Tait Communications
Grant Thompson is a Senior Customer Support Engineer at Tait Communications. Grant also has experience as an Academic Staff Member at Ara Institute of Canterbury and has worked as a Customer Support Engineer at MiMOMax Wireless Ltd. Grant has a background in machine shop teaching and has worked in various roles in the telecommunications and engineering industry, including roles such as Service Management Centre Senior Technician, Junior Test Engineer, and Fitter Welder/Maintenance Fitter. Grant holds a Diploma in Electrotechnology from Christchurch Polytechnic and has a strong foundation in computer systems networking and telecommunications.
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Tait Communications
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Our clients protect communities, power cities, move citizens, harness resources and save lives all over the world. We work with them to create, support and unify the critical communication solutions they depend on to do their jobs. Digital wireless communication forms the central nervous system of everything we do. Around this resilient, robust core we design, develop, manufacture, test, deploy, support and manage innovative communication environments for organizations that have to put their total trust in the systems and people they work with. We’ve worked hard to develop genuine insight into our clients’ worlds, and have pursued engineering, operational and services excellence for more than 40 years. This understanding, and our belief in championing open-standards technology, means we can give our clients the best possible choice and value to achieve the human outcomes they’re driven by. We’re not simply aligned with our clients; we’re devoted to their cause. Tait Communications’ sole dividend receiving shareholder is a charitable trust which shares the company’s operating profits across several donation and investment streams responsible for research and development, regional reinvestment and education. This rare model means clients can rely on Tait Communications to be an independent long-term player in the critical communications industry and to continue to play its role of ‘open-standards champion’.