Back to Articles
ASIC's Most Senior Tech Leader to Leave in May
iTnews
ENRICHED
Details
- Date Published
- 12 Feb 2026
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 15 Feb 2026, 03:00 am
Authors (0)
No authors linked
Description
Corporate watchdog kickstarts hiring process.
Summary
The article reports on the upcoming retirement of Joanne Harper, ASIC’s executive director for digital, data, and technology. Throughout her 13-year tenure, Harper led significant transformation initiatives in technology and cybersecurity at the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. Her leadership contributed to ASIC's evolution into a digitally enabled regulator. The role she is vacating is crucial for overseeing AI, data, and cybersecurity, which underscores ASIC's ongoing commitment to technological advancement and security. However, the article primarily focuses on personnel changes rather than specific AI safety or governance measures.
Body
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission’s top digital and technology leader is set to retire in May, with recruitment underway for a replacement.
Joanne Harper (Image Credit: Joanne Harper/LinkedIn)
Joanne Harper has held the role of executive director for digital, data and technology for a bit over two years.
She was previously ASIC’s senior executive leader of digital for four years, and chief information officer for over six years, as part of a 13-year career with the corporate watchdog.
An ASIC spokesperson told iTnews that Harper “is retiring in May 2026 after a long career” and credited her with overseeing the watchdog’s “transformation agenda across digital, data and technology, the registry business, and the delivery of [a] cyber security program” whilst in her current role.
“Prior to this, Harper managed the digital transformation program, … delivering our vision of being a digitally enabled, data-informed regulator.”
ASIC pulled down the job advertisement overnight but indicated it would offer the next executive director of digital, data and technology a three-year term.
The role has “end-to-end [responsibility for] digital, data, AI, cyber security, technology and major transformation programs”, the advertisement stated.
ASIC appeared to be pushing for a simplification agenda to be a part of the next three years of work.
“You will bring coherence to a complex portfolio, uniting digital products, enterprise technology, data and analytics, cyber security and large-scale program delivery into a single, future-focused agenda,” the advertisement stated.
It added that the new executive director would be able to “leverage off a strong foundation”, set by Harper and her team.