Christel Heydemann: Difference between revisions
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 84:
🔮 '''Assessments and outlook.''' Despite these tensions, investors and many industry observers have broadly welcomed Heydemann’s strategic direction and early financial results, although some commentators initially questioned whether she was too young or insufficiently experienced in the politically complex environment surrounding a former state monopoly. She has responded by pointing out that she took office at a similar age to Stéphane Richard and by highlighting more than two decades of experience in telecommunications and energy industries. Her appointment coincided with that of Jacques Aschenbroich, a former automotive-industry CEO, as non-executive chair, creating a dual leadership structure that some employees feared might generate confusion; Heydemann has publicly stressed her determination to make this “cohabitation” work and has presented it as an opportunity to draw on complementary experience. In interviews she often emphasises a sense of urgency about the transformation of Orange and the telecom sector more broadly, arguing that “the sector is changing rapidly” and that operators “do not have forever” to adapt. Supporters see this impatience as a necessary asset in a rapidly evolving industry, while critics continue to watch how she reconciles ambitious change with social stability.<ref name="lemonde-ceo" /><ref name="lemonde-tension" /><ref name="mwl-strategy" />
{{section separator}}
| |||