathryn Anthonisen, who retired earlier this year. Tremblay begins his new job on Sept. 8.
The move comes less than two years after Tremblay left Invest Ottawa for a senior executive role at Kanata-based Calian Group, where he leads the publicly traded firm’s IT and cyber solutions division.
Tremblay has made his mark at Calian, spearheading changes that included shifting many of the firm’s customers to Microsoft’s AI-powered cybersecurity platform. It’s a job he’s enjoyed, and he said another career change wasn’t on his radar until he saw a posting for the opening at CANARIE.
“I feel the same way about this one as I did when I looked at Invest Ottawa years ago – as a means to do something really positive, in that example for Ottawa, and in this example for Canada,” he told Techopia in an interview on Thursday.
It’s the latest stop in an eclectic career journey for the tech industry lifer, who earned a computer science diploma from Algonquin College and got his start in the business selling semiconductors on March Road in the early 1980s.
Tremblay later held a series of senior executive roles at Digital Equipment Corp., EDS Systemhouse, JDSU, Fujitsu Canada and SAP before spending a decade as a vice-president at Microsoft Canada, where he oversaw the software giant’s public sector accounts in this country.
Then, in 2017, Invest Ottawa came calling. Tremblay jumped into the CEO’s role with gusto, steering the government-funded organization through major changes that included a move to a new headquarters at Bayview Yards, the launch of projects such as Area X.O — a training ground for autonomous vehicles, drones and other emerging smart city technology — and the expansion of IO’s programs aimed at turning local startups into global businesses.
Now, he’s poised to take on a new challenge at another growing non-profit organization with an even more ambitious role in the Canadian economy.
“I just feel like it’s equipped me to come to the table with a variety of skills that are maybe a little bit unique in that respect,” Tremblay said of his wide-ranging career. “I’m very excited to take all of that and build on it and learn and contribute as much as I can with the background that I have.”
