High above the ever-changing skyline of Ottawa, members of the business community came together Friday to applaud, admire and appreciate some of the top winners of the Best Ottawa Business Awards — also known as The BOBs.
Roughly 75 attendees made their way to The Westin’s Twenty Two venue, named after the floor on which it’s located. Once there, they were instantly welcomed with champagne and canapés in a casual-chic lounge atmosphere.
The evening focused on the four major award categories of CEO of Year, Lifetime Achievement, CFO of the Year and Newsmaker of the Year. Not to worry, all 30 award recipients will get their shining moment during a special one-hour broadcast on Rogers TV and YouTube Live this Thursday at 8 p.m.
Register here for information on the virtual event.
The annual awards, jointly produced by the Ottawa Business Journal and Ottawa Board of Trade (OBoT), spotlights the innovation, leadership and prosperity of dozens of local companies.
Local entrepreneur Mark Sutcliffe played the straight man to his wisecracking co-emcee Sandra Plagakis, morning radio host on KiSS 105.3. She feigned tardiness while delivering her first joke of the night (at the expense of the city’s chronic transit problems). “Sorry, I came here on the LRT. Apologies.”
The evening was like a coming-out party for Stéphane Brutus, who's still getting to know Ottawa since stepping into his new role last March as dean of University of Ottawa’s Telfer School of Management. Telfer is the lead sponsor of The BOBs.
Present were OBJ publisher Michael Curran and Ottawa Board of Trade president and CEO Sueling Ching, along with OBoT chair Ian Sherman — fresh from receiving his latest award, the Order of Ottawa — and fellow board members Shelley True, owner of TRUEdotDesign marketing agency, and Ruby Williams, a partner at Deloitte. Business leaders also included Deloitte managing partner Dan Doré, Boyden partner Paul Marshall, KPMG managing partner Andrew Newman, RBC regional president Marjolaine Hudon and Invest Ottawa president and CEO Michael Tremblay. As well, Ross Meredith, general manager of The Westin hotel, was on hand.
Friday's event was a way of re-introducing an in-person component to The BOBs, which is normally held in a large gala format with hundreds of attendees. The awards program went virtual last year during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This year's CEO of the Year is Telfer alumna Kathryn Tremblay.
She heads up one of country’s leading companies in staffing and recruitment, excelHR and Altis Recruitment and affiliated companies Altis Technology and ExcellTR. She started the business from scratch in 1989 with her future husband and fellow go-getter Toni Guimarães.
In September 2016, Guimarães, 51, passed away after being diagnosed with stage-four prostate cancer, leaving Tremblay with a large company to run and four daughters to parent. As for the COVID-19 pandemic, it initially wiped out hundreds of job placements and led to a sharp drop in her company revenues.
The room heard how Tremblay — who really is the kind of woman who lights up a room with her presence — has a way of bouncing back. Along with helping her clients overcome unprecedented economic and human resource challenges during COVID, she has turned her own companies’ fortunes around. Her group of companies is on track to place more than 8,000 workers across Canada in 2021. As well, her firms’ combined revenues are expected to surpass $150 million, exceeding pre-COVID levels, the audience was told.